Deck 2: Signal Detection and Absolute Judgement

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Question
What is the difference between a signal detection and identification (absolute judgement) task?

A) signal detection typically involves several stimulus states or categories, identification requires only two
B) there is no difference-the two terms are synonyms
C) identification typically involves several stimulus states or categories, signal detection requires only two
D) signal detection occurs at a later processing stage than identification
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Question
When is signal detection theory (SDT) applicable?

A) when there are two discrete states of the world: referred to as signal and noise
B) when there are no discrete states of the world
C) when there are several discrete states of the world
D) when a signal is presented and the user assigns a score to its magnitude
Question
Which of the following is not one of the classes of joint events in signal detection theory (SDT)?

A) hit
B) false alarm
C) false miss
D) correct rejection
Question
The quantification of information is influenced by three variables. Which of the following is NOT one of them?

A) the number of possible events that could occur, N
B) their sequential constraints, or the context in which they occur
C) the probabilities of those events
D) redundancy
Question
If 20 signal trials and 10 noise trials were presented and there were 2 hits and 18 misses, which of the following is the correct hit rate?

A) 2/20 = .1
B) 18/20 = .9
C) 2/30 = .066
D) 18/30 = .60
Question
Can the value of evidence variable X ever exceed the criterion XC?

A) only when a signal is presented
B) only when noise is presented
C) when either signal or noise is presented
D) no, XC can never exceed evidence variable X
Question
In SDT we represent signal and noise as a pair of distributions. Which of the following is a true statement concerning these distributions:

A) there is always some overlap between the distributions and the distributions are normal
B) there is no overlap between the distributions and the distributions are normal
C) there is always some overlap between the distributions are the distributions are not normal
D) there is no overlap between the distributions and the distributions are normal
Question
In SDT we represent signal and noise as a pair of distributions. Which of the following describes conservative responding?

A) XC is placed to the left of where the distributions meet
B) the observer says "no" (signal absent) much more often than she says "yes" (signal present)
C) the observer says "yes" (signal present) much more often than he says "no" (signal absent)
D) XC is placed where the distributions meet
Question
The ______ the difference between signals and noise, the greater these error probabilities become because the amount of variation in X resulting from randomness increases relative to the amount of energy in the signal.

A) smaller
B) bigger
C) more improbable
D) none of the above
Question
Which of the following defines βopt in response to changes in signal probability?

A) P(N) / P(S)
B) P(S) * P(N)
C) P(S) / P(N)
D) 2 * P(N) + ½
Question
Optimal beta can be defined in terms of payoffs (costs and values). Which of the following should increase optimal beta?

A) an increase in the value of a correct rejection
B) an increase in the value of a hit
C) an increase in the cost of a miss
D) a decrease in the cost of a false alarm
Question
Sluggish beta refers to:

A) the optimal value of beta does not change with payoffs
B) empirical beta values are affected by probabilities
C) as optimal beta is adjusted by probabilities or payoffs, there is a smaller shift in empirical beta values than is necessary
D) as optimal beta is adjusted by probabilities or payoffs, there is a larger shift in empirical beta values than is necessary
Question
Which of the following statements about sluggish beta is false?

A) sluggish beta is more evident for probabilities than payoffs
B) sluggish beta is not related to an observer's sensitivity
C) sluggish beta is a laboratory phenomenon and does not occur in the real world
D) sluggish beta means that people cannot adjust their criterion in an optimal manner
Question
A key contribution of signal detection theory is that it:

A) predicts the response criterion for a particular individual
B) predicts the sensitivity for a particular observer in a particular context
C) makes a clear distinction between response bias and sensitivity
D) shows that sensitivity is less important than response bias
Question
A Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curve plots:

A) hits against misses
B) hits against misses plus false alarms
C) false alarms against correct rejections plus hits
D) hits against false alarms
Question
How many points on the ROC can be generated from a 2 x 2 response matrix?

A) one
B) two
C) four
D) eight
Question
Points along a single ROC curve have the same:

A) bias
B) sensitivity
C) sensitivity and bias
D) false alarm rate
Question
Confidence levels is a:

A) useful method in shifting the criterion to an optimal level.
B) way to demonstrate risky beta setting
C) method for determining which observers are more confident in their judgments
D) better way to measure sensitivity
Question
A point on the positive diagonal on an ROC curve indicates which of the following:

A) extremely high sensitivity
B) a low criterion setting
C) chance responding; i.e., zero sensitivity)
D) optimal beta
Question
What happens when an ROC curve is plotted using z-scores?

