Thresholds, Weber’s law, Fechner’s three methods Research Methods Fall 2010 Tamás Bőhm.

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Thresholds, Weber’s law, Fechner’s three methods Research Methods Fall 2010 Tamás Bőhm

Transcript of Thresholds, Weber’s law, Fechner’s three methods Research Methods Fall 2010 Tamás Bőhm.

Page 1: Thresholds, Weber’s law, Fechner’s three methods Research Methods Fall 2010 Tamás Bőhm.

Thresholds, Weber’s law, Fechner’s three methods

Research Methods

Fall 2010

Tamás Bőhm

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Introspection

• Method applied by early psychologists (Wundt)• Self-observation of conscious thoughts and

sensations– Do I perceive this light brighter than that? Why?

• Inherently subjective rejected as a scientific method

• But it provides useful intuitions when designing experiments (helps forming hypotheses)– I realized that it is hard for me to hear very high and

very low tones. Thus the frequency of a tone may be a factor in its perceived loudness/audibility. Let’s test this in an experiment!

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Formal methods

• Quantifying the sensations evoked by physical stimuli

• Gustav Fechner (1860): established 3 formal psychophysical methods

• Fechner’s methods have been (and are being) widely used

• More reliable and accurate than introspection

• Results from different experiments are comparable

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Thresholds

If a linear relationship is assumed, two values determine the function:

– X-intercept: minimum stimulus value that evoked any sensation;absolute threshold

– Slope: the rate at which sensation grows as we increase intensity;difference threshold(inversely proportional to slope)

Stimulus intensity

Sen

satio

n m

agni

tude

Linear psychophysical

equation

X-intercept

slope

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Thresholds

General definitions (not assuming linearity):– Absolute threshold:

intensity that the observer can just barely detect• Intensities below absolute threshold: undetectable• Intensities above absolute threshold: detectable

– Difference threshold (aka. just noticeable difference /JND/ and difference limen):minimum intensity difference that is noticeable to the observer

• A change in intensity that is smaller than the difference threshold: undetectable

• A change in intensity that is larger than the difference threshold: detectable

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Difference thresholds• Linear function

difference threshold (slope) is constant

• An observer able to detect the difference between intensities 100 and 110 should also be able to detect the difference between 1000 and 1010. This is not the case: the observer is able to detect the difference only between 1000 and 1100

• 500 & 550 Hz tones• 5000 & 5050 Hz tones• 5000 & 5500 Hz tones• Difference threshold is not

constant!Stimulus intensity

Sen

satio

n m

agni

tude

Linear psychophysical

equation

constant slope

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Difference thresholds

• Difference threshold is not constant (changes with intensity) function is nonlinear

• Weber’s law: difference threshold is a constant proportion of the initial stimulus value

ΔI / I = c• Previous

examples:c=10%

• Weber’s lawholds only approximately!

Stimulus intensity

Sen

satio

n m

agni

tude

Nonlinear psychophysical

equation

slope changes with intensity

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Absolute thresholds

• Even in the absence of stimulation, there is some random firing on sensory nerves

• This inner noise can even vary from moment to moment• Observers cannot distinguish inner noise from the effect

of a weak stimulus• Even when there is no light (perfect darkness),

observers may experience a dim light (dark light, intrinsic light)

• Observers in an anechoic chamber often report hearing a whistling sound

Measuring truly „absolute” thresholds is problematic: observers may confuse inner noise with the real thing

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Psychophysical methods• Threshold measurements: detection of small intensities (absolute thr.) and

discrimination of small intensity differences (difference thr.)Is it intense enough to see? How small a difference can you see?

– Fechner’s 3 methods• Method of constant stimuli• Method of limits• Method of adjustment

– Modifications of Fechner’s methods• Staircase method• Modifications of the method of constant stimuli (adaptive, no standard)

– Forced choice, objective methods– Sensory decision theory (SDT)– Psychophysical functions from psychometric data

• Direct scaling: growth of sensation with intensityHow bright do you see a light?

– Magnitude estimation and the power law• Multidimensional scaling: degree to which stimuli are comparable along

some dimensionsAlong which dimensions do you judge the similarity of two stimuli?

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Fechner’s three methods

• Presenting one stimulus at a time

• The stimulus is very weak

• Possible responses:“Yes, I see it.” /“No, I don’t see it.”

Absolute threshold Difference threshold

Method of constant stimuli

Method of limits

Method of adjustment not used

• Presenting two stimuli at a time:

– Standard: fixed, easily detectable

– Comparison: either more or less intense than the standard

• Possible responses:“Comparison is stronger.” /“Comparison is weaker.”

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Method of constant stimuli for measuring absolute thresholds

1. Select a range of light intensities from certainly invisible to certainly visible

2. Pick a few (4-7) points uniformly in this intensity range; this will be the constant stimulus set

Weak Strong

Light intensity

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Method of constant stimuli for measuring absolute thresholds

3. Test each stimulus many times (20-25) in random order

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Method of constant stimuli for measuring absolute thresholds

4. Present the stimuli one at a time and ask the observer if it was visible or not

Visible?YES NO

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Click to start

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Could you see the spot of light?

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Could you see the spot of light?

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Could you see the spot of light?

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Could you see the spot of light?

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Could you see the spot of light?

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Could you see the spot of light?

