This paper addresses the question how to compare reaction times computed by a computational model of speech comprehension with observed reaction times by participants. The question is based on the observation that reaction time sequences substantially differ per participant, which raises the issue of how exactly the model is to be assessed. Part of the variation in reaction time sequences is caused by the so-called local speed: the current reaction time correlates to some extent with a number of previous reaction times, due to slowly varying variations in attention, fatigue etc. This paper proposes a method, based on time series analysis, to filter the observed reaction times in order to separate the local speed effects. Results show that a...
Response times (RTs) are a natural kind of data to investigate cognitive processes underlying cognit...
We present a targeted, scaled-up comparison of incremental processing in humans and neural language ...
We investigate the relation between speed and accuracy within problem solving in its simplest non-tr...
This paper addresses the question how to compare reaction times computed by a computational model of...
This paper addresses the question how to compare reaction times computed by a computational model of...
Reaction times (RTs) are used widely in psychological and psycholinguistic research as inexpensive m...
This paper combines two different approaches to modeling reaction time data from lexical decision ex...
Contains fulltext : 238373.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)Interspeech 202...
Response times (RTs) are a natural kind of data to investigate cognitive processes underlying cognit...
Sequences of reaction times (RT) produced by participants in an experiment are not only influenced b...
DIANA is an end-to-end computational model of speech pro-cessing, which takes as input the speech si...
<p>Models' reaction times were calculated from 100 runs of picture and word set experiments.</p
In the psycholinguistic literature, reaction times and accuracy can be analyzed separately using mix...
Reaction time (RT) is a critical measure of performance, and studying its distribution at the group ...
This tutorial for the statistical processing of reaction times collected through a repeated-measure ...
Response times (RTs) are a natural kind of data to investigate cognitive processes underlying cognit...
We present a targeted, scaled-up comparison of incremental processing in humans and neural language ...
We investigate the relation between speed and accuracy within problem solving in its simplest non-tr...
This paper addresses the question how to compare reaction times computed by a computational model of...
This paper addresses the question how to compare reaction times computed by a computational model of...
Reaction times (RTs) are used widely in psychological and psycholinguistic research as inexpensive m...
This paper combines two different approaches to modeling reaction time data from lexical decision ex...
Contains fulltext : 238373.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)Interspeech 202...
Response times (RTs) are a natural kind of data to investigate cognitive processes underlying cognit...
Sequences of reaction times (RT) produced by participants in an experiment are not only influenced b...
DIANA is an end-to-end computational model of speech pro-cessing, which takes as input the speech si...
<p>Models' reaction times were calculated from 100 runs of picture and word set experiments.</p
In the psycholinguistic literature, reaction times and accuracy can be analyzed separately using mix...
Reaction time (RT) is a critical measure of performance, and studying its distribution at the group ...
This tutorial for the statistical processing of reaction times collected through a repeated-measure ...
Response times (RTs) are a natural kind of data to investigate cognitive processes underlying cognit...
We present a targeted, scaled-up comparison of incremental processing in humans and neural language ...
We investigate the relation between speed and accuracy within problem solving in its simplest non-tr...