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fechner (version 1.0-3)

wish: Wish's Morse-code-like Data

Description

Wish's (1967) Morse-code-like data of discrimination probabilities among $32$ auditory Morse-code-like signals.

Usage

wish

Arguments

Format

The wish data frame consists of $32$ rows and $32$ columns, representing the Morse-code-like signals (see ‘Details’) presented first and second, respectively. Each number, a numeric, in the data frame gives the relative frequency of subjects who responded ‘different’ to the row signal followed by the column signal.

Source

Wish, M. (1967) A model for the perception of Morse code-like signals. Human Factors, 9, 529--540.

Details

The $32$ Morse-code-like signals in Wish's (1967) study were $5$-element sequences $T\_1P_\1T\_2P\_2T\_3$, where $T$ stands for a tone (short or long) and $P$ stands for a pause ($1$ or $3$ units long). As in Dzhafarov and Colonius (2006), the stimuli are labeled $A$, $B$, ..., $Z$, $0$, $1$, ..., $5$, in the order they are presented in Wish's (1967) article.

Wish's (1967) $32x32$ Morse-code-like data gives the same-different judgements of subjects in response to the $32x32$ auditorily presented pairs of codes.

References

Dzhafarov, E. N. and Colonius, H. (2006) Reconstructing distances among objects from their discriminability. Psychometrika, 71, 365--386.

Dzhafarov, E. N. and Colonius, H. (2007) Dissimilarity cumulation theory and subjective metrics. Journal of Mathematical Psychology, 51, 290--304.

Uenlue, A. and Kiefer, T. and Dzhafarov, E. N. (2009) Fechnerian scaling in R: The package fechner. Journal of Statistical Software, 31(6), 1--24. URL http://www.jstatsoft.org/v31/i06/.

See Also

check.data for checking data format; check.regular for checking regular minimality/maximality; fechner, the main function for Fechnerian scaling. See also morse for Rothkopf's Morse code data, and fechner-package for general information about this package.