Probabilistic Models for Sequential Taste Effects in Triadic Choice

Sequential effects and positional response bias are accounted for in new models for triadic choice. These models were applied to data on distilled water and dilute NaCl solutions by use of the triangular and 3-alternative forced-choice methods with 4 participants. The concept of a "conditional...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance 1995-10, Vol.21 (5), p.1088-1097
Hauptverfasser: Ennis, Daniel M, O'Mahony, Michael
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O'Mahony, Michael
description Sequential effects and positional response bias are accounted for in new models for triadic choice. These models were applied to data on distilled water and dilute NaCl solutions by use of the triangular and 3-alternative forced-choice methods with 4 participants. The concept of a "conditional stimulus" is introduced to describe stimuli that are created partially by prior oral environmental effects. The effects of 1 or 2 prior stimuli on triadic choice was evaluated. The triad models used were based on a Thurstonian variant of M. W. Richardson's (1938) method of triads and a Thurstonian model for first choice among 3 possibly different stimuli. Maximum likelihood estimates of the scale values for conditional stimuli and bias parameters showed that it was necessary only to consider 1 prior stimulus. It was also shown that salt concentration differences are not the physical analog of the mental representations for the conditional stimuli. The results strongly suggest a water taste to salt taste continuum.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); MEDLINE; EBSCOhost APA PsycARTICLES
subjects Adult
Association Learning
Attention
Choice Behavior
Decision Making
Female
Human
Humans
Male
Models, Statistical
Psychology
Psychophysics
Sodium Chloride
Statistical Probability
Stimulus Discrimination
Stimulus Parameters
Taste
Taste Perception
Taste Threshold
title Probabilistic Models for Sequential Taste Effects in Triadic Choice
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