Publications
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Heathcote, A., & Elliott, D. (2010). Nonlinear dynamical analysis of noisy time series. In S. J. Guastello & R. A. M. Gregson (Eds.), Nonlinear dynamical systems analysis for the behavioral sciences using real data (pp. 117–148). CRC Press.
Matzke, D., Dolan, C.V., & Molenaar, D. (2010). The issue of power in the identification of “g” with lower-order factors. Intelligence, 38, 336-344.
Freeman, E., Heathcote, A., Chalmers, K., & Hockley, W. (2010). Item effects in recognition memory for words. Journal of Memory and Language, 62(1), 1–18.
Heathcote, A., Bora, B., & Freeman, E. (2010). Recollection and confidence in two-alternative forced choice episodic recognition. Journal of Memory and Language, 62(2), 183–203.
Smith, J. L., Smith, E. A., Provost, A. L., & Heathcote, A. (2010). Sequence effects support the conflict theory of N2 and P3 in the Go/NoGo task. International Journal of Psychophysiology, 75(3), 217–226.
Karayanidis, F., Jamadar, S., Ruge, H., Phillips, N., Heathcote, A., & Forstmann, B. U. (2010). Advance preparation in task-switching: Converging evidence from behavioral, brain activation, and model-based approaches. Frontiers in Psychology, 1:25.
Heathcote, A., Brown, S., Wagenmakers, E. J., & Eidels, A. (2010). Distribution-free tests of stochastic dominance for small samples. Journal of Mathematical Psychology, 54(5), 454–463.
Eidels, A., Donkin, C., Brown, S. D., & Heathcote, A. (2010). Converging measures of workload capacity. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 17(6), 763–771.
Sheu, C.-F., & Heathcote, A. (2001). A nonlinear regression approach to estimating signal detection models for rating data. Behavior Research Methods, Instruments, & Computers, 33(2), 108–114.
Kelly, A., Heathcote, A., Heath, R., & Longstaff, M. (2001). Response-Time Dynamics: Evidence for Linear and Low-Dimensional Nonlinear Structure in Human Choice Sequences. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A, 54(3), 805–840.
Andrews, S., & Heathcote, A. (2001). Distinguishing common and task-specific processes in word identification: A matter of some moment? Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 27(2), 514–544.