Abstract

The multidimensional generalization of signal detection theory known as General Recognition Theory (GRT, Ashby & Townsend, Psychological Review, 93, 154-179 1986) has been used to model and characterize the ways in which changes in encoded perceptual information and the application of decisional operators can produce patterns in behavior that are consistent with notions such as configural processing and representation. In particular, a set of studies (e.g., Cornes et al.,, 2011; Wenger & Ingvalson; 2002, 2003) have shown how decisional influences might exert themselves in situations of configural perception, such that effects such as the Thatcher illusion can be obtained by way of shifts in decisional criteria. The present investigation brought to bear the combined tools of GRT and Systems Factorial Technology (SFT, Little et al.,, 2017; Townsend & Nozawa, 1995) with a classical illusion, to show that it is possible to induce a shift in a decisional criterion by way of varying payoffs and that this shift is accompanied by regular changes in the workload capacity statistic. The combined sets of analyses on the same stimuli reveal orderly effects on the decisional criteria (i.e., the signal detection parameter c), report independence (suggesting perceptual independence), invariant measures of sensitivity (i.e., the signal detection parameter [Formula: see text]),and exhaustive parallel processing accompanied by super capacity. We therefore propose wider use of the combined sets of tools, further exploration of the ability of decisional alterations to affect processing times while leaving accuracy largely unscathed, and reaching out to explore more of the information processing mechanisms of classical illusions.

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