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How do people judge the order of two nearly simultaneous stimuli, such as a light and a tone?We consider this question in the context of a general independent-channels model that incorporates most existing models of order perception as special cases, and which has been implicitly assumed when temporal-order judgments are used to study perceptual latency.In the model, a "decision function" converts a difference in central "arrival times" of two sensory signals into an order judgment.The psychometric function for order is regarded as a distribution function, and can be represented additively in terms of the central arrival latencies and the decision function.Various distinct decision functions correspond to various previously proposed mechanisms involving a "perceptual moment," attention switching, a threshold for arrival-time dif ferences, and so forth (Section II).One test of the model is to compare reaction-time measurements with order judgments (Section III).Discrepancies can be understood by an analysis of the concept of perceptual latency that recognizes the internal response to a pulse as being spread out in time (Section IV).IA glossary of symbols and abbreviations may be found at the end of the text.
Sternberg et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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