The reason for equating psychology to the problem of defining stimuli can be stated thus: the complete definition of the stimulus to a given response involves the specification of all the transformations of the environment, both internal and external,... Psychophysics - Page viide Stanley Smith Stevens - 329 pagesAperçu limité - À propos de ce livre
| Arthur I. Rubin, Jacqueline Elder, United States. National Bureau of Standards - 1980 - 318 pages
...problem must be solved in psychology— defining the stimulus. His reasons are expressed as follows: The complete definition of the stimulus to a given...internal and external, that leave the response invariant. This specification of the condition of invariance would entail, of course, a complete understanding... | |
| 1980 - 344 pages
...problem must be solved in psychology— defining the stimulus. His reasons are expressed as follows: The complete definition of the stimulus to a given...internal and external, that leave the response invariant. This specification of the condition of invariance would entail, of course, a complete understanding... | |
| Arthur I. Rubin, Jacqueline Elder, United States. National Bureau of Standards - 1980 - 324 pages
...problem must be solved in psychology—defining the stimulus. His reasons are expressed as follows: The complete definition of the stimulus to a given...involves the specification of all the transformations of He illustrates this point by examining a well-researched area—hearing. Under what conditions do people... | |
| Steven Yantis - 2004 - 830 pages
...observed that "In a sense there is only one problem of psychophysics. the dctinition of the stimulus [T]he complete definition of the stimulus to a given...the specification of all the transformations of the environmem. both imernal and external. that leave the response invariam. This specification of the... | |
| Steven Yantis - 2002 - 816 pages
...that "In a sense there is only one problem of psychophysics, the definition of the stimulus. . . . [T]he complete definition of the stimulus to a given...internal and external, that leave the response invariant. This specification of the conditions of invariance would entail, of course, a complete understanding... | |
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