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Law of comparative judgment

The law of comparative judgment was conceived by L. L. Thurstone. In modern-day terminology, it is more aptly described as a model that is used to obtain measurements from any process of pairwise comparison. Examples of such processes are the comparisons of perceived intensity of physical stimuli, such as the weights of objects, and comparisons of the extremity of an attitude expressed within statements, such as statements about capital punishment. The measurements represent how we perceive entities, rather than measurements of actual physical properties. This kind of measurement is the focus of psychometrics and psychophysics.

In somewhat more technical terms, the law of comparative judgment is a mathematical representation of a discriminal process, which is any process in which a comparison is made between pairs of a collection of entities with respect to magnitudes of an attribute, trait, attitude, and so on. The theoretical basis for the model is closely related to item response theory and the theory underlying the Rasch model, which are used in psychology and education to analyse data from questionnaires and tests.

Background edit

Thurstone published a paper on the law of comparative judgment in 1927. In this paper he introduced the underlying concept of a psychological continuum for a particular 'project in measurement' involving the comparison between a series of stimuli, such as weights and handwriting specimens, in pairs. He soon extended the domain of application of the law of comparative judgment to things that have no obvious physical counterpart, such as attitudes and values (Thurstone, 1929). For example, in one experiment, people compared statements about capital punishment to judge which of each pair expressed a stronger positive (or negative) attitude.

The essential idea behind Thurstone's process and model is that it can be used to scale a collection of stimuli based on simple comparisons between stimuli two at a time: that is, based on a series of pairwise comparisons. For example, suppose that someone wishes to measure the perceived weights of a series of five objects of varying masses. By having people compare the weights of the objects in pairs, data can be obtained and the law of comparative judgment applied to estimate scale values of the perceived weights. This is the perceptual counterpart to the physical weight of the objects. That is, the scale represents how heavy people perceive the objects to be based on the comparisons.

Although Thurstone referred to it as a law, as stated above, in terms of modern psychometric theory the 'law' of comparative judgment is more aptly described as a measurement model. It represents a general theoretical model which, applied in a particular empirical context, constitutes a scientific hypothesis regarding the outcomes of comparisons between some collection of objects. If data agree with the model, it is possible to produce a scale from the data.

Relationships to pre-existing psychophysical theory edit

Thurstone showed that in terms of his conceptual framework, Weber's law and the so-called Weber-Fechner law, which are sometimes (and misleadingly) regarded as one and the same, are independent, in the sense that one may be applicable but not the other to a given collection of experimental data. In particular, Thurstone showed that if Fechner's law applies and the discriminal dispersions associated with stimuli are constant (as in Case 5 of the LCJ outlined below), then Weber's law will also be verified. He considered that the Weber-Fechner law and the LCJ both involve a linear measurement on a psychological continuum whereas Weber's law does not.

Weber's law essentially states that how much people perceive physical stimulus intensity to change depends on that intensity. For example, if someone compares a light object of 1 kg with one slightly heavier, one notices a relatively small difference, perhaps when the second object is 1.2 kg. On the other hand, if someone compares a heavy object of 30 kg with a second, the second must be quite a bit larger for a person to notice the difference, perhaps when the second object is 36 kg. People tend to perceive differences that are proportional to the size rather than noticing a specific difference irrespective of the size. The same applies to brightness, pressure, warmth, loudness, and so on.

Thurstone stated Weber's law as follows: "The stimulus increase which is correctly discriminated in any specified proportion of attempts (except 0 and 100 per cent) is a constant fraction of the stimulus magnitude" (Thurstone, 1959, p. 61). He considered that Weber's law said nothing directly about sensation intensities at all. In terms of Thurstone's conceptual framework, the association posited between perceived stimulus intensity and the physical magnitude of the stimulus in the Weber-Fechner law will only hold when Weber's law holds and the just noticeable difference (JND) is treated as a unit of measurement. Importantly, this is not simply given a priori (Michell, 1997, p. 355), as is implied by purely mathematical derivations of the one law from the other. It is, rather, an empirical question whether measurements have been obtained; one which requires justification through the process of stating and testing a well-defined hypothesis in order to ascertain whether specific theoretical criteria for measurement have been satisfied. Some of the relevant criteria were articulated by Thurstone, in a preliminary fashion, including what he termed the additivity criterion. Accordingly, from the point of view of Thurstone's approach, treating the JND as a unit is justifiable provided only that the discriminal dispersions are uniform for all stimuli considered in a given experimental context. Similar issues are associated with Stevens' power law.

In addition, Thurstone employed the approach to clarify other similarities and differences between Weber's law, the Weber-Fechner law, and the LCJ. An important clarification is that the LCJ does not necessarily involve a physical stimulus, whereas the other 'laws' do. Another key difference is that Weber's law and the LCJ involve proportions of comparisons in which one stimulus is judged greater than another whereas the so-called Weber-Fechner law does not.

