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Weaver, Adam D.; McKevitt, Brian C.; Farris, Allie M. – Beyond Behavior, 2017
Multiple-stimulus without replacement preference assessment is a research-based method for identifying appropriate rewards for students with emotional and behavioral disorders. This article presents a brief history of how this technology evolved and describes a step-by-step approach for conducting the procedure. A discussion of necessary materials…
Descriptors: Learner Engagement, Academic Achievement, Rewards, Emotional Disturbances
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Guasch, Marc; Haro, Juan; Boada, Roger – Psicologica: International Journal of Methodology and Experimental Psychology, 2017
With the increasing refinement of language processing models and the new discoveries about which variables can modulate these processes, stimuli selection for experiments with a factorial design is becoming a tough task. Selecting sets of words that differ in one variable, while matching these same words into dozens of other confounding variables…
Descriptors: Factor Analysis, Language Processing, Design, Cluster Grouping
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Koriat, Asher – Psychological Review, 2012
How do people monitor the correctness of their answers? A self-consistency model is proposed for the process underlying confidence judgments and their accuracy. In answering a 2-alternative question, participants are assumed to retrieve a sample of representations of the question and base their confidence on the consistency with which the chosen…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Validity, Computation, Task Analysis
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Cannella-Malone, Helen I.; Sabielny, Linsey M.; Jimenez, Eliseo D.; Miller, Megan M. – TEACHING Exceptional Children, 2013
Research has demonstrated that people with significant intellectual, developmental, and physical disabilities can indicate clear preferences through methodologically rigorous assessments. Once preferred items have been identified, they can be used to reinforce new behaviors, which can assist in the development of a meaningful learning experience.…
Descriptors: Severe Disabilities, Evaluation Methods, Preferences, Student Needs
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Erdelyi, Matthew Hugh – American Psychologist, 2010
Ever since the classic work of Ebbinghaus (1885/1964), the default view in scientific psychology has been that memory declines over time. Less well-known clinical and laboratory traditions suggest, however, that memory can also increase over time. Ballard (1913) demonstrated that, actually, memory simultaneously increases and decreases over time…
Descriptors: Recall (Psychology), Aging (Individuals), Stimuli, Research Methodology
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Brusco, Michael; Steinley, Douglas – Psychological Methods, 2010
Structural balance theory (SBT) has maintained a venerable status in the psychological literature for more than 5 decades. One important problem pertaining to SBT is the approximation of structural or generalized balance via the partitioning of the vertices of a signed graph into "K" clusters. This "K"-balance partitioning problem also has more…
Descriptors: Psychology, Mathematical Models, Stimuli, Measurement Techniques
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Thompson, Stacy D.; Bruns, Deborah A.; Rains, Kari W. – Young Exceptional Children, 2010
For infants and toddlers demonstrating feeding problems, it is critical to find the basis for the problems to create more pleasurable mealtimes for the child, his or her family members, and caregivers. Feeding difficulties can affect general health, developmental gains, and emotional well-being. Understanding the cause of feeding problems and…
Descriptors: Sensory Integration, Toddlers, Infants, Family Relationship
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Colonius, Hans; Diederich, Adele – Psychological Review, 2006
An inequality by J. O. Miller (1982) has become the standard tool to test the race model for redundant signals reaction times (RTs), as an alternative to a neural summation mechanism. It stipulates that the RT distribution function to redundant stimuli is never larger than the sum of the distribution functions for 2 single stimuli. When many…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Geometric Concepts, Reaction Time, Evaluation Methods
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Merwin, Rhonda M.; Wilson, Kelly G. – Psychological Record, 2005
Thirty-two subjects completed 2 stimulus equivalence tasks using a matching-to-sample paradigm. One task involved direct reinforcement of conditional discriminations designed to produce derived relations between self-referring stimuli (e.g., me, myself, I) and positive evaluation words (e.g., whole, desirable, perfect). The other task was designed…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Self Concept, Task Analysis, Reinforcement
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Rouder, Jeffrey N. – Psychometrika, 2005
Glickman, Gray, and Morales (this issue) propose a statistical model for measuring the unobserved latency of stimulus-controlled processes. The model accounts for both speed and accuracy and does so by assuming that participants set an internal deadline. If a stimulus-controlled response is not produced by the deadline, the participant then…
Descriptors: Models, Statistical Analysis, Stimuli, Response Style (Tests)
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Thomas, R. Murray – International Journal of Educational Research, 1986
This monograph examines the assessment of moral development over the past half century. Recent renewed interest in the field has led to the creation of new techniques and to the refinement of existing methods. Unsolved problems in theory and in technical development provide challenges for researchers in the future. (LMO)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Educational Assessment, Educational Research, Evaluation Methods