The slope of the two-interval, forced-choice psychometric function (e.g. the Weibull parameter, ß) provides valuable information about the relationship between contrast sensitivity and signal strength. However, little is known about how or whether ß varies with stimulus parameters such as spatiotemporal frequency and stimulus size and shape. A second unresolved issue concerns the best way to estimate the slope of the psychometric function. For example, if an observer is non-stationary (e.g. their threshold drifts between experimental sessions), ß will be underestimated if curve fitting is performed after collapsing the data across experimental sessions. We measured psychometric functions for 2 experienced observers for 14 different spatiote...
Recent studies have reported that flanking stimuli broaden the psychometric function and lower detec...
Knowledge of an observer's psychometric function slope is potentially useful in clinical visual...
It has been suggested (Tadmor and Tolhurst, 1994 Vision Research34 541-554) that the psychophysical ...
The slope of the two-interval, forced-choice psychometric function (e.g. the Weibull parameter, ß) p...
AbstractThe slope of the two-interval, forced-choice psychometric function (e.g. the Weibull paramet...
Methods to obtain estimates of psychophysical functions are used in numerous fields, such as audiolo...
In forced-choice detection, incorrect responses are routinely ascribed to internal noise, because ex...
Contrast sensitivity improves with the area of a sine-wave grating, but why? Here we assess this phe...
<p>(a) Examples of psychometric functions for the peripheral grating detection. The upper panel show...
In a 2-alternative forced-choice (2AFC) discrimination task, observers choose which of two stimuli h...
<div><p>In a 2-alternative forced-choice (2AFC) discrimination task, observers choose which of two s...
Many current models of visual detection predict that the slope of psychometric functions for detecti...
AbstractExternal noise paradigms, measuring contrast threshold as a function of external noise contr...
AbstractIf the spatial-frequency of sinusoidal signals in a contrast-detection experiment varies ran...
AbstractRecent developments in the efficient estimation of threshold are here extended to the proble...
Recent studies have reported that flanking stimuli broaden the psychometric function and lower detec...
Knowledge of an observer's psychometric function slope is potentially useful in clinical visual...
It has been suggested (Tadmor and Tolhurst, 1994 Vision Research34 541-554) that the psychophysical ...
The slope of the two-interval, forced-choice psychometric function (e.g. the Weibull parameter, ß) p...
AbstractThe slope of the two-interval, forced-choice psychometric function (e.g. the Weibull paramet...
Methods to obtain estimates of psychophysical functions are used in numerous fields, such as audiolo...
In forced-choice detection, incorrect responses are routinely ascribed to internal noise, because ex...
Contrast sensitivity improves with the area of a sine-wave grating, but why? Here we assess this phe...
<p>(a) Examples of psychometric functions for the peripheral grating detection. The upper panel show...
In a 2-alternative forced-choice (2AFC) discrimination task, observers choose which of two stimuli h...
<div><p>In a 2-alternative forced-choice (2AFC) discrimination task, observers choose which of two s...
Many current models of visual detection predict that the slope of psychometric functions for detecti...
AbstractExternal noise paradigms, measuring contrast threshold as a function of external noise contr...
AbstractIf the spatial-frequency of sinusoidal signals in a contrast-detection experiment varies ran...
AbstractRecent developments in the efficient estimation of threshold are here extended to the proble...
Recent studies have reported that flanking stimuli broaden the psychometric function and lower detec...
Knowledge of an observer's psychometric function slope is potentially useful in clinical visual...
It has been suggested (Tadmor and Tolhurst, 1994 Vision Research34 541-554) that the psychophysical ...