On 2016 May 22, Lydia Maniatis commented:
(Fifth comment). Some more thoughts: Ariely's main concepts - sets, similarity - are vague. He could have explained what, for the purpose of his claims, he intends them to mean. But he doesn't - they're just placeholders.
What, for Ariely, is a set? He refers to "a collection of items." He challenges the idea that "representations of complex scenes still consist of many individual representations" suggesting instead that in many cases where "proximal items are somewhat similar the representation of a set may contain information about...the average size, color, orientation, aspect ratio, and shape of the items in the set and essentially no information about individual items."
So it would seem that Ariely's working definition of a "set" is a collection of proximal, somewhat similar items (which may differ in pretty much any respect, including shape). So vague - the description "somewhat similar" is absolutely without content - as to be practically useless, and as noted earlier, many or most of the implications are falsifiable. As noted above, even the author's own attempt to explain the alternative Ebbinghaus groups involves a contradiction of that definition.
In my discussion of the arbitrary methodological choices, I didn't mention the main one, which is the decision to use black circles and to focus on size. The reason he gives is that "such sets have the advantage that the members do not fall into distinct categories, as they could if they varied in color, shape, or orientation." So they would be "sets," but variations other than strictly size would be "disadvantageous." In what sense would they be disadvantageous? There's no discussion about this; it seems like an evasion.
Even limiting our discussion to size, we could introduce intractable complications that even Ariely's "novel paradigms" couldn't make fit. What if each circle consisted of a set of concentric circles, variously spaced? Would we construct an average of the envelope, an average of each subset of circles? What if the large group of circles, due to a configurational accident, visually grouped into two or three subsets (as may indeed have happened)? Would we have three different averages, and would these be averaged in turn? Etc.
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