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Peer reviewedTversky, Amos; Gati, Itamar – Psychological Review, 1982
The coincidence hypothesis predicts that dissimilarity between objects that differ on two separable dimensions is larger than predicted from their unidimensional differences on the basis of triangle inequality and segmental additivity. The coincidence hypothesis was supported in two-dimensional stimuli studies. (Author/CM)
Descriptors: Classification, Discriminant Analysis, Hypothesis Testing, Mathematical Models
Smithson, Michael; Verkuilen, Jay – Psychological Methods, 2006
Uncorrectable skew and heteroscedasticity are among the "lemons" of psychological data, yet many important variables naturally exhibit these properties. For scales with a lower and upper bound, a suitable candidate for models is the beta distribution, which is very flexible and models skew quite well. The authors present…
Descriptors: Maximum Likelihood Statistics, Predictor Variables, Mathematical Models, Comparative Analysis
Peer reviewedTakane, Yoshio; And Others – Psychometrika, 1987
A new method of multiple discriminant analysis allows a mixture of continuous and discrete predictors. It handles conditional, joint, or separate sampling. Subjects and criterion groups are represented as points in a multidimensional Euclidean space. Advantages of the method, deriving from Akaike Information Criterion model evaluation, are…
Descriptors: Adults, Discriminant Analysis, Evaluation Criteria, Mathematical Models
Baratta, Mary Kathryne – 1979
The advantages of the Delphi Technique are that it relies on collective expert judgment, prevents the excessive influence in decision-making of those in positions of status, and encourages consensus. The technique consists of five steps: (1) asking experts to list items relevant to a topic; (2) returning the list to the participants and asking…
Descriptors: Administration, Decision Making, Discriminant Analysis, Factor Analysis

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