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Muth, Chelsea; Bales, Karen L.; Hinde, Katie; Maninger, Nicole; Mendoza, Sally P.; Ferrer, Emilio – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2016
Unavoidable sample size issues beset psychological research that involves scarce populations or costly laboratory procedures. When incorporating longitudinal designs these samples are further reduced by traditional modeling techniques, which perform listwise deletion for any instance of missing data. Moreover, these techniques are limited in their…
Descriptors: Sample Size, Psychological Studies, Models, Statistical Analysis
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Klotsche, Jens; Gloster, Andrew T. – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2012
Longitudinal studies are increasingly common in psychological research. Characterized by repeated measurements, longitudinal designs aim to observe phenomena that change over time. One important question involves identification of the exact point in time when the observed phenomena begin to meaningfully change above and beyond baseline…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, Psychological Studies, Nonparametric Statistics, Regression (Statistics)
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Gonzalez, Cleotilde; Dutt, Varun – Psychological Review, 2011
In decisions from experience, there are 2 experimental paradigms: sampling and repeated-choice. In the sampling paradigm, participants sample between 2 options as many times as they want (i.e., the stopping point is variable), observe the outcome with no real consequences each time, and finally select 1 of the 2 options that cause them to earn or…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Learning Theories, Models, Sampling
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Shadish, William R. – Psychological Methods, 2010
This article compares Donald Campbell's and Donald Rubin's work on causal inference in field settings on issues of epistemology, theories of cause and effect, methodology, statistics, generalization, and terminology. The two approaches are quite different but compatible, differing mostly in matters of bandwidth versus fidelity. Campbell's work…
Descriptors: Inferences, Generalization, Epistemology, Causal Models
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Campbell, Jamie I. D.; Parker, Helen R.; Doetzel, Nicole L. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2004
In Experiment 1, adults (n = 48) performed simple addition, multiplication, and parity (i.e., odd-even) comparisons on pairs of Arabic digits or English number words. For addition and comparison, but not multiplication, response time increased with the number of odd operands. For addition, but not comparison, this parity effect was greater for…
Descriptors: Reaction Time, Arithmetic, Number Concepts, Psychological Studies