| Literature DB >> 26840072 |
Kobi Snitz1, Anat Arzi1, Merav Jacobson1, Lavi Secundo1, Kineret Weissler1, Adi Yablonka1.
Abstract
We define a new measure of sensory stimuli which has the following properties: It is cross modal, performance based, robust, and well defined. We interpret this measure as the intricacy or complexity of the stimuli, yet its validity is independent of its interpretation. We tested the validity and cross modality of our measure using three olfactory and one visual experiment. In order to test the link between our measure and cognitive performance we also conducted an additional visual experiment. We found that our measure is correlated with the results of the well-established Rapid Serial Visual Presentation masking experiment. Specifically, ranking stimuli according to our measure was correlated at r = 0.75 (p < 0.002) with masking effectiveness. Thus, our novel measure of sensory stimuli provides a new quantitative tool for the study of sensory processing.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26840072 PMCID: PMC4740424 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0147449
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Rank Order correlation between intricacy ordering of the stimuli according to 10000 randomly selected pairs of 30 descriptors from data set A; Blue histogram is actual data with mean correlation of 0.8075 and red histogram is shuffled data with mean correlation of r = 0.2563; A two-sample Kolmogorov-Smirnov test comparing the two distributions has p value p < 10−100 that the distributions are equal.
Fig 2Number of odor variance vectors in a sum vs. average correlation between the sums: data sets A (blue), B (red), C(green), D(black).
Fig 3Brodatz figures listed in order of intricacy.
Fig 4Data sets A, B, C and D heat maps of Wilcoxon correlation between descriptor variance vectors.