
Statistical Decision Theory in Perception and Cognition
Signal Detection and General Recognition Theories
F. Gregory Ashby(Author)
MIT Press
Published on 19. May 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
384 pages
978-0-262-05251-1 (ISBN)
Description
A comprehensive survey of the dominant methods for separating perceptual from decisional effects and for studying perceptual interactions.
Human performance in any perceptual or cognitive task can change for a variety of reasons. Signal detection theory (SDT) and its multidimensional generalization, general recognition theory (GRT), are by far the dominant methods for determining whether a change in performance is due to a change in perception or a change in how perceptual or cognitive information is used to select a response. In addition, GRT is the dominant method for studying perceptual interactions.
In this book, author F. Gregory Ashby covers how SDT and GRT are used in thousands of published articles that span an enormous range of fields, including vision and all other areas of perception, memory, decision-making, eyewitness testimony, response time modeling, face perception, visual search, categorization, perceived similarity, preference, stereotyping, implicit learning, fMRI data analysis, and food science. The book includes examples that illustrate how the various methods are applied, as well as Matlab code to perform several key computations.
Human performance in any perceptual or cognitive task can change for a variety of reasons. Signal detection theory (SDT) and its multidimensional generalization, general recognition theory (GRT), are by far the dominant methods for determining whether a change in performance is due to a change in perception or a change in how perceptual or cognitive information is used to select a response. In addition, GRT is the dominant method for studying perceptual interactions.
In this book, author F. Gregory Ashby covers how SDT and GRT are used in thousands of published articles that span an enormous range of fields, including vision and all other areas of perception, memory, decision-making, eyewitness testimony, response time modeling, face perception, visual search, categorization, perceived similarity, preference, stereotyping, implicit learning, fMRI data analysis, and food science. The book includes examples that illustrate how the various methods are applied, as well as Matlab code to perform several key computations.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Cambridge (Massachusetts)
United States
Publishing group
MIT Press Ltd
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 178 mm
Thickness: 36 mm
Weight
369 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-262-05251-1 (9780262052511)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

F. Gregory Ashby
Statistical Decision Theory in Perception and Cognition
Signal Detection and General Recognition Theories
E-Book
05/2026
MIT Press
€83.49
Available for download
Person
F. Gregory Ashby is Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Psychological & Brain Sciences at the University of California, Santa Barbara. In 2017, he was awarded the Howard Crosby Warren Medal for outstanding achievement in experimental psychology in the United States and Canada.
Content
Table of Contents
1. Introduction
2. Signal Detection Theory
3. SDT Models of Recognition Memory, Visual Search, Eyewitness Identification, and Group Decision Making
4. Generalizing to Multiple Dimensions: General Recognition Theory
5. Decision Processes with Multidimensional Stimuli
6. The Summary Statistics Approach to Testing for Perceptual Interactions
7. Fitting the Gaussian GRT Model to Categorization and Identification Data
8. GRT Accounts of Similarity, Preference, and Same-Different Judgments
9. Modeling Response Times
10. Statistical Decision Theory and Neuroscience
Appendix A: The Bivariate Normal Distribution
Appendix B: Matlab Code
References
1. Introduction
2. Signal Detection Theory
3. SDT Models of Recognition Memory, Visual Search, Eyewitness Identification, and Group Decision Making
4. Generalizing to Multiple Dimensions: General Recognition Theory
5. Decision Processes with Multidimensional Stimuli
6. The Summary Statistics Approach to Testing for Perceptual Interactions
7. Fitting the Gaussian GRT Model to Categorization and Identification Data
8. GRT Accounts of Similarity, Preference, and Same-Different Judgments
9. Modeling Response Times
10. Statistical Decision Theory and Neuroscience
Appendix A: The Bivariate Normal Distribution
Appendix B: Matlab Code
References