Boynton, Geoffrey MMoreland, James Christopher2017-02-142017-02-142017-02-142016-12Moreland_washington_0250O_16637.pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1773/38207Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2016-12Observers show small but systematic deviations from equal weighting of all elements when asked to localize the center of an array of dots. Counter-intuitively, with small numbers of dots drawn from a Gaussian distribution, this bias results in subjects overweighting the influence of outlier dots – inconsistent with traditional statistical estimators of central tendency. Here we show that this apparent statistical anomaly can be explained by the observation that outlier dots also lie in regions of lower dot density. Using a standard model of V1 processing, that includes spatial integration followed by a compressive static nonlinearity, we can successfully predict the finding that dots in less dense regions of an array have a relatively greater influence on the perceived center.application/pdfen-USnoneCognitionPerceptionSummary StatisticsVisionPsychologyCognitive psychologyNeurosciencespsychologyA neurophysiological explanation for biases in visual localizationThesis