
doi: 10.1068/p2917
pmid: 11768489
Carryover of stimuli in sequential judgments was studied for a visual assessment task involving estimation of the percentage cover of black circles on a white image. Seven image types with different levels of cover density were arranged in a sequentially balanced design in which each image type was preceded the same number of times by all image types. In the absence of carryover, when images were preceded by images with the same cover density, the response scores were well fitted by a power function of percentage cover with a mean exponent of 0.73 over subjects. Carryover took the form of an assimilation, so that the cover estimate for a target image was generally higher when preceded by an image with higher cover, and lower when preceded by an image with lower cover. However, the magnitude of the carryover effect showed little evidence of increasing with difference in cover between successive images. Nonparametric and parametric methods for testing for carryover are presented. The need for development of psychological models to explain the proposed statistical models is discussed.
Adult, Male, Observer Variation, Analysis of Variance, Models, Statistical, Adolescent, Statistics, Nonparametric, Discrimination, Psychological, Linear Models, Psychophysics, Humans, Female, Least-Squares Analysis
Adult, Male, Observer Variation, Analysis of Variance, Models, Statistical, Adolescent, Statistics, Nonparametric, Discrimination, Psychological, Linear Models, Psychophysics, Humans, Female, Least-Squares Analysis
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