2010
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2010.00001
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http://frontiersin.org/psychology/quantitativepsychologyandmeasurement/paper/10.3389/fpsyg.2010.00001/

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Cited by 116 publications
(212 citation statements)
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References 7 publications
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“…Possible explanations for this failure to replicate include task demands (participants usually respond to a much larger number of words over time in a megastudy than in a small-scale experiment leading to different fatigue and practice effects, and priming and list effects), and item-wise correlations between megastudies. Conversely, Keuleers et al (2010) reported a perfect convergence between the results of over 10 small-scale lexical decision experiments, covering a range of word processing phenomena, and the data patterns obtained by analyzing lexical decision RTs to the same sets of stimuli, as reported in their Dutch Lexicon Project megastudy. Moreover, Balota et al (2013) replicated results of published studies on word frequency and regularity, contra Sibley et al (2009), using by-participant z-scores and accuracy estimates from the English Lexicon Project.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 88%
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“…Possible explanations for this failure to replicate include task demands (participants usually respond to a much larger number of words over time in a megastudy than in a small-scale experiment leading to different fatigue and practice effects, and priming and list effects), and item-wise correlations between megastudies. Conversely, Keuleers et al (2010) reported a perfect convergence between the results of over 10 small-scale lexical decision experiments, covering a range of word processing phenomena, and the data patterns obtained by analyzing lexical decision RTs to the same sets of stimuli, as reported in their Dutch Lexicon Project megastudy. Moreover, Balota et al (2013) replicated results of published studies on word frequency and regularity, contra Sibley et al (2009), using by-participant z-scores and accuracy estimates from the English Lexicon Project.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 88%
“…Among other advantages, megastudies offer the ability to conduct virtual experiments, that is, to draw samples of items with properties that vary in critical linguistic dimensions. Behavioral responses to the items in such a virtual experiment can then be treated as if they were the outcomes of an experiment designed with the critical manipulation in mind (Balota, Yap, Hutchinson, & Cortese, 2013; Keuleers, Diependaele, & Brysbaert, 2010; Sibley, Kello, & Seidenberg, 2009). The benefits of virtual experiments are many.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Cross-cultural research has shown that high independence (personal control) predicted higher well-being in the U.S., whereas high interdependence (relational harmony, measured as the absence of relational strain) predicted higher well-being in Japan [81]. …”
Section: Scientific Advances On Psychological Well-beingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Those with high levels of trait impulsivity do not always show behavioral evidence of poor self-control (Wiers, Ames, Hofman, Krank, & Stacey, 2010). Dual-process models of self-regulation explain this phenomenon by positing that self-controlled behavior is the result of the interaction between impulsive and reflective processes (Smith & DeCoster, 2000).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%