Relaxed forced choice improves performance of visual quality assessment methods
Mohsen Jenadeleh, Johannes Zagermann, Harald Reiterer, Ulf-Dietrich, Reips, Raouf Hamzaoui, Dietmar Saupe

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that allowing a 'not sure' option in forced choice visual quality assessments reduces cognitive load and improves model accuracy, based on a large crowdsourcing experiment comparing response formats.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive comparison of traditional and relaxed forced choice formats in visual quality assessment through extensive crowdsourcing data.
Findings
'Not sure' option reduces mental load in assessments.
Models with 'not sure' option better fit ground truth data.
Response formats produce statistically different models.
Abstract
In image quality assessment, a collective visual quality score for an image or video is obtained from the individual ratings of many subjects. One commonly used format for these experiments is the two-alternative forced choice method. Two stimuli with the same content but differing visual quality are presented sequentially or side-by-side. Subjects are asked to select the one of better quality, and when uncertain, they are required to guess. The relaxed alternative forced choice format aims to reduce the cognitive load and the noise in the responses due to the guessing by providing a third response option, namely, ``not sure''. This work presents a large and comprehensive crowdsourcing experiment to compare these two response formats: the one with the ``not sure'' option and the one without it. To provide unambiguous ground truth for quality evaluation, subjects were shown pairs of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsImage and Video Quality Assessment · Multisensory perception and integration · Visual perception and processing mechanisms
