Maximilian Karl Scharf, Anna Warzybok, Sabine Hochmuth, Birger Kollmeier
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A consistency measure for psychometric measurements.
Adaptive tracking procedures in psychophysics may produce erroneous, "untypical" results and non-converging tracks due to, e.g., inattention of the test subject or external disturbances. This paper presents a multi-state psychometric model, which is used to rate the outcome of psychometric measurement procedures with a consistency measure. The consistency measure may be used for a post hoc, automated consistency estimation for any psychometric measurement procedure that can be modeled with a sigmoid psychometric function. The model calculates the log likelihood difference between single and two interleaved psychometric functions, potentially underlying a recorded adaptive track. A binary classifier was tested with a range of candidates for consistency measures with simulated, inconsistent tracks, and expert ratings of empirical tracks. The proposed consistency measure was identified as the best candidate to classify inconsistent tracks, while expert ratings were best predicted with the spectrum of the stimulus level, which is shown to be a suboptimal predictor of consistency. A threshold of the proposed measure for the German matrix sentence test is 10 to test for inconsistency, with a sensitivity of 60% and a specificity of 80%.
期刊介绍:
Since 1929 The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America has been the leading source of theoretical and experimental research results in the broad interdisciplinary study of sound. Subject coverage includes: linear and nonlinear acoustics; aeroacoustics, underwater sound and acoustical oceanography; ultrasonics and quantum acoustics; architectural and structural acoustics and vibration; speech, music and noise; psychology and physiology of hearing; engineering acoustics, transduction; bioacoustics, animal bioacoustics.