
Julia Trommershäuser (ed.)
et al.
Published online:
20 September 2012
Published in print:
14 September 2011
Online ISBN:
9780199918379
Print ISBN:
9780195387247
Contents
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INTRODUCTION INTRODUCTION
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INTEGRATION OF ARBITRARY FEATURES WHEN PERFORMING A SET OF PERCEPTUAL DISCRIMINATION TASKS INTEGRATION OF ARBITRARY FEATURES WHEN PERFORMING A SET OF PERCEPTUAL DISCRIMINATION TASKS
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INTEGRATION OF VISION AND MEMORY IN A SENSORIMOTOR TASK INTEGRATION OF VISION AND MEMORY IN A SENSORIMOTOR TASK
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SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
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REFERENCES REFERENCES
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Chapter
CHAPTER 15 Optimality Principles Apply to a Broad Range of Information Integration Problems in Perception and Action
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Pages
279–291
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Published:September 2011
Cite
Michel, Melchi M., and others, 'Optimality Principles Apply to a Broad Range of Information Integration Problems in Perception and Action', in Julia Trommershäuser, Konrad Kording, and Michael S. Landy (eds), Sensory Cue Integration, Computational Neuroscience Series (2011; online edn, Oxford Academic, 20 Sept. 2012), https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195387247.003.0015, accessed 7 May 2025.
Abstract
This chapter describes two research projects that evaluated whether people's judgments are predicted by those of the standard ideal observer in more complex situations. The first project, conducted by Michel and Jacobs (2008), examined how people learn to combine information from arbitrary visual features when performing a set of perceptual discrimination tasks. The second project, conducted by Brouwer and Knill (2007, 2009), examined how people combine location information from vision and memory in a sensorimotor task.
Keywords:
judgments, standard ideal observer, information integration, visual features, perceptual discrimination, location, vision, memory
Collection:
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