Tailoring a psychophysical discrimination experiment upon assessment of the psychometric function: Predictions and results

Decision making is a widespread research topic and plays a crucial role in neuroscience as well as in other research and application fields of, for example, biology, medicine and economics. The most basic implementation of decision making, namely binary discrimination, is successfully i...

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Main Authors: Andrea Vilardi, Davide Tabarelli, Leonardo Ricci
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AIP Publishing LLC 2015-02-01
Series:AIP Advances
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4908271
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spelling doaj-a19b4b89477c435d9985c43be62d06f52020-11-24T21:17:49ZengAIP Publishing LLCAIP Advances2158-32262015-02-0152027121027121-1010.1063/1.4908271023502ADVTailoring a psychophysical discrimination experiment upon assessment of the psychometric function: Predictions and resultsAndrea Vilardi0Davide Tabarelli1Leonardo Ricci2Dipartimento di Fisica and CIMeC, Centre for Mind/Brain Sciences, Università di Trento, I-38123 Trento, ItalyDipartimento di Fisica and CIMeC, Centre for Mind/Brain Sciences, Università di Trento, I-38123 Trento, ItalyDipartimento di Fisica and CIMeC, Centre for Mind/Brain Sciences, Università di Trento, I-38123 Trento, Italy Decision making is a widespread research topic and plays a crucial role in neuroscience as well as in other research and application fields of, for example, biology, medicine and economics. The most basic implementation of decision making, namely binary discrimination, is successfully interpreted by means of signal detection theory (SDT), a statistical model that is deeply linked to physics. An additional, widespread tool to investigate discrimination ability is the psychometric function, which measures the probability of a given response as a function of the magnitude of a physical quantity underlying the stimulus. However, the link between psychometric functions and binary discrimination experiments is often neglected or misinterpreted. Aim of the present paper is to provide a detailed description of an experimental investigation on a prototypical discrimination task and to discuss the results in terms of SDT. To this purpose, we provide an outline of the theory and describe the implementation of two behavioural experiments in the visual modality: upon the assessment of the so-called psychometric function, we show how to tailor a binary discrimination experiment on performance and decisional bias, and to measure these quantities on a statistical base. Attention is devoted to the evaluation of uncertainties, an aspect which is also often overlooked in the scientific literature. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4908271
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrea Vilardi
Davide Tabarelli
Leonardo Ricci
spellingShingle Andrea Vilardi
Davide Tabarelli
Leonardo Ricci
Tailoring a psychophysical discrimination experiment upon assessment of the psychometric function: Predictions and results
AIP Advances
author_facet Andrea Vilardi
Davide Tabarelli
Leonardo Ricci
author_sort Andrea Vilardi
title Tailoring a psychophysical discrimination experiment upon assessment of the psychometric function: Predictions and results
title_short Tailoring a psychophysical discrimination experiment upon assessment of the psychometric function: Predictions and results
title_full Tailoring a psychophysical discrimination experiment upon assessment of the psychometric function: Predictions and results
title_fullStr Tailoring a psychophysical discrimination experiment upon assessment of the psychometric function: Predictions and results
title_full_unstemmed Tailoring a psychophysical discrimination experiment upon assessment of the psychometric function: Predictions and results
title_sort tailoring a psychophysical discrimination experiment upon assessment of the psychometric function: predictions and results
publisher AIP Publishing LLC
series AIP Advances
issn 2158-3226
publishDate 2015-02-01
description Decision making is a widespread research topic and plays a crucial role in neuroscience as well as in other research and application fields of, for example, biology, medicine and economics. The most basic implementation of decision making, namely binary discrimination, is successfully interpreted by means of signal detection theory (SDT), a statistical model that is deeply linked to physics. An additional, widespread tool to investigate discrimination ability is the psychometric function, which measures the probability of a given response as a function of the magnitude of a physical quantity underlying the stimulus. However, the link between psychometric functions and binary discrimination experiments is often neglected or misinterpreted. Aim of the present paper is to provide a detailed description of an experimental investigation on a prototypical discrimination task and to discuss the results in terms of SDT. To this purpose, we provide an outline of the theory and describe the implementation of two behavioural experiments in the visual modality: upon the assessment of the so-called psychometric function, we show how to tailor a binary discrimination experiment on performance and decisional bias, and to measure these quantities on a statistical base. Attention is devoted to the evaluation of uncertainties, an aspect which is also often overlooked in the scientific literature.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4908271
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