Ecological validity (perception)
- Ecological validity (perception)
The ecological validity of a sensory cue in perception is the correlation between the cue (something an organism might be able to measure from the proximal stimulus) and a property of the world (some aspect of the distal stimulus). For example, the color of a banana is a cue that indicates whether the banana is ripe. This particular cue has an ecological validity close to 1, because a banana's ripeness is highly correlated with its color. By contrast, the presence of a sticker on the banana is a cue with an ecological validity close to 0, if (as seems likely) ripe and unripe bananas (in a fruit bowl, say) are equally likely to have stickers on them.
The concept of ecological validity is closely related to likelihood in Bayesian statistical inference and to cue validity in statistics.
History of terminology
Egon Brunswik defined the term "ecological validity" in the 1940's to describe a cue's informativeness. His students have written that the now-common use of "ecological validity" to describe a type of experimental validity was a corruption of his original terminology (see external link to paper by Hammond). Brunswik used the words "representative design" to describe what is now usually called the external validity of an experiment; this in turn depends partly on what is now usually called the ecological validity of the experiment. As originally defined by Brunswik, however, ecological validity was a property of a cue, not a property of an experiment.
External links and references
* Kenneth R. Hammond [http://brunswik.org/notes/essay2.html "Ecological validity: Then and now."]
Wikimedia Foundation.
2010.
Look at other dictionaries:
Ecological footprint — The ecological footprint is a measure of human demand on the Earth s ecosystems. It is a standardized measure of demand for natural capital that may be contrasted with the planet s ecological capacity to regenerate.[1] It represents the amount of … Wikipedia
Cue validity — is the conditional probability that an object falls in a particular category given a particular feature or cue. The term was popularized by Beach (1964), Reed (1972) and especially by Eleanor Rosch in her investigations of the acquisition of so… … Wikipedia
Matching hypothesis — The matching hypothesis (also known as the matching phenomenon) is a social psychology theory, first proposed by Elaine Hatfield and her colleagues in 1966,[1], which suggests why people become attracted to their partner. It claims that people… … Wikipedia
Sensory cue — A sensory cue is a statistic or signal that can be extracted from the sensory input by a perceiver, that indicates the state of some property of the world that the perceiver is interested in perceiving. Sensory cues include visual cues, auditory… … Wikipedia
Eye movement in music reading — skills. A central aspect of music reading is the sequence of alternating saccades and fixations, as it is for most oculomotor tasks. Saccades are the rapid ‘flicks’ that move the eyes from location to location over a music score. Saccades are… … Wikipedia
Educational psychology — Psychology … Wikipedia
Eye movement in language reading — The study of eye movement in language reading stretches back almost a thousand years. Eye movements during reading were first described by the French ophthalmologist Louis Émile Javal in the late 19th century. He reported that eyes do not move… … Wikipedia
The Third Wave of Democratization — The Third Wave: Democratization in the Late Twentieth Century is a 1991 book by Samuel P. Huntington which outlines the significance of a third wave of democratization to describe the global trend that has seen more than 60 countries experience… … Wikipedia
Android science — is a new interdisciplinary framework for studying human interaction and cognition based on the premise that a very humanlike robot (that is, an android) can elicit human directed social responses in human beings. The android s ability to elicit… … Wikipedia
Germany — /jerr meuh nee/, n. a republic in central Europe: after World War II divided into four zones, British, French, U.S., and Soviet, and in 1949 into East Germany and West Germany; East and West Germany were reunited in 1990. 84,068,216; 137,852 sq.… … Universalium