Search results for "alternative hypothesis"

showing 10 items of 15 documents

Adaptive strategies of territory formation

2003

How do territorial animals gain ownership of an area? Early modelling has considered the evolution of fighting when the winner can claim the right to the resource. Recently, alternative hypotheses have been offered where repeated interactions lead to division of space through 'nagging' instead of one decisive fight. However, these models assume that animals avoid areas in which they have taken part in aggressive interactions, but do not consider whether avoidance itself is adaptive. We aim to bridge this gap between mechanistic and adaptive explanations, by presenting a game-theory model where individuals choose whether to return to an area after a fight with a specific outcome (win, loss, …

0106 biological sciencesAdaptive strategieseducation.field_of_studyAlternative hypothesismedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesPopulationBiologyTerritoriality010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesOutcome (game theory)NaggingAnimal ecology0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesAnimal Science and Zoology050102 behavioral science & comparative psychologyPositive economicseducationGame theoryEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonBehavioral Ecology and Sociobiology
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Differences in pitch between tones affect behaviour even when incorrectly identified in direction.

2001

The ability to detect differences between simultaneously presented contra- and ipsilesional stimuli but not to identify the former on neurological patients with the symptom termed 'extinction' has given rise to the hypothesis that extinguished stimuli have impaired access to attentive processing but are detected pre-attentively. Such a dissociation found in normal participants with experimentally degraded sensory information, and its absence in equivalent tasks in terms of the amount of information required has, however, led to an alternative hypothesis that the lesser amount of information required to perform same/different judgements is sufficient to explain this dissociation. In the pres…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyDissociation (neuropsychology)Cognitive NeuroscienceAlternative hypothesismedia_common.quotation_subjectPoison controlExperimental and Cognitive PsychologySensory systemStimulus (physiology)AudiologyBehavioral NeurosciencePerceptionmedicineReaction TimeHumansPitch Perceptionmedia_commonTwo-alternative forced choiceCognitionAcoustic StimulationFemalePsychologySocial psychologyPsychomotor PerformanceNeuropsychologia
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The origins of agriculture in Iberia: a computational model

2015

Here we discuss the importance of using the rich and growing database of high-precision, audited radiocarbon dates for high-resolution bottom-up modelling to focus on problems concerning the spread of the Neolithic in the Iberia. We also compare the spread of the Late Mesolithic (so-called Geometric) and the Early Neolithic using our modelling environment. Our results suggest that the source of radiocarbon data used to evaluate alternative hypotheses plays an important role in the results and open up new lines of research for the future.

Agent-based modelArcheologyFocus (computing)business.industryAlternative hypothesissimulationArchaeologyagent-based modellaw.inventionGeographyAgriculturelawAnthropologyRegional scienceradiocarbonlcsh:ArchaeologyRadiocarbon datinglcsh:CC1-960NeolithicbusinessIberian PeninsulaDocumenta Praehistorica
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Testing for goodness rather than lack of fit of continuous probability distributions.

2021

The vast majority of testing procedures presented in the literature as goodness-of-fit tests fail to accomplish what the term is promising. Actually, a significant result of such a test indicates that the true distribution underlying the data differs substantially from the assumed model, whereas the true objective is usually to establish that the model fits the data sufficiently well. Meeting that objective requires to carry out a testing procedure for a problem in which the statement that the deviations between model and true distribution are small, plays the role of the alternative hypothesis. Testing procedures of this kind, for which the term tests for equivalence has been coined in sta…

Computer scienceStatement (logic)Alternative hypothesisScienceTest StatisticsResearch and Analysis MethodsStatistical InferenceMathematical and Statistical TechniquesStatistical inferenceEconometricsHumansLack-of-fit sum of squaresStatistical MethodsEquivalence (measure theory)Statistical hypothesis testingStatistical DataProbabilityMultidisciplinaryModels StatisticalApplied MathematicsSimulation and ModelingStatisticsQRProbability TheoryProbability DistributionTerm (time)Monte Carlo methodStatistical TheoriesPhysical SciencesProbability distributionMedicineMathematicsAlgorithmsResearch ArticleStatistical DistributionsPLoS ONE
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A Multisite Preregistered Paradigmatic Test of the Ego-Depletion Effect

2021

We conducted a preregistered multilaboratory project ( k = 36; N = 3,531) to assess the size and robustness of ego-depletion effects using a novel replication method, termed the paradigmatic replication approach. Each laboratory implemented one of two procedures that was intended to manipulate self-control and tested performance on a subsequent measure of self-control. Confirmatory tests found a nonsignificant result ( d = 0.06). Confirmatory Bayesian meta-analyses using an informed-prior hypothesis (δ = 0.30, SD = 0.15) found that the data were 4 times more likely under the null than the alternative hypothesis. Hence, preregistered analyses did not find evidence for a depletion effect. Ex…

