Localizing Structure in Individual Differences: A Visual Illusion Case Study
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Are people who are susceptible to one illusion susceptible to others? Previous research has shown small correlations, but might small values reflect attenuation from measurement error from trial-to-trial variation? To assess measurement error, we develop a set of novel data visualizations and hierarchical models. Data from 149 participants on 2 variants of 5 illusions were collected using an adjustment paradigm. The results showed low trial-noise and strong between-subject variability (e.g., signal-to-noise ratio $\approx 1.14$, reliability $\approx 0.93$). Correlations across illusions are low, around $0.22 \pm 0.07$. A Bayesian hierarchical analysis reveals minimal attenuation from measurement error in these values. Though correlations are low, latent variable analysis reveals a common latent factor that loads on all tasks and explains about 23.3\% of the variance in illusion susceptibility.