Absolute Judgement: IE-311 Ergonomics 2
Absolute Judgement: IE-311 Ergonomics 2
IE-311
Ergonomics 2
Absolute judgement occurs when an observer assigns a
stimulus into one of multiple categories along a sensory
dimension.
Examples:
Inspector of wool quality who must categorize
Definition a given specimen into one of several quality
levels.
Driver who must interpret and recognize the
color of a display symbol appearing on his
map display.
Applying
Absolute
Judgement
Bit – unit of information, stands for binary digit, coinage
by John Tukey at IBM, which was taken up by Claude
Shannon who was the founder of modern information
theory.
Quantifying can be any two possibilities like true and false, yes and
no, hot and cold, etc.
Information
𝐻𝑡 is the number of
information transmission
𝐻𝑠 is the number of
combined dimensions
Absolute Judgement
Single Multidimensional
Dimensions Judgement
Dimensions
Channel Orthogonal
Capacity Dimensions
Edge Correlated
Effect Dimensions
In a one-dimensional absolute-judgment task, a person
is presented with a number of stimuli that vary on one
dimension (e.g., 10 different tones varying only in
pitch) and responds to each stimulus with a
Single corresponding response (learned before).
Dimension Performance is nearly perfect up to five or six different
stimuli but declines as the number of different stimuli is
increased.
Limit Stimuli for
the Workers
George Miller discussed between the limits of one-dimensional
absolute judgment and the limits of short-term memory.
The information contained in the input can be determined by the
number of binary decisions that need to be made to arrive at the
selected stimulus, and the same holds for the response.
Therefore, people's maximum performance on one-dimensional
absolute judgement can be characterized as an information