A) the ROC curve becomes a straight line
B) the ROC curve becomes more shallow
C) the ROC curve becomes straight and shallow
D) the ROC curve cannot be represented using z-scores
Question
What does d' represent?

A) response bias
B) a non-parametric measure of bias
C) sensitivity
D) accuracy
Question
What does A' represent?

A) a non-parametric measure of response bias
B) a parametric measure of sensitivity
C) bias divided by sensitivity
D) a non-parametric measure of sensitivity
Question
As more dimensions are added, more total information is transmitted, but less information is transmitted per dimension.

A) integral dimensions
B) orthogonal dimensions
C) configural dimensions
D) correlated dimensions
Question
As more dimensions are added, the security of the channel improves, but Hs limits the amount of information that can be transmitted.

A) integral dimensions
B) orthogonal dimensions
C) correlated dimensions
D) configural dimensions
Question
Some dimensional pairs, particularly those spatial dimensions like the height and width of a rectangle_______ when they are combined (Garner, 1976).

A) collied
B) integrate
C) configure
D) separate
Question
When human operators transmit information along all dimensions of a two-dimensional (or more) stimulus, they must ________ between the dimensions. When they are asked to process one dimension and ignore changes on the others, they are _______.

A) separate, dividing attention
B) divide attention, focusing attention
C) choose, focusing attention
D) divide attention, selecting
Question
A study described by Swets (1998) indicated that radiologists provided with a "reading aid" (checklist of features and a response scale) were better able to distinguish a cancerous tumor from a benign cyst than radiologists without the aid. In SDT terms, this means the radiologists _______.

A) with the reading aid were more conservative than those without
B) with the reading aid were more liberal than those without
C) without the reading aid were more influenced by disease prevalence than those who used the aid
D) with the reading aid showed greater sensitivity than those without
Question
A physician has to weigh the value of human life against financial and other costs when making medical decisions. Rather than consider the values of hits and correct rejections and the costs of misses and false alarms, Swets suggested that physicians:

A) ignore the costs
B) develop a ratio of benefits and costs in the form of a statement
C) weight the values twice as much as the costs
D) ignore the costs and values and go with a gut judgment
Question
Which of the following approaches to eyewitness identification tends to reduce false alarms?

A) a sequential lineup
B) a simultaneous lineup
C) information the witness that the suspect might not be in the lineup
D) post-identification suggestions
Question
What is the main reason that alarm and alert systems have a low beta setting?

A) to avoid the "cry-wolf effect"
B) The cost of misses is typically greater than the cost of false alarms
C) the base rate of dangerous events is high
D) it is an inherent characteristic of automated detection systems
Question
Which of the following is not a solution to the mistrust caused by alarm false alarms?

A) use multiple alarm levels
B) keep the human in the loop
C) improve operator understanding of alarm false alarm rates
D) lower automated beta slightly
Question
In the experiment by Mackworth (1948), a pointer moved in small jumps around a clock face. At intermittent intervals a target event occurred (a double jump of the pointer). What was the key result?

A) the target event was detected
B) the target event was not detected
C) it became easier to detect the target event over time
D) it became harder to detect the target event over time
Question
The vigilance decrement is a result of:

A) a decrease in sensitivity
B) a decrease in the response criterion (more liberal)
C) an increase in the response criterion (more conservative)
D) both a decrease in sensitivity and an increase in the response criterion (more conservative)
Question
Sensitivity in a vigilance task is higher when:

A) a target's signal strength is reduced
B) there is uncertainty about time or location of the signal
C) targets and non-targets are presented simultaneously (rather than successively)
D) the event rate is increased
Question
Which of the following theories accounts for the observed shift in the response criterion over the course of a vigil?

A) arousal theory
B) expectancy theory
C) sustained demand theory
D) arousal theory and expectancy theory
Question
Which of the following theories accounts for the sensitivity decrement over the course of a vigil?

A) arousal theory
B) expectancy theory
C) sustained demand theory
D) arousal theory and expectancy theory
Question
Sensitivity in a vigilance task can be improved by:

A) requiring the inspector to remember the target stimulus
B) decreasing target salience
C) increasing the event rate
D) decreasing the event rate
Question
Which of the following is NOT an effective method for shifting the response criterion downward towards an optimal level:

A) introducing false signals
B) providing feedback to the inspector (knowledge of results)
C) training the observer to produce automating processing of the target
D) instructions about the costs of misses
Question
Which of the following does NOT occur in an absolute judgment task?

