Publication | Closed Access
The race model inequality: Interpreting a geometric measure of the amount of violation.
118
Citations
46
References
2006
Year
Race RelationRace LawNeurolinguisticsNeural RecodingDiscriminationEducationAttentionSocial SciencesRaceNeurodynamicsGeometric MeasureSignal DetectionCognitive NeurosciencePsychophysicsMultisensory IntegrationStatisticsRacial EquityRace ModelSocial InequalityCognitive ScienceRacial JusticeExperimental PsychologyRace Model InequalityRt Distribution FunctionComputational NeuroscienceSociologyNeuroscienceNumerical Index
An inequality by J. O. Miller (1982) has become the standard tool to test the race model for redundant signals reaction times (RTs), as an alternative to a neural summation mechanism.It stipulates that the RT distribution function to redundant stimuli is never larger than the sum of the distribution functions for 2 single stimuli.When many different experimental conditions are to be compared, a numerical index of violation is very desirable.Widespread practice is to take a certain area with contours defined by the distribution functions for single and redundant stimuli.Here this area is shown to equal the difference between 2 mean RT values.This result provides an intuitive interpretation of the index and makes it amenable to simple statistical testing.An extension of this approach to 3 redundant signals is presented.
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