[visionlist] Highly cited publications on vision in which authors were also subjects?

Brown, Angela brown.112 at osu.edu
Wed May 27 13:53:55 -04 2020


This is one disadvantage of studying inarticulate subjects (animals, babies): you can’t introspect on their experience, and they can’t tell you what they see.

Angela Brown

From: "visionlist-bounces at visionscience. com" <visionlist-bounces at visionscience.com> on behalf of "Robert Hess, Dr." <robert.hess at mcgill.ca>
Date: Wednesday, May 27, 2020 at 1:25 PM
To: "gabrieljacobdiaz at gmail.com" <gabrieljacobdiaz at gmail.com>, "visionlist at visionscience. com" <visionlist at visionscience.com>
Subject: Re: [visionlist] Highly cited publications on vision in which authors were also subjects?

Hi Gabriel,

I concur with John. In my lab you can’t get away with not being a subject in your own psychophysical experiment, for the simple reason that you need to know what artefacts to control, naive subjects won’t tell you this interesting information. I am a subject in almost all of my normal psychophysics and imaging.

Best,

Robert


On May 27, 2020, at 11:47 AM, John Robson <jgr11 at cam.ac.uk<mailto:jgr11 at cam.ac.uk>> wrote:

Gabriel,

I believe that both Fergus Campbell and I developed quite a reputation for asking authors of drafts of psychophysical papers about the subjective experience of being an experimental subject. We both always felt that the design of experiments should take into account what it was like to be a subject and it was always desirable for authors to be among the subjects. You will find that all the most cited psychophysical papers of both Campbell and myself rely heavily (if not exclusively) on reports of observations made by their authors.

John Robson

On May 27 2020, Gabriel Diaz wrote:


Dear vision community,

In response to a recent proposal to my IRB, I have received a request to
provide examples of manuscripts in which the PI is also the subject in the
manuscript.  I am hoping that some of you may be able to help me track some
down. The more impactful the better, whether that be indicated by citation
count, recognition of the publication venue, or any other metric, as long
as it will be evident to a non-expert.

Extra points if the study involves some element of motor behavior /
perception & action.

Thanks in advance,
- gD

--
Professor John Robson  ScD FRS
Senior Research Professor in Vision Science
University of Houston College of Optometry, Houston,  TX 77204-2020
+1 (713) 743 1807
and
Fellow, Gonville & Caius College, Trinity St., Cambridge, CB2 1TA
and
Herrings House, Wilbraham Rd, Fulbourn, Cambridge, CB21 5EU
+44 1223 880277
jgr11 at cam.ac.uk<mailto:jgr11 at cam.ac.uk>




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