PRACTICE EFFECTS IN THE PERFORMANCE OF A SIMPLE VISUAL DISCRIMINATION TASK BY INITIALLY NAIVE OBSERVERS.

Abstract

An experiment was conducted to evaluate the effects of early practice during training in a simple visual discrimination task. Four experimentally naive subjects completed a series of fifty experimental sessions, and their data, based upon threshold estimates reduced from 50,000 observations, were examined for both short-term and long-term practice effects. Short-term effects were found to be limited to very early sessions, with essential stability of sensitivity having been reached by the fifth session. This result is consonant with other studies of training effects in the visual domain. Long term effects, up to the fiftieth session at least, were not found. It was concluded that naive observers may confidently be assumed to have attained a stable level of performance after very few training sessions in tasks requiring a simple discrimination. (Author)

Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Oct 01, 1962
Accession Number
AD0600908

Entities

People

  • John H. Taylor

Organizations

  • Scripps Institution of Oceanography

Tags

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Consonants
  • Discrimination
  • Observation
  • Observers
  • Sensitivity
  • Social Sciences
  • Training

Fields of Study

  • Psychology

Readers

  • Academic Conference Management
  • Computational Modeling and Simulation
  • Neural Network Machine Learning.