Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editor's Statement
- Foreword
- Preface
- Measurement Theory
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Relations
- Chapter 2 Fundamental Measurement, Derived Measurement, and the Uniqueness Problem
- Chapter 3 Three Representation Problems: Ordinal, Extensive, and Difference Measurement
- Chapter 4 Applications to Psychophysical Scaling
- Chapter 5 Product Structures
- Chapter 6 Nontransitive Indifference, Probabilistic Consistency, and Measurement without Numbers
- Chapter 7 Decisionmaking under Risk or Uncertainty
- Chapter 8 Subjective Probability
- Author Index
- Subject Index
Chapter 4 - Applications to Psychophysical Scaling
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editor's Statement
- Foreword
- Preface
- Measurement Theory
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Relations
- Chapter 2 Fundamental Measurement, Derived Measurement, and the Uniqueness Problem
- Chapter 3 Three Representation Problems: Ordinal, Extensive, and Difference Measurement
- Chapter 4 Applications to Psychophysical Scaling
- Chapter 5 Product Structures
- Chapter 6 Nontransitive Indifference, Probabilistic Consistency, and Measurement without Numbers
- Chapter 7 Decisionmaking under Risk or Uncertainty
- Chapter 8 Subjective Probability
- Author Index
- Subject Index
Summary
The Psychophysical Problem
Loudness
A sound has a variety of physical characteristics. For example, a pure tone can be described by its physical intensity (energy transported), its frequency (in cycles per second), its duration, and so on. The same sound has various psychological characteristics. For example, how loud does it seem? What emotional meaning does it portray? What images does it suggest? Since the middle of the nineteenth century, scientists have tried to study the relationships between the physical characteristics of stimuli like sounds and their psychological characteristics. Some psychological characteristics might have little relationship to physical ones. For example, emotional meaning probably has little relation to the physical intensity of a sound, but rather it may be related to past experiences, as, for example, with the sound of a siren. Other psychological characteristics seem to be related in fairly regular ways to physical characteristics. Such sensations as loudness are an example. Psychophysics is the discipline that studies various psychological sensations such as loudness, brightness, apparent length, and apparent duration, and their relations to physical stimuli. It attempts to scale or measure psychological sensations on the basis of corresponding physical stimuli. In this chapter, we shall describe some of the history of psychophysical scaling and its applications or potential applications to measurement of noise pollution, of attitudes, of utility, etc., and we shall discuss ways to put psychophysical scaling on a firm measurement-theoretic foundation. We shall concentrate on loudness.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Measurement TheoryWith Applications to Decisionmaking, Utility, and the Social Sciences, pp. 149 - 196Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1984