Everything about Psychophysics totally explained
Psychophysics is a subdiscipline of
psychology dealing with the relationship between physical
stimuli and their
subjective correlates, or
percepts.
History
Many of the classical techniques and theory of psychophysics were formulated in 1860 when
Gustav Theodor Fechner published
Elemente der Psychophysik. He coined the term "psychophysics", and described research relating physical stimuli with how they're perceived and set out the philosophical foundations of the field. Fechner wanted to develop a theory that could relate matter to the mind, by describing the relationship between the world and the way it's perceived Fechner's work formed the basis of psychology as a
science.
Wilhelm Wundt, the founder of the first laboratory for psychological research, built upon Fechner's work.
One author has argued that the medieval Persian scholar
Alhacen should be considered the "founder of psychophysics." Although al-Haytham made many subjective reports regarding vision, there's no evidence that he used quantitative psychophysical techniques and such claims have been rebuffed.
Psychophysicists usually employ experimental stimuli that can be objectively measured, such as pure tones varying in intensity, or lights varying in luminance. All the
senses have been studied:
vision,
hearing,
touch (including
skin and
enteric perception),
taste,
smell, and the sense of time.
Regardless of the sensory domain, there are three main topics in the psychophysical classification scheme: absolute thresholds, discrimination thresholds, and scaling.
The most common use of psychophysics is in producing scales of human experience of various aspects of physical stimuli. Take for an example the physical stimulus of frequency of sound. Frequency of a sound is measured in
hertz, cycles per second. But human experience of the frequencies of sound isn't the same as the frequencies. For one thing, there's a frequency below which no sounds can be heard, no matter how intense they're (around 20 Hz depending on the individual) and there's a frequency above which no sounds can be heard, no matter how intense they're (around 20,000 Hz, again depending on the individual). For another, doubling the frequency of a sound (for example, from 100 Hz to 200 Hz) doesn't lead to a doubling of experience. The perceptual experience of the frequency of sound is called
pitch, and it's measured by psychophysicists in
mels.
More analytical approaches allow the use of psychophysical methods to study neurophysiological properties and sensory processing mechanisms. This is of particular importance in human research, where other (more invasive) methods are not used due to
ethical reasons.
Areas of investigation include
sensory thresholds, methods of measurement of
sensitivity, and
signal detection theory.
Thresholds
A threshold (or limen), is the point of intensity at which the participant can just detect the presence of, or difference in, a stimulus. Stimuli with intensities below the threshold are considered not detectable, however stimuli at values close to threshold will often be detectable some proportion of the time. Due to this, a threshold is considered to be the point at which a stimulus, or change in a stimulus, is detected some proportion
p of the time.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Psychophysics'.
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