A) multiple stimuli are presented
B) the subject gives its stimuli its name
C) the stimuli lie along some continuum (e.g., different brightnesses)
D) the stimuli are presented in systematic order (e.g., from dimmest to brightest)
Question
What is the limit of human performance in an absolute judgment task, in terms of information transmitted (HT)

A) 2-3 bits
B) 2-3 stimulus levels
C) 7 plus or minus 2 bits
D) there is no limit
Question
What are the implications of the bow effect for human absolute judgment?

A) stimuli in the middle of a range are more likely to be misclassified
B) stimuli at the ends of a range are more likely to be misclassified
C) stimuli at the high end of the range are more likely to be misclassified
D) stimuli at the low to middle range are most likely to be misclassified
Question
Which of the following pairs of dimensions are most likely to be orthogonal?

A) weight and hair color
B) weight and height
C) weight and gender
D) height and gender
Question
As dimensions are combined orthogonally, what happens to human information transmission (i.e., total HT)?

A) it increases with the number of combined dimensions
B) it matches perfect performance
C) the number of bits per added dimension decreases
D) it increases with the number of combined dimensions and the number of bits per added dimension decreases
Question
As dimensions are combined redundantly (e.g., traffic light), what happens to human information transmission?

A) it increases but is limited by the total amount of information in the stimulus
B) it increases with each increase in the number of combined dimensions
C) it decreases
D) it decreases but Hloss increases
Question
When humans must identify or classify three or more stimuli at different levels along a sensory continuum, a task called absolute judgment, we find that performance is relatively ____ even when there may be substantial physical ????_______ between the levels

A) poor, differences
B) better, similarities
C) poor, similarities
D) better, differences
Question
In a graph demonstrating typical human performance in absolute judgment tasks, the level of the flat part or asymptote of the function indicates ____.

A) the maximum amount of information in the stimulus
B) the minimum of information transmitted.
C) the experimental results
D) the channel capacity of the operator
Question
SDT concepts are highly applicable to many engineering psychology problems (Fisher, Schweickert, & Drury, 2006). What are the two general benefits?

A) provides a diagnostic tool that implies different corrective actions
B) provides the operator with the ability to focus attention on one dimension
C) provides the ability to compare sensitivity and quality of performance
D) a and c
E) b and c
F) a and b
Question
Which of the following is an area of application of SDT?

A) medical diagnosis
B) eyewitness testimony
C) alarm design
D) all of the above
Question
Which of the following results describes configural dimensions?

A) the size of rectangles does not affect classification of their color
B) classification performance is affected by how the dimensions of the height and width of rectangles are paired
C) classification performance is not affected by how the dimensions of the height and width of rectangles are paired
D) the height of different sized rectangles is easily classified
Question
Which of the following does not affect the amount of information in a stimulus

A) the number of alternatives
B) its probability
C) its sequential context
D) its salience
Question
Discuss the difference between sensitivity and bias in conceptual terms.
Question
Describe what is meant by "sluggish beta".
Question
Draw an ROC curve and label the axes. Indicate sensitivity and bias. What happens to the curve when z-scores are used?
Question
Summarize the key differences between orthogonal dimensions and correlated dimensions.
Question
Summarize the methods in which are useful in shifting the criterion to an optimal level and briefly describe the four of them.
Question
Summarize the implications of multidimensional absolute judgement for sorting/classification tasks. Be sure to discuss configural dimensions and emergent features in your answer.
Question
Consider the application of signal detection theory to alarm systems. What is special about this situation, in a signal detection sense?
Question
What is a vigilance task and what is meant by the vigilance decrement?
Question
What are the key results in a vigilance task (consider both sensitivity and bias).
Question
Describe some techniques to combat the loss of vigilance (again consider both sensitivity and bias in your answer).
Question
Summarize the implication of vigilance inside and outside the laboratory and the differences between the two.
Question
In his classic 1956 paper, George Miller discussed various experiments that used the absolute judgment paradigm. He concluded that there appears to be a limit to classification in this task. Explain how he arrived at this conclusion.
Question
Describe how signal detection theory works and how it is relevant to many real-world tasks.
Question
Summarize the major theoretical accounts of vigilance.
Question
What is information, and how is it relevant to display design?
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Deck 2: Signal Detection and Absolute Judgement
1
What is the difference between a signal detection and identification (absolute judgement) task?