The general form edit

The most general form of the LCJ is

 

in which:

  •   is the psychological scale value of stimuli i
  •   is the sigma corresponding with the proportion of occasions on which the magnitude of stimulus i is judged to exceed the magnitude of stimulus j
  •   is the discriminal dispersion of a stimulus  
  •   is the correlation between the discriminal deviations of stimuli i and j

The discriminal dispersion of a stimulus i is the dispersion of fluctuations of the discriminal process for a uniform repeated stimulus, denoted  , where   represents the mode of such values. Thurstone (1959, p. 20) used the term discriminal process to refer to the "psychological values of psychophysics"; that is, the values on a psychological continuum associated with a given stimulus.

Case 5 edit

Thurstone specified five particular cases of the 'law', or measurement model. An important case of the model is Case 5, in which the discriminal dispersions are specified to be uniform and uncorrelated. This form of the model can be represented as follows:

 

where

 

In this case of the model, the difference   can be inferred directly from the proportion of instances in which j is judged greater than i if it is hypothesised that   is distributed according to some density function, such as the normal distribution or logistic function. In order to do so, it is necessary to let  , which is in effect an arbitrary choice of the unit of measurement. Letting   be the proportion of occasions on which i is judged greater than j, if, for example,   and it is hypothesised that   is normally distributed, then it would be inferred that  .

When a simple logistic function is employed instead of the normal density function, then the model has the structure of the Bradley-Terry-Luce model (BTL model) (Bradley & Terry, 1952; Luce, 1959). In turn, the Rasch model for dichotomous data (Rasch, 1960/1980) is identical to the BTL model after the person parameter of the Rasch model has been eliminated, as is achieved through statistical conditioning during the process of Conditional Maximum Likelihood estimation. With this in mind, the specification of uniform discriminal dispersions is equivalent to the requirement of parallel Item Characteristic Curves (ICCs) in the Rasch model. Accordingly, as shown by Andrich (1978), the Rasch model should, in principle, yield essentially the same results as those obtained from a Thurstone scale. Like the Rasch model, when applied in a given empirical context, Case 5 of the LCJ constitutes a mathematized hypothesis which embodies theoretical criteria for measurement.

Applications edit

One important application involving the law of comparative judgment is the widely used Analytic Hierarchy Process, a structured technique for helping people deal with complex decisions. It uses pairwise comparisons of tangible and intangible factors to construct ratio scales that are useful in making important decisions.[1][2]

References edit

  1. ^ Saaty, Thomas L. (1999-05-01). Decision Making for Leaders: The Analytic Hierarchy Process for Decisions in a Complex World. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: RWS Publications. ISBN 978-0-9620317-8-6.
  2. ^ Saaty, Thomas L. (September 2008). "Relative Measurement and its Generalization in Decision Making: Why Pairwise Comparisons are Central in Mathematics for the Measurement of Intangible Factors - The Analytic Hierarchy/Network Process" (PDF). Review of the Royal Academy of Exact, Physical and Natural Sciences, Series A: Mathematics (RACSAM). 102 (2): 251–318. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.455.3274. doi:10.1007/bf03191825. S2CID 42215574. Retrieved 2008-12-22.
  • Andrich, D. (1978b). Relationships between the Thurstone and Rasch approaches to item scaling. Applied Psychological Measurement, 2, 449-460.
  • Bradley, R.A. and Terry, M.E. (1952). Rank analysis of incomplete block designs, I. the method of paired comparisons. Biometrika, 39, 324-345.
  • Krus, D.J., & Kennedy, P.H. (1977) Normal scaling of dominance matrices: The domain-referenced model. Educational and Psychological Measurement, 37, 189-193
  • Luce, R.D. (1959). Individual Choice Behaviours: A Theoretical Analysis. New York: J. Wiley.
  • Michell, J. (1997). Quantitative science and the definition of measurement in psychology. British Journal of Psychology, 88, 355-383.
  • Rasch, G. (1960/1980). Probabilistic models for some intelligence and attainment tests. (Copenhagen, Danish Institute for Educational Research), expanded edition (1980) with foreword and afterword by B.D. Wright. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.
  • Thurstone, L.L. (1927). A law of comparative judgement. Psychological Review, 34, 273-286.
  • Thurstone, L.L. (1929). The Measurement of Psychological Value. In T.V. Smith and W.K. Wright (Eds.), Essays in Philosophy by Seventeen Doctors of Philosophy of the University of Chicago. Chicago: Open Court.
  • Thurstone, L.L. (1959). The Measurement of Values. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.

