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Schneider, Darryl W.; Anderson, John R. – Cognitive Psychology, 2011
We propose and evaluate a memory-based model of Hick's law, the approximately linear increase in choice reaction time with the logarithm of set size (the number of stimulus-response alternatives). According to the model, Hick's law reflects a combination of associative interference during retrieval from declarative memory and occasional savings…
Descriptors: Reaction Time, Memory, Evaluation, Models
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Kangas, Brian D.; Berry, Meredith S.; Branch, Marc N. – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2011
Despite its frequent use to assess effects of environmental and pharmacological variables on short-term memory, little is known about the development of delayed matching-to-sample (DMTS) performance. This study was designed to examine the dimensions and dynamics of DMTS performance development over a long period of exposure to provide a more…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Stimuli, Memory, Intervals
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Smithson, Michael; Merkle, Edgar C.; Verkuilen, Jay – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2011
This paper describes the application of finite-mixture general linear models based on the beta distribution to modeling response styles, polarization, anchoring, and priming effects in probability judgments. These models, in turn, enhance our capacity for explicitly testing models and theories regarding the aforementioned phenomena. The mixture…
Descriptors: Priming, Research Methodology, Probability, Item Response Theory
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Jose, Paul E.; Brown, Isobel – Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 2008
A cross-sectional non-clinical sample of 1,218 adolescents, aged 10-17 years, completed measures of stress, rumination, and depression to allow tests of the response style theory of S. Nolen-Hoeksema [J Res Adolesc 4:519-534, 1994] in adolescents, in particular whether increasing levels of stress and rumination in early adolescence are predictive…
Descriptors: Response Style (Tests), Early Adolescents, Adolescents, Age Differences
Kalisch, Stanley James, Jr. – 1974
The four purposes of this study were: (1) To compare two versions of a tailored testing model similar to one suggested by Kalisch (1974); (2) To identify levels of the variables within the two versions, which produce an efficient tailored testing procedures; (3) To compare, within each version, the results obtained when employing relatively small…
Descriptors: Ability, Adaptive Testing, Branching, Comparative Analysis
Kalisch, Stanley James, Jr. – 1975
Two tailored testing models, specifying procedures by which the correctness of examinees' responses to a fixed number of test items are predicted by presenting as few items as possible to the examinee, were compared for their efficiency. The models differ in that one requires reconsideration of each prediction whenever additional information is…
Descriptors: Ability, Adaptive Testing, Branching, Comparative Analysis
Ramaswamy, T.
The Rasch item analysis model is supposed to yield norm-free estimates of ability and easiness values, but there are several possible interpretations of the nature and extent of such norm-freeness. One such interpretation was that to involve the scores of one single experimental group of testees which were embedded in four differently skewed…
Descriptors: Ability, Cloze Procedure, Correlation, Hypothesis Testing
Kalisch, Stanley J. – 1974
A tailored testing model employing the beta distribution, whose mean equals the difficulty of an item and whose variance is approximately equal to the sampling variance of the item difficulty, and employing conditional item difficulties, is proposed. The model provides a procedure by which a minimum number of items of a test, consisting of a set…
Descriptors: Adaptive Testing, Branching, Computer Oriented Programs, Decision Making