A) signal detection typically involves several stimulus states or categories, identification requires only two
B) there is no difference-the two terms are synonyms
C) identification typically involves several stimulus states or categories, signal detection requires only two
D) signal detection occurs at a later processing stage than identification
C
2
When is signal detection theory (SDT) applicable?

A) when there are two discrete states of the world: referred to as signal and noise
B) when there are no discrete states of the world
C) when there are several discrete states of the world
D) when a signal is presented and the user assigns a score to its magnitude
A
3
Which of the following is not one of the classes of joint events in signal detection theory (SDT)?

A) hit
B) false alarm
C) false miss
D) correct rejection
C
4
The quantification of information is influenced by three variables. Which of the following is NOT one of them?

A) the number of possible events that could occur, N
B) their sequential constraints, or the context in which they occur
C) the probabilities of those events
D) redundancy
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
If 20 signal trials and 10 noise trials were presented and there were 2 hits and 18 misses, which of the following is the correct hit rate?

A) 2/20 = .1
B) 18/20 = .9
C) 2/30 = .066
D) 18/30 = .60
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Can the value of evidence variable X ever exceed the criterion XC?

A) only when a signal is presented
B) only when noise is presented
C) when either signal or noise is presented
D) no, XC can never exceed evidence variable X
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
In SDT we represent signal and noise as a pair of distributions. Which of the following is a true statement concerning these distributions:

A) there is always some overlap between the distributions and the distributions are normal
B) there is no overlap between the distributions and the distributions are normal
C) there is always some overlap between the distributions are the distributions are not normal
D) there is no overlap between the distributions and the distributions are normal
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
In SDT we represent signal and noise as a pair of distributions. Which of the following describes conservative responding?

A) XC is placed to the left of where the distributions meet
B) the observer says "no" (signal absent) much more often than she says "yes" (signal present)
C) the observer says "yes" (signal present) much more often than he says "no" (signal absent)
D) XC is placed where the distributions meet
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
The ______ the difference between signals and noise, the greater these error probabilities become because the amount of variation in X resulting from randomness increases relative to the amount of energy in the signal.

A) smaller
B) bigger
C) more improbable
D) none of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Which of the following defines βopt in response to changes in signal probability?

A) P(N) / P(S)
B) P(S) * P(N)
C) P(S) / P(N)
D) 2 * P(N) + ½
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Optimal beta can be defined in terms of payoffs (costs and values). Which of the following should increase optimal beta?

A) an increase in the value of a correct rejection
B) an increase in the value of a hit
C) an increase in the cost of a miss
D) a decrease in the cost of a false alarm
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Sluggish beta refers to:

A) the optimal value of beta does not change with payoffs
B) empirical beta values are affected by probabilities
C) as optimal beta is adjusted by probabilities or payoffs, there is a smaller shift in empirical beta values than is necessary
D) as optimal beta is adjusted by probabilities or payoffs, there is a larger shift in empirical beta values than is necessary
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Which of the following statements about sluggish beta is false?

A) sluggish beta is more evident for probabilities than payoffs
B) sluggish beta is not related to an observer's sensitivity
C) sluggish beta is a laboratory phenomenon and does not occur in the real world
D) sluggish beta means that people cannot adjust their criterion in an optimal manner
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
A key contribution of signal detection theory is that it:

A) predicts the response criterion for a particular individual
B) predicts the sensitivity for a particular observer in a particular context
C) makes a clear distinction between response bias and sensitivity
D) shows that sensitivity is less important than response bias
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
A Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curve plots:

A) hits against misses
B) hits against misses plus false alarms
C) false alarms against correct rejections plus hits
D) hits against false alarms
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Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
How many points on the ROC can be generated from a 2 x 2 response matrix?

A) one
B) two
C) four
D) eight
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Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Points along a single ROC curve have the same:

A) bias
B) sensitivity
C) sensitivity and bias
D) false alarm rate
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Confidence levels is a:

A) useful method in shifting the criterion to an optimal level.
B) way to demonstrate risky beta setting
C) method for determining which observers are more confident in their judgments
D) better way to measure sensitivity
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
A point on the positive diagonal on an ROC curve indicates which of the following:

A) extremely high sensitivity
B) a low criterion setting
C) chance responding; i.e., zero sensitivity)
D) optimal beta
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
What happens when an ROC curve is plotted using z-scores?

