Quantifying Human Response: Linking Metrological and Psychometric Characterisations of Man as a Measurement Instrument

Journal of Physics: Conference Series, 459, 2013

7 Pages Posted: 16 Oct 2013 Last revised: 18 Oct 2013

See all articles by Leslie Pendrill

Leslie Pendrill

SP Technical Research Institute of Sweden

William P. Fisher

University of California, Berkeley - BEAR Center

Date Written: September 4, 2013

Abstract

A better understanding of how to characterise human response is essential to improved person-centred care and other situations where human factors are crucial. Challenges to introducing classical metrological concepts such as measurement uncertainty and traceability when characterising Man as a Measurement Instrument include the failure of many statistical tools when applied to ordinal measurement scales and a lack of metrological references in, for instance, healthcare. The present work attempts to link metrological and psychometric (Rasch) characterisation of Man as a Measurement Instrument in a study of elementary tasks, such as counting dots, where one knows independently the expected value because the measurement object (collection of dots) is prepared in advance. The analysis is compared and contrasted with recent approaches to this problem by others, for instance using signal error fidelity.

Keywords: measurement, metrology, psychometrics, Rasch models, counting, perception, Weber's law, traceability

Suggested Citation

Pendrill, Leslie and Fisher, William P., Quantifying Human Response: Linking Metrological and Psychometric Characterisations of Man as a Measurement Instrument (September 4, 2013). Journal of Physics: Conference Series, 459, 2013, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2340744

Leslie Pendrill (Contact Author)

SP Technical Research Institute of Sweden ( email )

Box 857
Borås, SE-50115
Sweden

William P. Fisher

University of California, Berkeley - BEAR Center ( email )

Berkeley, CA 94704
United States

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