Non-symbolic estimation of big and small ratios with accurate and noisy feedback
Nicola J. Morton, Matt Grice, Simon Kemp, Randolph C. Grace

TL;DR
This study explores how people learn to estimate ratios and differences using non-symbolic feedback, showing high accuracy and flexibility in perceptual computation.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel comparison of big and small ratio scales in perceptual tasks using non-symbolic feedback.
Findings
Subjects learned to estimate big and small ratios and differences with high accuracy.
Subjects effectively ignored added noise in feedback during estimation tasks.
Results suggest the perceptual system is flexible in non-symbolic computation.
Abstract
The ratio of two magnitudes can take one of two values depending on the order they are operated on: a ‘big’ ratio of the larger to smaller magnitude, or a ‘small’ ratio of the smaller to larger. Although big and small ratio scales have different metric properties and carry divergent predictions for perceptual comparison tasks, no psychophysical studies have directly compared them. Two experiments are reported in which subjects implicitly learned to compare pairs of brightnesses and line lengths by non-symbolic feedback based on the scaled big ratio, small ratio or difference of the magnitudes presented. Results of Experiment 1 showed all three operations were learned quickly and estimated with a high degree of accuracy that did not significantly differ across groups or between intensive and extensive modalities, though regressions on individual data suggested an overall predisposition…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCognitive and developmental aspects of mathematical skills · Visual perception and processing mechanisms · Sensory Analysis and Statistical Methods
