On 2017 May 25, Lydia Maniatis commented:
Comment 2:Below are some of the assumptions entailed by the sixty-year-old "signal detection theory," as described by Nevin (1969) in a review of Green and Swets (1966), the founding text of sdt.
"Signal detection theory [has proposed] an indirectly derived measure of sensitivity...This measure is defined as the separation...between a pair of hypothesized normal density functions representing the internally observed effects of signal plus noise, an noise alone."
In other words, for any image an investigator might present, the nervous system of the observer generates a pair of probability functions related to the presence of absence of a feature of that image that the investigator has in mind and which he/she has instructed the observer to watch for. The observer perceives this feature on the basis of some form of knowledge of these functions. These functions have no perceptual correlate, nor is the observer aware of them, nor is there any explanation of how or why they would be represented at the neural level.
"The subject's pre-experimental biases, his expectations based on instructions and the a priori probability of signal, and the effects of the consequences of responding, are all subsumed under the parameter beta. The subject is assumed to transform his observations into a likelihood ratio, which is the ratio of the probability density of an observation if a signal is present to the probability density of that observation in the absence of signal. He is assumed, further, to partition the likelihood ratio continuum so that one response occurs if the likelihood ratio exceeds beta, and the other if it is less than beta."
Wow. None of these assumptions have any relationship to perceptual experience. Are they in the least plausible, or in any conceivable way testable? They underlie much of the data collection in contemporary vision science. They are dutifully taught by instructors; learning such material clearly requires that students set aside any critical thinking instincts.
The chief impetus behind SDT seems to have been a desire for mathematical neatness, rather than for the achievement of insight and discovery.
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