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Glickman, Mark E.; Gray, Jeremy R.; Morales, Carlos J. – Psychometrika, 2005
Both the speed and accuracy of responding are important measures of performance. A well-known interpretive difficulty is that participants may differ in their strategy, trading speed for accuracy, with no change in underlying competence. Another difficulty arises when participants respond slowly and inaccurately (rather than quickly but…
Descriptors: Memory, Reaction Time, Cognitive Processes, Attention Control
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Waters, Andrew J.; Shiffman, Saul; Sayette, Michael A.; Paty, Jean A.; Gwaltney, Chad J.; Balabanis, Mark H. – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 2004
Cue exposure paradigms have been used to examine reactivity to smoking cues. However, it is not known whether cue-provoked craving is associated with smoking cessation outcomes or whether cue reactivity can be attenuated by nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) in clinical samples. Cue-provoked craving ratings and reaction time responses were…
Descriptors: Therapy, Cues, Reaction Time, Smoking
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Laursen, Paul B.; Shing, Cecilia M.; Jenkins, David G. – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2004
The power output achieved at peak oxygen consumption (V[O.sub.2]peak) and the time this power can be maintained (i.e., Tmax) have been used in prescribing high-intensity interval training. In this context, the present study examined temporal aspects of the V[O.sub.2] response to exercise at the cycling power that output well trained cyclists…
Descriptors: Intervals, Reaction Time, Exercise Physiology, Kinetics
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Compton, Donald L. – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 2006
In the fourth session of the National Research Center on Learning Disabilities Responsiveness-to-Intervention Symposium in 2003, Good, Vellutino, and Torgesen presented papers that addressed the question, "How should unresponsiveness to secondary intervention be operationalized in an RTI approach to LD identification?" In this commentary, I…
Descriptors: Reaction Time, Responses, Intervention, Definitions
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Ratcliff, Roger – Cognitive Psychology, 2006
The diffusion model (Ratcliff, 1978) and the leaky competing accumulator model (LCA, Usher & McClelland, 2001) were tested against two-choice data collected from the same subjects with the standard response time procedure and the response signal procedure. In the response signal procedure, a stimulus is presented and then, at one of a number of…
Descriptors: Models, Responses, Reaction Time, Goodness of Fit
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Jefferies, E.; Lambon Ralph, M.A.; Baddeley, A.D. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2004
Immediate serial recall is better for sentences than word lists presumably because of the additional support that meaningful material receives from long-term memory. This may occur automatically, without the involvement of attention, or may require additional attentionally demanding processing. For example, the episodic buffer model (Baddeley,…
Descriptors: Linguistics, Word Lists, Sentences, Reaction Time
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Rose, S.A.; Feldman, J.F.; Jankowski, J.J. – Intelligence, 2005
The present study explored the dimensionality of cognition at 12 months by factor analyzing data from a large cohort of preterm and full-term infants (N=182). Two analyses were done. In the first, using only measures used earlier, when the infants were 7 months of age, the same three factors emerged at 12 months as at the earlier age-namely,…
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, Recognition (Psychology), Reaction Time, Object Permanence
Spencer, K.A.; Rogers, M.A. – Brain and Language, 2005
It is widely accepted that the cerebellar and basal ganglia control circuits contribute to the programming of movement. Converging evidence from neuroimaging, limb control, and neuropsychological studies suggests that (1) people with cerebellar disease have reduced ability to program movement sequences in advance of movement onset and (2) people…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Diseases, Reaction Time, Neuropsychology
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Smith, Philip L.; Wolfgang, Bradley J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2004
A dichoptic masking procedure was used to test whether the mask-dependent cuing effects found in luminance detection by P. L. Smith (2000a) were due to integration masking or interruption masking. Attentional cuing enhanced detection sensitivity (d') when stimuli were backwardly masked with either dichoptic or monoptic masks, whereas no cuing…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Prompting, Reaction Time, Attention
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Kubina, Jr., Richard M.; Wolfe, Pamela – Exceptionality, 2005
Curricula for students with autism do not take into account levels of learning such as behavioral fluency. Behavioral fluency addresses accuracy as well as speed of response. We posit that fluency increases the functionality of skills for students with autism and should be systematically programmed into a curriculum. To discuss the application of…
Descriptors: Autism, Language Fluency, Curriculum, Behavior Patterns
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Brown, Scott; Heathcote, Andrew – Psychological Review, 2005
Almost all models of response time (RT) use a stochastic accumulation process. To account for the benchmark RT phenomena, researchers have found it necessary to include between-trial variability in the starting point and/or the rate of accumulation, both in linear (R. Ratcliff & J. N. Rouder, 1998) and nonlinear (M. Usher & J. L. McClelland, 2001)…
Descriptors: Reaction Time, Models, Measurement Techniques, Regression (Statistics)
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Schwarz, Wolf – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
Paradigms used to study the time course of the redundant signals effect (RSE; J. O. Miller, 1986) and temporal order judgments (TOJs) share many important similarities and address related questions concerning the time course of sensory processing. The author of this article proposes and tests a new aggregate diffusion-based model to quantitatively…
Descriptors: Time, Perception, Visual Stimuli, Reaction Time
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Moscoso del Prado Martin, Fermin; Kostic, Aleksandar; Baayen, R. Harold – Cognition, 2004
In this study we introduce an information-theoretical formulation of the emergence of type- and token-based effects in morphological processing. We describe a probabilistic measure of the informational complexity of a word, its information residual, which encompasses the combined influences of the amount of information contained by the target word…
Descriptors: Morphology (Languages), Language Processing, Reaction Time, Indo European Languages
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Mohamed Zied, Kefi; Phillipe, Allain; Karine, Pinon; Valerie, Havet-Thomassin; Ghislaine, Aubin; Arnaud, Roy; Didier, Le Gall – Brain and Cognition, 2004
The present investigation examined the functioning of inhibitory mechanisms in younger and older bilinguals using a bilingual version of the Stroop test. The study predicted different patterns of age related decline in inhibitory mechanisms (inter- and intralingual interference) in bilinguals depending on their level of proficiency. Consistent…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Age Differences, Adults, Inhibition
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Bolte, Jens; Uhe, Mechtild – Brain and Language, 2004
Using lexical decision, the effects of primes of different length on spoken word recognition were evaluated in three partial repetition priming experiments. Prime length was determined via gating (Experiments 1a and 2a). It was shorter than, equivalent to, or longer than the recognition point (RP), or a complete word. In Experiments 1b and 1c,…
Descriptors: Reaction Time, Word Recognition, Linguistics, Experiments
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