Stevens' power law

Stevens' power law is a proposed relationship between the magnitude of a physical stimulus and the intensity or strength that people feel.

ContinuumExponent ()Stimulus condition
Loudness0.67Sound pressure of 3000 Hz tone
Vibration0.95Amplitude of 60 Hz on finger
Vibration0.6Amplitude of 250 Hz on finger
Brightness0.335° target in dark
Brightness0.5Point source
Brightness0.5Brief flash
Brightness1Point source briefly flashed
Lightness1.2Reflectance of gray papers
Visual length1Projected line
Visual area0.7Projected square
Redness (saturation)1.7Red-gray mixture
Taste1.3Sucrose
Taste1.4Salt
Taste0.8Saccharine
Smell0.6Heptane
Cold1Metal contact on arm
Warmth1.6Metal contact on arm
Warmth1.3Irradiation of skin, small area
Warmth0.7Irradiation of skin, large area
Discomfort, cold1.7Whole body irradiation
Discomfort, warm0.7Whole body irradiation
Thermal pain1Radiant heat on skin
Tactual roughness1.5Rubbing emery cloths
Tactual hardness0.8Squeezing rubber
Finger span1.3Thickness of blocks
Pressure on palm1.1Static force on skin
Muscle force1.7Static contractions
Heaviness1.45Lifted weights
Viscosity0.42Stirring silicone fluids
Electric shock3.5Current through fingers
Vocal effort1.1Vocal sound pressure
Angular acceleration1.45 s rotation
Duration1.1White noise stimuli

Most people think that it describes a wider range of sensations than Weber-Fechner law. But critics argue that the validity of the law is not sure.

The theory is named after psychophysicist Stanley Smith Stevens (19061973). Although the idea of a power law had been suggested by 19th century researchers, Stevens is credited with reviving the law and publishing a body of psychophysical data to support it in 1956.

The general form of the law is

where is the magnitude of the physical stimulus, is the psychophysical function capturing sensation (the subjective size of the stimulus), is an exponent that depends on the type of stimulation and is a proportionality constant that depends on the type of stimulation and the units used.

The table to the right lists the exponents reported by Stevens.

References

  • Ellermeier, W., Faulhammer, G. (2000). Empirical evaluation of axioms fundamental to Stevens's ratio-scaling approach: I. Loudness production. Perception & Psychophysics, 62, 1505–1511.
  • Green, D. M., & Luce, R. D. (1974). Variability of magnitude estimates: a timing theory analysis. Perception & Psychophysics, 15, 291–300.
  • Luce, R. D. (2002). A psychophysical theory of intensity proportions, joint presentations, and matches. Psychological Review, 109, 520–532.
  • Narens, L. (1996). A theory of ratio magnitude estimation. Journal of Mathematical Psychology, 40, 109–129.
  • Smelser, N. J., & Baltes, P. B. (2001). International encyclopedia of the social & behavioral sciences. pp. 15105–15106. Amsterdam; New York: Elsevier. ISBN 0-08-043076-7.
  • Steingrimsson, R., & Luce, R. D. (2006). Empirical evaluation of a model of global psychophysical judgments: III. A form for the psychophysical function and intensity filtering. Journal of Mathematical Psychology, 50, 15–29.
  • Stevens, S. S. (1957). On the psychophysical law. Psychological Review 64(3):153–181. PMID 13441853.
  • Zimmer, K. (2005). Examining the validity of numerical ratios in loudness fractionation. Perception & Psychophysics, 67, 569–579.
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