A NOTE ON SOME ALTERNATIVE MODELS FOR RESPONSE BIAS CHANGES DURING FORCED-CHOICE DETECTION EXPERIMENTS.

Abstract

Several variants of a learning model for forced-choice detection experiments (Atkinson and Kinchla, 1965) may be produced by making various reasonable assumptions regarding which events are effective in producing response bias changes. Atkinson and Kinchla assumed the bias changed according to a single parameter stochastic learning mechanism, such changes occurring only when no signal was detected. An alternative formulation uses two learning parameters and postulates the bias changes on every trial, but at different rates, according to whether or not the signal is detected. This two-parameter bias model was applied to the original data (Atkinson and Kinchla, 1965), and produced numerical estimates of the parameters which confirm the conjecture that the bias changes principally during non-detection trials. In addition, the parameter estimates indicate that the relative effectiveness of information feedback is determined by its relative frequency of occurrence, an interpretation which was not possible from the single-parameter model. (Author)

Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Nov 01, 1965
Accession Number
AD0629677

Entities

People

  • Don A. Ronken

Tags

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Detection
  • Feedback
  • Frequency
  • Learning

Fields of Study

  • Biology

Readers

  • Regression Analysis.
  • Space/Atmospheric Physics.