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Sherpajack (talk | contribs) m Links to GLM, sigmoid & link function were broken by changes in those pages. I added them, as well as links to probit and logit pages. |
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The '''psychometric function''' is an inferential model applied in detection and discrimination tasks. It models the relationship between a given feature of the physical [[stimulus (physiology)|stimulus]], e.g. velocity, duration, brightness, weight etc., and the forced-choice responses of the subject. The psychometric function is a specific application of the [[Generalized linear model|generalized linear model]] (GLM) to psychophysical data. The probability of response is related to a linear combine of predictors by means of a [[Sigmoid function|sigmoid]] [[Link function|link function]] (e.g. [[Probit|probit]], [[Logit|logit]], etc.). Depending on the number of choices, the psychophysical experimental paradigms classify as simple forced choice (also known as yes-no task), [[two-alternative forced choice]] (2AFC), and n-alternative forced choice. The number of alternatives in the experiment determine the lower asymptote of the function. Two different types of psychometric plots are in common use. One plots the percentage of correct responses (or a similar value) displayed on the [[y-axis]] and the physical parameter on the [[x-axis]]. If the stimulus parameter is very far towards one end of its possible range, the person will always be able to respond correctly. Towards the other end of the range, the person never perceives the stimulus properly and therefore the probability of correct responses is at chance level. In between, there is a transition range where the subject has an above-chance rate of correct responses, but does not always respond correctly. The [[
A common example is [[visual acuity]] testing with an [[eye chart]]. The person sees symbols of different sizes (the size is the relevant physical stimulus parameter) and has to decide which symbol it is. Usually, there is one line on the chart where a subject can identify some, but not all, symbols. This is equal to the transition range of the psychometric function and the sensory threshold corresponds to visual acuity. (Strictly speaking, a typical optometric measurement does not exactly yield the sensory threshold due to biases in the standard procedure.)
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