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First published in 1986. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
This volume is based on the 10th annual Harvard Symposium for the
Quantitative Analysis of Behavior. The first Harvard Symposium was
devoted to signal-detection analyses of reinforcement and choice
behavior. The present volume reprises the original signal-
detection theme, incorporating additional insights based on
experimental and theoretical analyses undertaken during the years
separating the two conferences. This collection illustrates how
signal-detection theory, first advanced to account for performance
in threshold-level sensory discrimination, has broadened to
encompass a variety of psychological problems involving
discriminations between confusable stimuli. The approach is
quantitative in its emphasis on estimation of independent
parameters of the discrimination process, and analytical in its
efforts to separate the determiners of discriminability and bias
and to identify the mechanisms of their operation. Above all, the
book is broadly integrative in its approach to diverse problems.
This volume is based on the 10th annual Harvard Symposium for the
Quantitative Analysis of Behavior. The first Harvard Symposium was
devoted to signal-detection analyses of reinforcement and choice
behavior. The present volume reprises the original signal-
detection theme, incorporating additional insights based on
experimental and theoretical analyses undertaken during the years
separating the two conferences.
This volume is based on the 10th annual Harvard Symposium for the
Quantitative Analysis of Behavior. The first Harvard Symposium was
devoted to signal-detection analyses of reinforcement and choice
behavior. The present volume reprises the original signal-
detection theme, incorporating additional insights based on
experimental and theoretical analyses undertaken during the years
separating the two conferences.
This collection illustrates how signal-detection theory, first
advanced to account for performance in threshold-level sensory
discrimination, has broadened to encompass a variety of
psychological problems involving discriminations between confusable
stimuli. The approach is quantitative in its emphasis on estimation
of independent parameters of the discrimination process, and
analytical in its efforts to separate the determiners of
discriminability and bias and to identify the mechanisms of their
operation. Above all, the book is broadly integrative in its
approach to diverse problems. This volume is based on the 10th
annual Harvard Symposium for the Quantitative Analysis of Behavior.
The first Harvard Symposium was devoted to signal-detection
analyses of reinforcement and choice behavior. The present volume
reprises the original signal- detection theme, incorporating
additional insights based on experimental and theoretical analyses
undertaken during the years separating the two conferences.
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