Bross M
Percept Mot Skills. 1979 Feb;48(1):187-94. doi: 10.2466/pms.1979.48.1.187.
This experiment compared the visual sensory sensitivity of deaf and hearing subjects in a signal detection paradigm. Subjects (ns = 6) were required to give forced-choice responses to a brightness discrimination task under three stimulus probability conditions (0.25, 0.50, and 0.75). A total of 1,800 trials were given to each subject and utilized to construct isosensitivity functions and d' and Beta, indices for sensory sensitivity and response bias, respectively. The results showed that no enhanced sensory sensitivity is present for these deaf children and questions the classical sensory compensation hypothesis. Furthermore, the deaf subjects responded in a relatively bias-free manner to variations in stimulus probability.
本实验在信号检测范式下比较了聋人和听力正常受试者的视觉感官敏感性。受试者(n = 6)被要求在三种刺激概率条件(0.25、0.50和0.75)下对亮度辨别任务做出强制选择反应。每个受试者共进行了1800次试验,并用于构建等敏感性函数以及d'和β,分别作为感官敏感性和反应偏差的指标。结果表明,这些聋童不存在增强的感官敏感性,这对经典的感官补偿假说提出了质疑。此外,聋人受试者对刺激概率的变化反应相对无偏差。