External links edit

  • "The Measurement of Psychological Value"

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The law of comparative judgment was conceived by L L Thurstone In modern day terminology it is more aptly described as a model that is used to obtain measurements from any process of pairwise comparison Examples of such processes are the comparisons of perceived intensity of physical stimuli such as the weights of objects and comparisons of the extremity of an attitude expressed within statements such as statements about capital punishment The measurements represent how we perceive entities rather than measurements of actual physical properties This kind of measurement is the focus of psychometrics and psychophysics In somewhat more technical terms the law of comparative judgment is a mathematical representation of a discriminal process which is any process in which a comparison is made between pairs of a collection of entities with respect to magnitudes of an attribute trait attitude and so on The theoretical basis for the model is closely related to item response theory and the theory underlying the Rasch model which are used in psychology and education to analyse data from questionnaires and tests Contents 1 Background 1 1 Relationships to pre existing psychophysical theory 2 The general form 3 Case 5 4 Applications 5 References 6 External linksBackground editThurstone published a paper on the law of comparative judgment in 1927 In this paper he introduced the underlying concept of a psychological continuum for a particular project in measurement involving the comparison between a series of stimuli such as weights and handwriting specimens in pairs He soon extended the domain of application of the law of comparative judgment to things that have no obvious physical counterpart such as attitudes and values Thurstone 1929 For example in one experiment people compared statements about capital punishment to judge which of each pair expressed a stronger positive or negative attitude The essential idea behind Thurstone s process and model is that it can be used to scale a collection of stimuli based on simple comparisons between stimuli two at a time that is based on a series of pairwise comparisons For example suppose that someone wishes to measure the perceived weights of a series of five objects of varying masses By having people compare the weights of the objects in pairs data can be obtained and the law of comparative judgment applied to estimate scale values of the perceived weights This is the perceptual counterpart to the physical weight of the objects That is the scale represents how heavy people perceive the objects to be based on the comparisons Although Thurstone referred to it as a law as stated above in terms of modern psychometric theory the law of comparative judgment is more aptly described as a measurement model It represents a general theoretical model which applied in a particular empirical context constitutes a scientific hypothesis regarding the outcomes of comparisons between some collection of objects If data agree with the model it is possible to produce a scale from the data Relationships to pre existing psychophysical theory edit Thurstone showed that in terms of his conceptual framework Weber s law and the so called Weber Fechner law which are sometimes and misleadingly regarded as one and the same are independent in the sense that one may be applicable but not the other to a given collection of experimental data In particular Thurstone showed that if Fechner s law applies and the discriminal dispersions associated with stimuli are constant as in Case 5 of the LCJ outlined below then Weber s law will also be verified He considered that the Weber Fechner law and the LCJ both involve a linear measurement on a psychological continuum whereas Weber s law does not Weber s law essentially states that how much people perceive physical stimulus intensity to change depends on that intensity For example if someone compares a light object of 1 kg with one slightly heavier one notices a relatively small difference perhaps when the second object is 1 2 kg On the other hand if someone compares a heavy object of 30 kg with a second the second must be quite a bit larger for a person to notice the difference perhaps when the second object is 36 kg People tend to perceive differences that are proportional to the size rather than noticing a specific difference irrespective of the size The same applies to brightness pressure warmth loudness and so on Thurstone stated Weber s law as follows The stimulus increase which is correctly discriminated in any specified proportion of attempts except 0 and 100 per cent is a constant fraction of the stimulus magnitude Thurstone 1959 p 61 He considered that Weber s law said nothing directly about sensation intensities at all In terms of Thurstone s conceptual framework the association posited between perceived stimulus intensity and the physical magnitude of the stimulus in the Weber Fechner law will only hold when Weber s law holds and the just noticeable difference JND is treated as a unit of measurement Importantly this is not simply given a priori Michell 1997 p 355 as is implied by purely mathematical derivations of the one law from the other It is rather an empirical question whether measurements have been obtained one which requires justification through the process of stating and testing a well defined hypothesis in order to ascertain whether specific theoretical criteria for measurement have been satisfied Some of the relevant criteria were articulated by Thurstone in a preliminary fashion including what he termed the additivity criterion Accordingly from the point of view of Thurstone s approach treating the JND as a unit is justifiable provided only that the discriminal dispersions are uniform for all stimuli considered in a given experimental context Similar issues are associated with Stevens power law In addition Thurstone employed the approach to clarify other similarities and differences between Weber s law the