ABSTRACT

In this two volume festschrift, contributors explore the theoretical developments (Volume I) and applications (Volume II) in traditional cognitive psychology domains, and model other areas of human performance that benefit from rigorous mathematical approaches. It brings together former classmates, students and colleagues of Dr. James T. Townsend, a pioneering researcher in the field since the early 1960s, to provide a current overview of mathematical modeling in psychology. Townsend’s research critically emphasized a need for rigor in the practice of cognitive modeling, and for providing mathematical definition and structure to ill-defined psychological topics. The research captured demonstrates how the interplay of theory and application, bridged by rigorous mathematics, can move cognitive modeling forward.

chapter 2|15 pages

Visual Processing Capacity

chapter 4|17 pages

The Mental Representation of Roman Letters

Revisiting Townsend's 1971 Letter-Identification Data

chapter 5|13 pages

Exposing the Hidden Ideal

chapter 6|21 pages

Hearing What We See

The Temporal Dynamics of Audiovisual Speech Integration

chapter 7|28 pages

Processing Characteristics of Monaural Tone Detection

A Reaction-Time Perspective on a Classic Psychoacoustic Problem

chapter 8|21 pages

Characterizing and Quantifying Human Bandwidth

On the Utility and Criticality of the Construct of Capacity