Your Vestibular Thresholds May Be Lower Than You Think: Cognitive Biases in Vestibular Psychophysics.
Elena Lopez-Contreras GonzalezSusan A KingFaisal KarmaliPublished in: American journal of audiology (2023)
Results in normal subjects supported each hypothesis. Subjects tended to respond opposite of their preceding response (not the preceding stimulus), indicating a cognitive bias, and this caused an overestimation of thresholds. Using an enhanced model (MATLAB code provided) that considered these effects, average thresholds were lower (5.5% for yaw, 7.1% for interaural). Since the results indicate that the magnitude of cognitive bias varies across subjects, this enhanced model can reduce measurement variability and potentially improve the efficiency of data collection.