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Andrew Heathcote
Andrew Heathcote
Verified email at uva.nl - Homepage
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
The simplest complete model of choice response time: Linear ballistic accumulation
SD Brown, A Heathcote
Cognitive psychology 57 (3), 153-178, 2008
13662008
The power law repealed: The case for an exponential law of practice
A Heathcote, S Brown, DJK Mewhort
Psychonomic bulletin & review 7 (2), 185-207, 2000
9412000
A consensus guide to capturing the ability to inhibit actions and impulsive behaviors in the stop-signal task
F Verbruggen, AR Aron, GP Band, C Beste, PG Bissett, AT Brockett, ...
elife 8, e46323, 2019
7302019
Analysis of response time distributions: an example using the Stroop task.
A Heathcote, SJ Popiel, DJ Mewhort
Psychological bulletin 109 (2), 340, 1991
6881991
The form of the forgetting curve and the fate of memories
L Averell, A Heathcote
Journal of mathematical psychology 55 (1), 25-35, 2011
3342011
The multiattribute linear ballistic accumulator model of context effects in multialternative choice.
JS Trueblood, SD Brown, A Heathcote
Psychological review 121 (2), 179, 2014
3142014
Not just for consumers: Context effects are fundamental to decision making
JS Trueblood, SD Brown, A Heathcote, JR Busemeyer
Psychological science 24 (6), 901-908, 2013
3042013
Quantile maximum likelihood estimation of response time distributions
A Heathcote, S Brown, DJK Mewhort
Psychonomic bulletin & review 9, 394-401, 2002
3022002
A ballistic model of choice response time.
S Brown, A Heathcote
Psychological review 112 (1), 117, 2005
2922005
The hare and the tortoise: emphasizing speed can change the evidence used to make decisions.
B Rae, A Heathcote, C Donkin, L Averell, S Brown
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition 40 (5), 1226, 2014
2552014
When the brain takes a break: A model-based analysis of mind wandering
M Mittner, W Boekel, AM Tucker, BM Turner, A Heathcote, BU Forstmann
Journal of Neuroscience 34 (49), 16286-16295, 2014
2532014
Diffusion versus linear ballistic accumulation: different models but the same conclusions about psychological processes?
C Donkin, S Brown, A Heathcote, EJ Wagenmakers
Psychonomic bulletin & review 18, 61-69, 2011
2382011
Fitting distributions using maximum likelihood: Methods and packages
D Cousineau, S Brown, A Heathcote
Behavior Research Methods, Instruments, & Computers 36 (4), 742-756, 2004
2202004
Electrophysiological correlates of anticipatory task‐switching processes
R Nicholson, F Karayanidis, D Poboka, A Heathcote, PT Michie
Psychophysiology 42 (5), 540-554, 2005
2102005
Advance preparation in task-switching: converging evidence from behavioral, brain activation, and model-based approaches
F Karayanidis, S Jamadar, H Ruge, N Phillips, A Heathcote, ...
Frontiers in Psychology 1, 25, 2010
2082010
Distinguishing common and task-specific processes in word identification: A matter of some moment?
S Andrews, A Heathcote
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition 27 (2), 514, 2001
2072001
Item recognition memory and the receiver operating characteristic.
A Heathcote
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition 29 (6), 1210, 2003
1972003
QMPE: Estimating Lognormal, Wald, and Weibull RT distributions with a parameter-dependent lower bound
A Heathcote, S Brown, D Cousineau
Behavior Research Methods, Instruments, & Computers 36, 277-290, 2004
1812004
Dynamic models of choice
A Heathcote, YS Lin, A Reynolds, L Strickland, M Gretton, D Matzke
Behavior research methods 51, 961-985, 2019
1782019
Do junior doctors feel they are prepared for hospital practice? A study of graduates from traditional and non‐traditional medical schools
J Hill, IE Rolfe, SA Pearson, A Heathcote
Medical education 32 (1), 19-24, 1998
1681998
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