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Outputs (5)

The evolution of primate short-term memory (2022)
Journal Article
Grange. (2022). The evolution of primate short-term memory. Animal Behavior and Cognition, 428-516. https://doi.org/10.26451/abc.09.04.06.2022

Short-term memory is implicated in a range of cognitive abilities and is critical for understanding primate cognitive evolution. To investigate the effects of phylogeny, ecology and sociality on short-term memory, we tested the largest and most diver... Read More about The evolution of primate short-term memory.

A spurious correlation between difference scores in evidence-accumulation model parameters (2022)
Journal Article
Grange, J. A., & Schuch, S. (in press). A spurious correlation between difference scores in evidence-accumulation model parameters. Behavior Research Methods, https://doi.org/10.3758/s13428-022-01956-8

Evidence-accumulation models are a useful tool for investigating the cognitive processes that give rise to behavioural data patterns in reaction times (RTs) and error rates. In their simplest form, evidence-accumulation models include three parameter... Read More about A spurious correlation between difference scores in evidence-accumulation model parameters.

mixtur: An R package for designing, analysing, and modelling continuous report visual short-term memory studies (2022)
Journal Article
Grange. (2022). mixtur: An R package for designing, analysing, and modelling continuous report visual short-term memory studies. Behavior Research Methods, https://doi.org/10.3758/s13428-021-01688-1

Visual short-term memory (vSTM) is often measured via continuous-report tasks whereby participants are presented with stimuli that vary along a continuous dimension (e.g., colour) with the goal of memorising the stimulus features. At test, participan... Read More about mixtur: An R package for designing, analysing, and modelling continuous report visual short-term memory studies.

Computational modelling of the speed–accuracy tradeoff: No evidence for an association with depression symptomatology (2022)
Journal Article
Grange. (2022). Computational modelling of the speed–accuracy tradeoff: No evidence for an association with depression symptomatology. Journal of Psychiatric Research, 111-125. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpsychires.2021.12.057

Successful decision making often requires finding the right balance between the speed and accuracy of responding: Emphasising speed can lead to error-prone performance, yet emphasising accuracy leads to a slowing of performance. Such speed–accuracy t... Read More about Computational modelling of the speed–accuracy tradeoff: No evidence for an association with depression symptomatology.