Weber Fechner law and the LCJ An important clarification is that the LCJ does not necessarily involve a physical stimulus whereas the other laws do Another key difference is that Weber s law and the LCJ involve proportions of comparisons in which one stimulus is judged greater than another whereas the so called Weber Fechner law does not The general form editThe most general form of the LCJ is Si Sj xijsi2 sj2 2rijsisj displaystyle S i S j x ij sqrt sigma i 2 sigma j 2 2r ij sigma i sigma j nbsp in which Si displaystyle S i nbsp is the psychological scale value of stimuli i xij displaystyle x ij nbsp is the sigma corresponding with the proportion of occasions on which the magnitude of stimulus i is judged to exceed the magnitude of stimulus j si displaystyle sigma i nbsp is the discriminal dispersion of a stimulus Ri displaystyle R i nbsp rij displaystyle r ij nbsp is the correlation between the discriminal deviations of stimuli i and jThe discriminal dispersion of a stimulus i is the dispersion of fluctuations of the discriminal process for a uniform repeated stimulus denoted Ri displaystyle R i nbsp where Si displaystyle S i nbsp represents the mode of such values Thurstone 1959 p 20 used the term discriminal process to refer to the psychological values of psychophysics that is the values on a psychological continuum associated with a given stimulus Case 5 editThurstone specified five particular cases of the law or measurement model An important case of the model is Case 5 in which the discriminal dispersions are specified to be uniform and uncorrelated This form of the model can be represented as follows xij Si Sjs displaystyle x ij frac S i S j sigma nbsp where s si2 sj2 displaystyle sigma sqrt sigma i 2 sigma j 2 nbsp In this case of the model the difference Si Sj displaystyle S i S j nbsp can be inferred directly from the proportion of instances in which j is judged greater than i if it is hypothesised that xij displaystyle x ij nbsp is distributed according to some density function such as the normal distribution or logistic function In order to do so it is necessary to let s 1 displaystyle sigma 1 nbsp which is in effect an arbitrary choice of the unit of measurement Letting Pij displaystyle P ij nbsp be the proportion of occasions on which i is judged greater than j if for example Pij 0 84 displaystyle P ij 0 84 nbsp and it is hypothesised that xij displaystyle x ij nbsp is normally distributed then it would be inferred that Si Sj 1 displaystyle S i S j cong 1 nbsp When a simple logistic function is employed instead of the normal density function then the model has the structure of the Bradley Terry Luce model BTL model Bradley amp Terry 1952 Luce 1959 In turn the Rasch model for dichotomous data Rasch 1960 1980 is identical to the BTL model after the person parameter of the Rasch model has been eliminated as is achieved through statistical conditioning during the process of Conditional Maximum Likelihood estimation With this in mind the specification of uniform discriminal dispersions is equivalent to the requirement of parallel Item Characteristic Curves ICCs in the Rasch model Accordingly as shown by Andrich 1978 the Rasch model should in principle yield essentially the same results as those obtained from a Thurstone scale Like the Rasch model when applied in a given empirical context Case 5 of the LCJ constitutes a mathematized hypothesis which embodies theoretical criteria for measurement Applications editOne important application involving the law of comparative judgment is the widely used Analytic Hierarchy Process a structured technique for helping people deal with complex decisions It uses pairwise comparisons of tangible and intangible factors to construct ratio scales that are useful in making important decisions 1 2 References edit Saaty Thomas L 1999 05 01 Decision Making for Leaders The Analytic Hierarchy Process for Decisions in a Complex World Pittsburgh Pennsylvania RWS Publications ISBN 978 0 9620317 8 6 Saaty Thomas L September 2008 Relative Measurement and its Generalization in Decision Making Why Pairwise Comparisons are Central in Mathematics for the Measurement of Intangible Factors The Analytic Hierarchy Network Process PDF Review of the Royal Academy of Exact Physical and Natural Sciences Series A Mathematics RACSAM 102 2 251 318 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 455 3274 doi 10 1007 bf03191825 S2CID 42215574 Retrieved 2008 12 22 Andrich D 1978b Relationships between the Thurstone and Rasch approaches to item scaling Applied Psychological Measurement 2 449 460 Bradley R A and Terry M E 1952 Rank analysis of incomplete block designs I the method of paired comparisons Biometrika 39 324 345 Krus D J amp Kennedy P H 1977 Normal scaling of dominance matrices The domain referenced model Educational and Psychological Measurement 37 189 193 Request reprint Luce R D 1959 Individual Choice Behaviours A Theoretical Analysis New York J Wiley Michell J 1997 Quantitative science and the definition of measurement in psychology British Journal of Psychology 88 355 383 Rasch G 1960 1980 Probabilistic models for some intelligence and attainment tests Copenhagen Danish Institute for Educational Research expanded edition 1980 with foreword and afterword by B D Wright Chicago The University of Chicago Press Thurstone L L 1927 A law of comparative judgement Psychological Review 34 273 286 Thurstone L L 1929 The Measurement of Psychological Value In T V Smith and W K Wright Eds Essays in Philosophy by Seventeen Doctors of Philosophy of the University of Chicago Chicago Open Court Thurstone L L 1959 The Measurement of Values Chicago The University of Chicago Press External links edit The Measurement of Psychological Value How to Analyze Paired Comparisons tutorial on using Thurstone s Law of Comparative Judgement L L Thurstone psychometric laboratory Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Law of comparative judgment amp oldid 1214553316, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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