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Could you see the spot of light?

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Could you see the spot of light?

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Could you see the spot of light?

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Could you see the spot of light?

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Could you see the spot of light?

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Could you see the spot of light?

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Could you see the spot of light?

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Could you see the spot of light?

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Method of constant stimuli for measuring absolute thresholds

5. Calculate the proportion of “yes” and “no” responses at each light level

+ - + + + - - - + + + - - - - +

0% 5% 20% 50% 80% 95% 100%

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Method of constant stimuli for measuring absolute thresholds

6. Plot the percentages against stimulus intensity psychometric function

Stimulus intensity

Per

cent

age

“see

n”

0%

100%

50%

75%

25%

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Psychometric function for absolute thresholds

Ideal

FIG (Sekuler)

• Fixed absolute threshold• Step function

Actual

FIG (Sekuler)

• Absolute threshold varies somewhat from trial to trial (due to constant fluctuations in sensitivity)

• Conventionally, the intensity corresponding to 50% is considered to be the threshold

sigmoid function

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Method of constant stimuli for measuring difference thresholds

1. Standard stimulus has a fixed intensity

2. The intensities of comparison stimuli bracket the standard

Light intensity

Standard stimulus:

Comparison stimuli:

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Method of constant stimuli for measuring difference thresholds

3. All pairs of standard and comparison stimuli are tested many times

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Method of constant stimuli for measuring difference thresholds

4. For each pair, the observer judges if the comparison stimulus was stronger or weaker than the standard

http://www.yorku.ca/psycho

STRONGER WEAKER

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Method of constant stimuli for measuring difference thresholds

5. For each comparison level, the percentage of “stronger” responses is calculated and results are plotted as a psychometric function

Light intensity of comparison stimuli

Per

cent

age

“str

onge

r”

0%

100%

50%

75%

25%

Page 53: Thresholds, Weber’s law, Fechner’s three methods Research Methods Fall 2010 Tamás Bőhm.

Psychometric function for difference thresholds

• When the observer cannot see a difference, he/she chooses randomly between “stronger” and “weaker”; this corresponds to 50% on the psychometric function point of subjective equivalence (PSE)

Light intensity of comparison stimuli

Per

cent

age

“str

onge

r”

0%

100%

50%

75%

25%

PSE

Page 54: Thresholds, Weber’s law, Fechner’s three methods Research Methods Fall 2010 Tamás Bőhm.

Psychometric function for difference thresholds

• By convention, the intensity at 75% is considered to be just noticeably stronger than the standard DS

• A comparison intensity at 25% is just noticeably weaker than the standard DW

• Difference threshold = the average of DS and DW

Light intensity of comparison stimuli

Per

cent

age

“str

onge

r”

0%

100%

50%

75%

25%

DW DS

Page 55: Thresholds, Weber’s law, Fechner’s three methods Research Methods Fall 2010 Tamás Bőhm.

Method of limits for measuring absolute thresholds

1. On each trial, the observer reports if she/he could see the light or not.

2. Start with presenting a light intensity well above the expected threshold (the observer can certainly see it)

3. Decrease the intensity until the observer cannot see it

4. Threshold estimate: the intensity at which the response changes

+

-

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+

+

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+

-

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-

-

Ligh

t in

tens

ity

Trials

• Descending series: start from above the expected threshold and decrease intensity

• Ascending series: start from below the expected threshold and increase intensity

threshold estimate

Page 56: Thresholds, Weber’s law, Fechner’s three methods Research Methods Fall 2010 Tamás Bőhm.

Click to start

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Method of limits for measuring absolute thresholds

• Ascending and descending series may yield different results use both

• Even in the same direction, there is variability in the threshold (inner noise, etc) average many measurements

• Measured threshold corresponds to 50% point in a psychometric function (method of constant stimuli)

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Ligh

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ity

Trials

pure-tone audiometry

Page 65: Thresholds, Weber’s law, Fechner’s three methods Research Methods Fall 2010 Tamás Bőhm.

threshold estimate

Method of limits for measuring difference thresholds

• Intensity of the comparison stimulus is decreased (descending) or increased (ascending) until the response changes

• Threshold estimate: intensity difference between the standard and comparison stimuli where the response changes

• Average results from multiple series in both directions

+

-

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Ligh

t in

tens

ity o

f co

mpa

rison

stim

ulus

Trials

+ comparison brighter

- comparison weaker

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+

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+

-

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-

-

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+

Page 66: Thresholds, Weber’s law, Fechner’s three methods Research Methods Fall 2010 Tamás Bőhm.

Method of adjustment for measuring absolute thresholds

• Observer can vary the stimulus intensity

• Instructed to adjust it so that it is just visible or just invisible

• Initial intensity is set to be far from the expected threshold value

adjustment device

stimulus with adjusted intensity

observer

Page 67: Thresholds, Weber’s law, Fechner’s three methods Research Methods Fall 2010 Tamás Bőhm.

Method of adjustment for measuring absolute thresholds

• Threshold estimate: final intensity value

• Descending: initial intensity is well above expected threshold; adjusted to just visible

• Ascending: initially well below threshold; adjusted to just invisible

• Ascending and descending task repeated several times and results averaged

• Similar to method of limits but observers find it easier

threshold estimate

descending ascending

• Adjustment: by a real or a software device (e.g. knob, slider)