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Journal Article

Citation

Marks LE. J. Exp. Psychol. Hum. Percept. Perform. 1993; 19(2): 227-249.

Affiliation

John B. Pierce Laboratory, New Haven, Connecticut 06519.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1993, American Psychological Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

8473837

Abstract

Stimulus context (the distribution of stimulus values) can strongly affect both perception and judgment. In 14 experiments, the method of magnitude estimation revealed 2 fundamentally different kinds of context effect in loudness. An assimilative effect dominated when stimuli varied unidimensionally (in intensity only). But a contrasting, or adaptation-like, effect dominated when stimuli varied multidimensionally (in frequency and intensity). In Experiment 15, direct loudness comparison revealed a potent, adaptational process specific to the signal frequency. Taken together, these and other results are compatible with the view that loudness perception and judgment reflect the net outcome of 2 different contextual processes: a relatively early (though probably not peripheral) process of perceptual adaptation and a later process of response-dependent assimilation.


Language: en

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