Title :
The acceptance of information, its subjective cost and the measurement of distortion (Corresp.)
Author :
Wilson, Roland G.
fDate :
11/1/1982 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
A suitable operational definition of the subjective acceptability of an information source to a human user is shown to be the "probability of acceptance in a multiple-choice test." It is shown that acceptance probability relates directly to the user\´s statistical dependence on a given source. The notion of subjective cost of information is introduced as a concise way of defining such acceptance probabilities and a general statistical model of decision behavior used to establish the relation between expected cost and probability of acceptance. Distortion is then defined as the marginal cost of accepting a replication over that of the original source. It is shown that this leads to a way of determining distortion functions from observation of acceptance decisions. The method is illustrated with an example of image noise evaluation.
Keywords :
Communication, human; Human communication; Image communication; Rate-distortion theory; Costs; Distortion measurement; Error correction codes; Galois fields; Humans; Information resources; Joining processes; Mutual information; Signal processing; Testing;
Journal_Title :
Information Theory, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TIT.1982.1056576