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Peer reviewedKline, Donald W.; And Others – International Journal of Aging and Human Development, 1980
The time judgments of the older participants were significantly and systematically determined by a metronome rate. Results are consistent with the notion of increased field-dependence among older persons and suggest that their greater social conformity and their inability to ignore irrelevant stimuli might also be explicable. (Author)
Descriptors: Age Differences, College Students, Gerontology, Institutionalized Persons
Peer reviewedWarner, Rebecca M. – Language and Speech, 1979
Vocal activity in spontaneous speech appears to alternate between regular periods of high and low activity. These cycles may be properties of social systems, internal cognitive rhythms, or physiological rhythms that affect readiness to initiate activity. (Author/RL)
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Behavioral Science Research, Communication Research, Interaction
Aparicio, Carlos F.; Baum, William M. – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2006
The generality of the molar view of behavior was extended to the study of choice with rats, showing the usefulness of studying order at various levels of extendedness. Rats' presses on two levers produced food according to concurrent variable-interval variable-interval schedules. Seven different reinforcer ratios were arranged within each session,…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Reinforcement, Cues, Intervals
Peer reviewedMullins, Celine; Bellgrove, Mark A.; Gill, Michael; Robertson, Ian H. – Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 2005
Objective: To examine the relationship between time reproduction, performance variability, and sustained attention deficits in children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) combined (ADHD-C) and inattentive (ADHD-I) subtypes, relative to matched controls. Method: Participants (age range 7.1-14.1 years) performed a time reproduction…
Descriptors: Time Management, Intervals, Hyperactivity, Attention Deficit Disorders
Steiger, James H. – Psychological Methods, 2004
This article presents confidence interval methods for improving on the standard F tests in the balanced, completely between-subjects, fixed-effects analysis of variance. Exact confidence intervals for omnibus effect size measures, such as or and the root-mean-square standardized effect, provide all the information in the traditional hypothesis…
Descriptors: Intervals, Effect Size, Statistical Analysis, Evaluation Methods
Mallinckrodt, Brent; Abraham, W. Todd; Wei, Meifen; Russell, Daniel W. – Journal of Counseling Psychology, 2006
P. A. Frazier, A. P. Tix, and K. E. Barron (2004) highlighted a normal theory method popularized by R. M. Baron and D. A. Kenny (1986) for testing the statistical significance of indirect effects (i.e., mediator variables) in multiple regression contexts. However, simulation studies suggest that this method lacks statistical power relative to some…
Descriptors: Statistical Significance, Multiple Regression Analysis, Simulation, Evaluation Methods
Hawley, Karri S.; Cherry, Katie E. – Behavior Modification, 2004
Six older adults with probable Alzheimers disease (AD) were trained to recall a name-face association using the spaced-retrieval method. We administered six training sessions over a 2-week period. On each trial, participants selected a target photograph and stated the target name, from eight other photographs, at increasingly longer retention…
Descriptors: Photography, Intervals, Alzheimers Disease, Older Adults
Cumming, Geoff; Finch, Sue – American Psychologist, 2005
Wider use in psychology of confidence intervals (CIs), especially as error bars in figures, is a desirable development. However, psychologists seldom use CIs and may not understand them well. The authors discuss the interpretation of figures with error bars and analyze the relationship between CIs and statistical significance testing. They propose…
Descriptors: Research Design, Psychologists, Psychology, Intervals
Froehlich, Alyson L.; Herbranson, Walter T.; Loper, Julia D.; Wood, David M.; Shimp, Charles P. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2004
Pigeons responded in a serial response time task patterned after that of M. J. Nissen and P. Bullemer (1987) with humans. Experiment 1 produced global facilitation: Response times in repeating lists of locations were faster than when locations were random. Response time to a spatial location was also a function of both that location's 1st- and…
Descriptors: Intervals, Reaction Time, Serial Learning, Animals
Fraley, R. Chris; Roberts, Brent W. – Psychological Review, 2005
In contemporary psychology there is debate over whether individual differences in psychological constructs are stable over extended periods of time. The authors argue that it is impossible to resolve such debates unless researchers focus on patterns of stability and the developmental mechanisms that may give rise to them. To facilitate this shift…
Descriptors: Psychological Studies, Individual Differences, Intervals, Meta Analysis
Fairbrother, Jeffrey T.; Shea, John B. – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2005
Two experiments investigated the effects of a single reminder trial on immediate and delayed retention. Experiment 1 determined if beneficial effects of a reminder mat were a function of task order. Immediate retention performance benefited only when the reminder trial was practiced in the first block of trials. Experiment 2 added a 24-hr delayed…
Descriptors: Memory, Intervals, Reaction Time, Psychomotor Skills
Lui, Kung-Jong; Cumberland, William G. – Psychometrika, 2004
When the underlying responses are on an ordinal scale, gamma is one of the most frequently used indices to measure the strength of association between two ordered variables. However, except for a brief mention on the use of the traditional interval estimator based on Wald's statistic, discussion of interval estimation of the gamma is limited.…
Descriptors: Intervals, Sample Size, Maximum Likelihood Statistics, Monte Carlo Methods
Jones, Mari Riess; Johnston, Heather Moynihan; Puente, Jennifer – Cognitive Psychology, 2006
In three experiments, participants listened for a target's pitch change within recurrent nine-tone patterns having largely isochronous rhythms. Patterns differed in pitch structure of initial (context) and final (target distance) pattern segments. Also varied were: probe timing (Experiments 2 and 3) and instructions about probe timing (Experiments…
Descriptors: Intervals, Auditory Perception, Auditory Stimuli, Intonation
Krampe, Ralf Th.; Mayr, Ulrich; Kliegl, Reinhold – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2005
The authors demonstrate that the timing and sequencing of target durations require low-level timing and executive control. Sixteen young (M-sub(age) = 19 years) and 16 older (M-sub(age) = 70 years) adults participated in 2 experiments. In Experiment 1, individual mean-variance functions for low-level timing (isochronous tapping) and the sequencing…
Descriptors: Young Adults, Older Adults, Motion, Psychomotor Skills
Charles, Eric P. – Psychological Methods, 2005
The correction for attenuation due to measurement error (CAME) has received many historical criticisms, most of which can be traced to the limited ability to use CAME inferentially. Past attempts to determine confidence intervals for CAME are summarized and their limitations discussed. The author suggests that inference requires confidence sets…
Descriptors: Error of Measurement, Error Correction, Intervals, Inferences

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