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Rouder, Jeffrey N.; Morey, Richard D. – Psychological Review, 2009
Following G. T. Fechner (1966), thresholds have been conceptualized as the amount of intensity needed to transition between mental states, such as between a states of unconsciousness and consciousness. With the advent of the theory of signal detection, however, discrete-state theory and the corresponding notion of threshold have been discounted.…
Descriptors: Psychometrics, Probability, Item Response Theory, Cognitive Processes
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Schmader, Toni; Johns, Michael; Forbes, Chad – Psychological Review, 2008
Research showing that activation of negative stereotypes can impair the performance of stigmatized individuals on a wide variety of tasks has proliferated. However, a complete understanding of the processes underlying these stereotype threat effects on behavior is still lacking. The authors examine stereotype threat in the context of research on…
Descriptors: Stereotypes, Negative Attitudes, Short Term Memory, Stress Variables
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Johnson-Laird, P. N.; Mancini, Francesco; Gangemi, Amelia – Psychological Review, 2006
A hyper-emotion theory of psychological illnesses is presented. It postulates that these illnesses have an onset in which a cognitive evaluation initiates a sequence of unconscious transitions yielding a basic emotion. This emotion is appropriate for the situation but inappropriate in its intensity. Whenever it recurs, it leads individuals to a…
Descriptors: Mental Disorders, Epidemiology, Psychopathology, Patients
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Rotello, Caren M.; Macmillan, Neil A.; Reeder, John A. – Psychological Review, 2004
In the remember-know paradigm for studying recognition memory, participants distinguish items whose presentations are episodically remembered from those that are merely familiar. A one-dimensional model postulates that remember responses are just high-confidence old judgments, but a meta-analysis of 373 experiments shows that the receiver…
Descriptors: Recognition (Psychology), Memory, Psychological Patterns, Psychological Studies
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Lachter, Joel; Forster, Kenneth I.; Ruthruff, Eric – Psychological Review, 2004
According to D. E. Broadbent's (1958) selective filter theory, people do not process unattended stimuli beyond the analysis of basic physical properties. This theory was later rejected on the basis of numerous findings that people identify irrelevant (and supposedly unattended) stimuli. A careful review of this evidence, however, reveals strong…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Cognitive Processes, Psychological Patterns, Research Methodology
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Proctor, Robert W. – Psychological Review, 1986
Ratcliff (1985) simulated data from three letter-matching experiments with his diffusion model. The necessity of including a comparison criterion is consistent with the conclusion of Proctor, Rao, and Hurst (1984) that bias of response criteria, alone, is insufficient to generate the fast-same phenomenon. (Author/LMO)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Encoding (Psychology), Models, Pattern Recognition
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Pronin, Emily; Gilovich, Thomas; Ross, Lee – Psychological Review, 2004
Important asymmetries between self-perception and social perception arise from the simple fact that other people's actions, judgments, and priorities sometimes differ from one's own. This leads people not only to make more dispositional inferences about others than about themselves (E. E. Jones & R. E. Nisbett, 1972) but also to see others as more…
Descriptors: Social Bias, Bias, Social Cognition, Intergroup Relations
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Orford, Jim – Psychological Review, 1986
This article critically examines the evidence for interpersonal complementarity according to four recent theories. The only prediction found to be regularly supported is that friendly-dominant and friendly-submissive behaviors are complementary. A repeated finding is that hostile-dominant acts are frequently responded to with further…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Behavior Theories, Cognitive Processes, Hostility
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Goodwin, Geoffrey P.; Johnson-Laird, P. N. – Psychological Review, 2005
Inferences about spatial, temporal, and other relations are ubiquitous. This article presents a novel model-based theory of such reasoning. The theory depends on 5 principles. (a) The structure of mental models is iconic as far as possible. (b) The logical consequences of relations emerge from models constructed from the meanings of the relations…
Descriptors: Inferences, Models, Thinking Skills, Concept Formation
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Brandstatter, Eduard; Gigerenzer, Gerd; Hertwig, Ralph – Psychological Review, 2006
Bernoulli's framework of expected utility serves as a model for various psychological processes, including motivation, moral sense, attitudes, and decision making. To account for evidence at variance with expected utility, the authors generalize the framework of fast and frugal heuristics from inferences to preferences. The priority heuristic…
Descriptors: Heuristics, Decision Making, Models, Psychological Patterns