hardsci.wordpress.com
Some thoughts on replication and falsifiability: Is this a chance to do better? – The Hardest Science
https://hardsci.wordpress.com/2014/07/01/some-thoughts-on-replication-and-falsifiability-is-this-a-chance-to-do-better
Some thoughts on replication and falsifiability: Is this a chance to do better? July 1, 2014. Most psychologists would probably endorse falsification. As an important part of science. But in practice we rarely do it right. As others have observed. From your theory. On the flip side, a theory is corroborated when it survives many risky opportunities to fail. So in the grand scheme, I don’t think we should self-flagellate too much about being poor theorists or succumb to physics envy. Most of the...So with...
talyarkoni.org
[citation needed] – minds, brains, data, etc.
http://www.talyarkoni.org/blog
Minds, brains, data, etc. Subscribe to this blog via email. Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email. The Great Minds Journal Club discusses Westfall & Yarkoni (2016). Neurosynth is joining the Elsevier family. Still not selective: comment on comment on comment on Lieberman & Eisenberger (2015). No, the dorsal anterior cingulate is not selective for pain: comment on Lieberman and Eisenberger (2015). The mysterious inefficacy of weather. Can’...
talyarkoni.org
In defense of Facebook – [citation needed]
http://www.talyarkoni.org/blog/2014/06/28/in-defense-of-facebook
Minds, brains, data, etc. Subscribe to this blog via email. Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email. The Great Minds Journal Club discusses Westfall & Yarkoni (2016). Neurosynth is joining the Elsevier family. Still not selective: comment on comment on comment on Lieberman & Eisenberger (2015). No, the dorsal anterior cingulate is not selective for pain: comment on Lieberman and Eisenberger (2015). The mysterious inefficacy of weather. It feels a...
pilab.psy.utexas.edu
Psychoinformatics Lab -- People
http://pilab.psy.utexas.edu/people
People of the PILab. Alejandro de la Vega.
jimgrange.wordpress.com
trimr: An R Package of Response Time Trimming Methods | Jim Grange
https://jimgrange.wordpress.com/2015/08/03/trimr-an-r-package-of-response-time-trimming-methods
Senior Lecturer in Cognitive Psychology. Keele University, UK. Trimr: An R Package of Response Time Trimming Methods. August 3, 2015. There are a wide array of response time trimming methods that I outlined in a previous post. To make response time trimming simpler for the researcher, I have developed a small R package trimr that takes raw RTs for all participants and experimental conditions, performs any trimming method the user requires, and returns data for all participants and conditions ready for in...
talyarkoni.org
The homogenization of scientific computing, or why Python is steadily eating other languages’ lunch – [citation needed]
http://www.talyarkoni.org/blog/2013/11/18/the-homogenization-of-scientific-computing-or-why-python-is-steadily-eating-other-languages-lunch?utm_content=buffer0277e&utm_source=buffer&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=Buffer
Minds, brains, data, etc. Subscribe to this blog via email. Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email. The Great Minds Journal Club discusses Westfall & Yarkoni (2016). Neurosynth is joining the Elsevier family. Still not selective: comment on comment on comment on Lieberman & Eisenberger (2015). No, the dorsal anterior cingulate is not selective for pain: comment on Lieberman and Eisenberger (2015). The mysterious inefficacy of weather. Ruby on Ra...
rynesherman.com
(Mis)Interpreting Confidence Intervals | Sherman's Head
http://rynesherman.com/blog/misinterpreting-confidence-intervals
About Psychology, Statistics, and R (by Ryne Sherman). In a recent paper Hoekstra, Morey, Rouder, and Wagenmakers. Argued that confidence intervals are just as prone to misinterpretation as tradiational. Values (for a nice summary, see this blog. Despite the risk of looking ignorant, I asked that very question on Twitter:. Alexander Etz (@AlexanderEtz) provided an excellent answer to my question. Despite Alexander’s clear (and correct) explanation, I still reject it. I reject it on the grounds that i...
jeffrouder.blogspot.com
Invariances: How many participants do I need? Insights from a Dominance Principle
http://jeffrouder.blogspot.com/2015/04/how-many-participants-do-i-need.html
A blog about research methods, statistics, infrastructure, cognition, memory, and perception. Tuesday, April 21, 2015. How many participants do I need? Insights from a Dominance Principle. The Twitter Fight About Numbers of Participants. In this post, I ask how wise are the cognitive psychologists by examining the ramifications of these small numbers of participants. This examination informed by a dominance principle. The variability within a person and condition across trials. Regardless of condition, s...
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