0000000001290369

AUTHOR

Dirk Hagemann

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Do Individual Effects Reflect Quantitative or Qualitative Differences in Cognition?

2021

Rouder and Haaf (2020) posed the important question if there are some individuals whose behavior is not in accordance with well-established experimental effects and whether these individual differences are quantitative or qualitative in nature. In our commentary, we discuss the distinction between quantitative and qualitative individual differences and between individual and average causal effects and come to the conclusion that this is not a new question, but in fact one that has already been discussed by Gordon W. Allport (1937) and Donald B. Rubin (1974, 1978). Moreover, we critically examine their proposed rule of thumb to collect about 100 trials per experimental condition to reliably …

Consciousness. CognitionElementary cognitive taskmedia_common.quotation_subjectCausal effectExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyCognitioncognitive tasksMeasure (mathematics)Rule of thumbtrial numbersCommentaryFunction (engineering)Psychologyindividual differencesindividual differences; cognitive tasks; trial numbersBF309-499Cognitive psychologymedia_commonJournal of Cognition
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