We investigate the relation between speed and accuracy within problem solving in its simplest non-trivial form. We consider tests with only two items and code the item responses in two binary variables: one indicating the response accuracy, and one indicating the response speed. Despite being a very basic setup, it enables us to study item pairs stemming from a broad range of domains such as basic arithmetic, first language learning, intelligence-related problems, and chess, with large numbers of observations for every pair of problems under consideration. We carry out a survey over a large number of such item pairs and compare three types of psychometric accuracy-response time models present in the literature: two 'one-process' models, the...
The most common process variable available for analysis due to tests presented in a computerized for...
University of Minnesota M.A. thesis. December 2010. Major: Educational Psychology. Advisor: Mark L. ...
Raw scores on time-limited multiple-choice intelligence tests are determined by incorrect responses ...
We investigate the relation between speed and accuracy within problem solving in its simplest non-tr...
We investigate the relation between speed and accuracy within problem solving in its simplest non-tr...
Both the speed and accuracy of responding are important measures of performance. A well-known interp...
Starting from an explicit scoring rule for time limit tasks incorporating both response time and acc...
Responses to items from an intelligence test may be fast or slow. The research issue dealt with in t...
The purpose of this investigation was to determine whether stress for speed and/or accuracy would di...
With the widespread use of computerized tests in educational measurement and cognitive psychology, r...
The assumption of conditional independence between response time and accuracy given speed and abilit...
The purpose of this paper is to review some of the key literature on response time as it has played ...
The speed–accuracy trade-off (SAT) suggests that time constraints reduce response accuracy. Its rele...
Response times (RTs) are a natural kind of data to investigate cognitive processes underlying cognit...
The most common process variable available for analysis due to tests presented in a computerized for...
The most common process variable available for analysis due to tests presented in a computerized for...
University of Minnesota M.A. thesis. December 2010. Major: Educational Psychology. Advisor: Mark L. ...
Raw scores on time-limited multiple-choice intelligence tests are determined by incorrect responses ...
We investigate the relation between speed and accuracy within problem solving in its simplest non-tr...
We investigate the relation between speed and accuracy within problem solving in its simplest non-tr...
Both the speed and accuracy of responding are important measures of performance. A well-known interp...
Starting from an explicit scoring rule for time limit tasks incorporating both response time and acc...
Responses to items from an intelligence test may be fast or slow. The research issue dealt with in t...
The purpose of this investigation was to determine whether stress for speed and/or accuracy would di...
With the widespread use of computerized tests in educational measurement and cognitive psychology, r...
The assumption of conditional independence between response time and accuracy given speed and abilit...
The purpose of this paper is to review some of the key literature on response time as it has played ...
The speed–accuracy trade-off (SAT) suggests that time constraints reduce response accuracy. Its rele...
Response times (RTs) are a natural kind of data to investigate cognitive processes underlying cognit...
The most common process variable available for analysis due to tests presented in a computerized for...
The most common process variable available for analysis due to tests presented in a computerized for...
University of Minnesota M.A. thesis. December 2010. Major: Educational Psychology. Advisor: Mark L. ...
Raw scores on time-limited multiple-choice intelligence tests are determined by incorrect responses ...