Measurement of low-signal suppression and other parameters of the forced-choice psychometric function Phillip L. Emerson OriginalPaper Pages: 2 - 6
Responses to incidental stimuli as a function of feedback contingency Gerald M. Murch OriginalPaper Pages: 10 - 12
Depth adjacency in simultaneous contrast Walter C. GogelDonald H. Mershon OriginalPaper Pages: 13 - 17
Reaction time as a function of the intensity and probability of occurrence of vibrotactile signals George A. GescheiderJohn H. WrightEric A. Milligan OriginalPaper Pages: 18 - 20
Recognition of tachistoscopically exposed letters by normals and retardates’ John J. WintersIrma R. Gerjuoy OriginalPaper Pages: 21 - 24
Vibrotactile vigilance: The effects of costs and values on signals W. G. Davenport OriginalPaper Pages: 25 - 28
Consistency between motor activity and perceived direction of rotation Clarke A. Burnham OriginalPaper Pages: 29 - 32
The effects of area and perimeter on detection rates Max E. BowenCharles W. Eriksen OriginalPaper Pages: 37 - 40
A comparison of chinchilla auditory evoked response and behavioral response thresholds Donald HendersonShinjiro OnishiHallowell Davis OriginalPaper Pages: 41 - 45
Visual form recognition threshold and the psychological refractory period R. Randolph BlakeRobert Fox OriginalPaper Pages: 46 - 48
Illusion in a three-dimensional Hering figure in relation to viewing distance Vincent Di LolloA. J. Marshall OriginalPaper Pages: 53 - 55