A) the ROC curve becomes a straight line
B) the ROC curve becomes more shallow
C) the ROC curve becomes straight and shallow
D) the ROC curve cannot be represented using z-scores
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Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
What does d' represent?

A) response bias
B) a non-parametric measure of bias
C) sensitivity
D) accuracy
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Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
What does A' represent?

A) a non-parametric measure of response bias
B) a parametric measure of sensitivity
C) bias divided by sensitivity
D) a non-parametric measure of sensitivity
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Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
As more dimensions are added, more total information is transmitted, but less information is transmitted per dimension.

A) integral dimensions
B) orthogonal dimensions
C) configural dimensions
D) correlated dimensions
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
As more dimensions are added, the security of the channel improves, but Hs limits the amount of information that can be transmitted.

A) integral dimensions
B) orthogonal dimensions
C) correlated dimensions
D) configural dimensions
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Some dimensional pairs, particularly those spatial dimensions like the height and width of a rectangle_______ when they are combined (Garner, 1976).

A) collied
B) integrate
C) configure
D) separate
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
When human operators transmit information along all dimensions of a two-dimensional (or more) stimulus, they must ________ between the dimensions. When they are asked to process one dimension and ignore changes on the others, they are _______.

A) separate, dividing attention
B) divide attention, focusing attention
C) choose, focusing attention
D) divide attention, selecting
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
A study described by Swets (1998) indicated that radiologists provided with a "reading aid" (checklist of features and a response scale) were better able to distinguish a cancerous tumor from a benign cyst than radiologists without the aid. In SDT terms, this means the radiologists _______.

A) with the reading aid were more conservative than those without
B) with the reading aid were more liberal than those without
C) without the reading aid were more influenced by disease prevalence than those who used the aid
D) with the reading aid showed greater sensitivity than those without
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
A physician has to weigh the value of human life against financial and other costs when making medical decisions. Rather than consider the values of hits and correct rejections and the costs of misses and false alarms, Swets suggested that physicians:

A) ignore the costs
B) develop a ratio of benefits and costs in the form of a statement
C) weight the values twice as much as the costs
D) ignore the costs and values and go with a gut judgment
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Which of the following approaches to eyewitness identification tends to reduce false alarms?

A) a sequential lineup
B) a simultaneous lineup
C) information the witness that the suspect might not be in the lineup
D) post-identification suggestions
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
What is the main reason that alarm and alert systems have a low beta setting?

A) to avoid the "cry-wolf effect"
B) The cost of misses is typically greater than the cost of false alarms
C) the base rate of dangerous events is high
D) it is an inherent characteristic of automated detection systems
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Which of the following is not a solution to the mistrust caused by alarm false alarms?

A) use multiple alarm levels
B) keep the human in the loop
C) improve operator understanding of alarm false alarm rates
D) lower automated beta slightly
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
In the experiment by Mackworth (1948), a pointer moved in small jumps around a clock face. At intermittent intervals a target event occurred (a double jump of the pointer). What was the key result?

A) the target event was detected
B) the target event was not detected
C) it became easier to detect the target event over time
D) it became harder to detect the target event over time
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
The vigilance decrement is a result of:

A) a decrease in sensitivity
B) a decrease in the response criterion (more liberal)
C) an increase in the response criterion (more conservative)
D) both a decrease in sensitivity and an increase in the response criterion (more conservative)
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Sensitivity in a vigilance task is higher when:

A) a target's signal strength is reduced
B) there is uncertainty about time or location of the signal
C) targets and non-targets are presented simultaneously (rather than successively)
D) the event rate is increased
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Which of the following theories accounts for the observed shift in the response criterion over the course of a vigil?

A) arousal theory
B) expectancy theory
C) sustained demand theory
D) arousal theory and expectancy theory
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
Which of the following theories accounts for the sensitivity decrement over the course of a vigil?

A) arousal theory
B) expectancy theory
C) sustained demand theory
D) arousal theory and expectancy theory
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
Sensitivity in a vigilance task can be improved by:

A) requiring the inspector to remember the target stimulus
B) decreasing target salience
C) increasing the event rate
D) decreasing the event rate
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Which of the following is NOT an effective method for shifting the response criterion downward towards an optimal level:

A) introducing false signals
B) providing feedback to the inspector (knowledge of results)
C) training the observer to produce automating processing of the target
D) instructions about the costs of misses
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
Which of the following does NOT occur in an absolute judgment task?

