Capítulo de livro

Experimental Discrimination of the World's Simplest and Most Antipodal Models: The Parallel-Serial Issue

2011; World Scientific; Linguagem: Inglês

10.1142/9789814368018_0011

ISSN

1793-107X

Autores

James T. Townsend, Haiyuan Yang, Devin Burns,

Tópico(s)

Color perception and design

Resumo

Advanced Series on Mathematical PsychologyDescriptive and Normative Approaches to Human Behavior, pp. 271-302 (2011) No AccessExperimental Discrimination of the World's Simplest and Most Antipodal Models: The Parallel-Serial IssueJames T. Townsend, Haiyuan Yang, and Devin M. BurnsJames T. TownsendIndiana University, USA, Haiyuan YangIndiana University, USA, and Devin M. BurnsIndiana University, USAhttps://doi.org/10.1142/9789814368018_0011Cited by:2 PreviousNext AboutSectionsPDF/EPUB ToolsAdd to favoritesDownload CitationsTrack CitationsRecommend to Library ShareShare onFacebookTwitterLinked InRedditEmail Abstract: In general cognitive systems are comprised of more than a single subprocess. The arrangement and linkages of these subprocesses are known as "mental architecture". The simplest non-trivial systems or manner of carrying out multi-tasking on discrete items is found in two diametrically opposite models that have been classically used to describe the architecture of this processing. Serial systems allow only one subsystem at a time to operate. The antithesis of serial processing assumes that all subsystems operate simultaneously, or in parallel. Mathematical characterizations of these and other architectures have been developed. Models of serial vs. parallel systems, seemingly so distinct, are shockingly hard to tell apart with experimental methodology. Here we review the history of psychological work on the subject, both theoretical and experimental. We also describe three additional properties of systems that must be considered simultaneously (and have often been conflated with architecture): stopping rule, dependency, and capacity. We present formal mathematical descriptions that can allow us to examine in which cases the two will be indistinguishable, and summarize successful paradigms for differentiating the models in the context of various psychological tasks. FiguresReferencesRelatedDetailsCited By 2The balance between vision and touchDevin M. Burns1 Oct 2019 | Journal of Mathematical Psychology, Vol. 92A new perspective on binaural integration using response time methodology: super capacity revealed in conditions of binaural masking releaseJennifer J. Lentz, Yuan He and James T. Townsend22 August 2014 | Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, Vol. 8 Descriptive and Normative Approaches to Human BehaviorMetrics History PDF download

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