Psychophysics of remembering: to bias or not to bias |
| |
Authors: | White K Geoffrey Wixted John T |
| |
Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, University of Otago, P O Box 56, Dunedin, New Zealand. geoff.white@otago.ac.nz |
| |
Abstract: | Delayed matching to sample is typically a two-alternative forced-choice procedure with two sample stimuli. In this task the effects of varying the probability of reinforcers for correct choices and the resulting receiver operating characteristic are symmetrical. A version of the task where a sample is present on some trials and absent on others is analogous to a yes/no recognition task. We describe data from two experiments where an asymmetry in performance in the yes/no task could be attributed to a change in response bias with increasing retention-interval duration from a matching-law perspective, but not from a signal-detection perspective. Both approaches make explicit assumptions about response bias. The apparent inconsistency between the two approaches to the treatment of response bias is resolved in terms of a model proposed by K. G. White and J. T. Wixted (1999) which predicts asymmetrical matching-law functions and receiver operating characteristics without making any assumptions about response bias. |
| |
Keywords: | remembering two‐alternative forced‐choice procedure yes/no recognition procedure matching law signal detection asymmetrical remembering delayed matching to sample pigeons |
本文献已被 PubMed 等数据库收录! |