A) multiple stimuli are presented
B) the subject gives its stimuli its name
C) the stimuli lie along some continuum (e.g., different brightnesses)
D) the stimuli are presented in systematic order (e.g., from dimmest to brightest)
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
What is the limit of human performance in an absolute judgment task, in terms of information transmitted (HT)

A) 2-3 bits
B) 2-3 stimulus levels
C) 7 plus or minus 2 bits
D) there is no limit
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
What are the implications of the bow effect for human absolute judgment?

A) stimuli in the middle of a range are more likely to be misclassified
B) stimuli at the ends of a range are more likely to be misclassified
C) stimuli at the high end of the range are more likely to be misclassified
D) stimuli at the low to middle range are most likely to be misclassified
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
Which of the following pairs of dimensions are most likely to be orthogonal?

A) weight and hair color
B) weight and height
C) weight and gender
D) height and gender
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
As dimensions are combined orthogonally, what happens to human information transmission (i.e., total HT)?

A) it increases with the number of combined dimensions
B) it matches perfect performance
C) the number of bits per added dimension decreases
D) it increases with the number of combined dimensions and the number of bits per added dimension decreases
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 65 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
As dimensions are combined redundantly (e.g., traffic light), what happens to human information transmission?

A) it increases but is limited by the total amount of information in the stimulus
B) it increases with each increase in the number of combined dimensions
C) it decreases
D) it decreases but Hloss increases
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45
When humans must identify or classify three or more stimuli at different levels along a sensory continuum, a task called absolute judgment, we find that performance is relatively ____ even when there may be substantial physical ????_______ between the levels

A) poor, differences
B) better, similarities
C) poor, similarities
D) better, differences
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46
In a graph demonstrating typical human performance in absolute judgment tasks, the level of the flat part or asymptote of the function indicates ____.

A) the maximum amount of information in the stimulus
B) the minimum of information transmitted.
C) the experimental results
D) the channel capacity of the operator
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47
SDT concepts are highly applicable to many engineering psychology problems (Fisher, Schweickert, & Drury, 2006). What are the two general benefits?

A) provides a diagnostic tool that implies different corrective actions
B) provides the operator with the ability to focus attention on one dimension
C) provides the ability to compare sensitivity and quality of performance
D) a and c
E) b and c
F) a and b
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48
Which of the following is an area of application of SDT?

A) medical diagnosis
B) eyewitness testimony
C) alarm design
D) all of the above
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49
Which of the following results describes configural dimensions?

A) the size of rectangles does not affect classification of their color
B) classification performance is affected by how the dimensions of the height and width of rectangles are paired
C) classification performance is not affected by how the dimensions of the height and width of rectangles are paired
D) the height of different sized rectangles is easily classified
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50
Which of the following does not affect the amount of information in a stimulus

A) the number of alternatives
B) its probability
C) its sequential context
D) its salience
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51
Discuss the difference between sensitivity and bias in conceptual terms.
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52
Describe what is meant by "sluggish beta".
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53
Draw an ROC curve and label the axes. Indicate sensitivity and bias. What happens to the curve when z-scores are used?
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54
Summarize the key differences between orthogonal dimensions and correlated dimensions.
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55
Summarize the methods in which are useful in shifting the criterion to an optimal level and briefly describe the four of them.
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56
Summarize the implications of multidimensional absolute judgement for sorting/classification tasks. Be sure to discuss configural dimensions and emergent features in your answer.
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57
Consider the application of signal detection theory to alarm systems. What is special about this situation, in a signal detection sense?
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58
What is a vigilance task and what is meant by the vigilance decrement?
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59
What are the key results in a vigilance task (consider both sensitivity and bias).
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60
Describe some techniques to combat the loss of vigilance (again consider both sensitivity and bias in your answer).
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61
Summarize the implication of vigilance inside and outside the laboratory and the differences between the two.
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62
In his classic 1956 paper, George Miller discussed various experiments that used the absolute judgment paradigm. He concluded that there appears to be a limit to classification in this task. Explain how he arrived at this conclusion.
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63
Describe how signal detection theory works and how it is relevant to many real-world tasks.
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64
Summarize the major theoretical accounts of vigilance.
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65
What is information, and how is it relevant to display design?
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