Ego depletionself-controlväsymysmedia_common.quotation_subjectAlternative hypothesispsykologiset teoriatBayesian probabilityopen data050109 social psychology050105 experimental psychologypreregisteredStatisticsReplication (statistics)/dk/atira/pure/core/keywords/600089002PsychologyHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesGeneral Psychologymedia_commonEgoitsehallintabayesilainen menetelmä05 social sciencesNull (mathematics)Bayes TheoremSelf-controlSDG 10 - Reduced InequalitiesModerationopen materialsResearch Designpsykologiset testit/dk/atira/pure/sustainabledevelopmentgoals/reduced_inequalitiesTraitregistered replicationPsychologyego depletionPsychological Science
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Revenues from related Parties Transactions and UEFA Financial Fair Play. The Search for an Alternative Solution to Fair Value Measurement for the Bre…

2014

Transactions with related parties (RPTs) are numerous and frequent in the economy of companies; they are often made with different values from the ones in arm’s length transactions, and sometimes for opportunistic reasons. Many cases of RPTs occur in the football sector too, and they are mostly related to sponsorship contracts revenues. Through the financial fair play regulations, UEFA encourages the clubs which want to get the license for competing in European tournaments, to count on their capability to operate on the basis of their own revenues. The reorientation of the professional football clubs economic governance requested by UEFA also provides specific RPTs disclosure as well as the…

FinanceBreak-even (economics)business.industryAlternative hypothesisEconomic governanceFootballSettore SECS-P/07 - Economia Aziendalerelated parties transactions financial fair play fair valueFair valueValue (economics)General Earth and Planetary SciencesRevenuebusinessLicenseGeneral Environmental ScienceAthens Journal of Sports
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Technological differences and convergence in the OECD

2000

Abstract. In this paper we test the homogeneity of the technological parameters among OECD countries, which is the maintained hypothesis in most of the empirical growth literature. We first identify differences in the constant term of the convergence equation estimated for the OECD 1960/1990 sample using a fixed- effects estimator. Then we provide a formal test of the homogeneity of technological parameters across groups of countries. We identify at least two different groups within the OECD, with significantly different technologies. Convergence within each group is fast, supporting the notion of club convergence. Nevertheless, the implausible parameter values obtained for the leading tech…

Homogeneity (statistics)Alternative hypothesisGrowth convergence clubs technological parametersEstimatorOecd countriesInternational economicsjel:C21jel:C22Constant termjel:O41jel:O57EconometricsEconomicsClubGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceSolow model
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Hypoxia and hypothermia as rival agents of selection driving the evolution of viviparity in lizards

2017

[Aim]: The evolution of key innovations promotes adaptive radiations by opening access to new ecological opportunity. The acquisition of viviparity (live-bearing reproduction) has emerged as one such innovation explaining reptile proliferations into extreme climates. By evolving viviparity, females provide embryos with internally stable environments to complete development. The classical hypothesis suggests that natural selection for viviparity arises from low temperatures in cold climates, which promote prolonged egg retention in the mother's body. An alternative hypothesis proposes that declines in atmospheric oxygen at high elevations create natural selection for embryo retention to prov…

Life‐history evolution0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineLiolaemusMultivariate statisticsAlternative hypothesis010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciences03 medical and health sciencesbiology.animalHomeostasisHypoxiaMacroecologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMacroecologyC150 Environmental BiologyViviparityGlobal and Planetary ChangeNatural selectionEcologybiologyEcologyViviparyLizardC182 EvolutionHypoxia (environmental)Liolaemusbiology.organism_classificationSquamates030104 developmental biologyReproductive modesGlobal Ecology and Biogeography
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Competitive Industry Dynamics with Constant Costs

1998

This paper integrates investment and production decisions in a dynamic model of a competitive industry where producers, facing a technology involving fixed input–output coefficients, employ quantity adjustment rules. Whether complex dynamic price behaviour is consistent with producers breaking-even over time is explored. The proportion of costs which are sunk through investment is shown to have a potentially dramatic impact on the price dynamics. The implications of an alternative hypothesis— that producers ‘normally’ use their avail able capacities and only do otherwise if events are sufficiently dramatic—are explored

MicroeconomicsEconomics and EconometricsAlternative hypothesisCompetitive industryQuantity adjustmentEconomicsProduction (economics)Investment (macroeconomics)Constant (mathematics)Metroeconomica
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Predicting the Significance of Necessity

2019

With Necessary Condition Analysis (NCA), a necessity effect is estimated by calculating the amount of empty space in the upper-left corner in a plot with a predictor X and an outcome Y, and recently a method for testing the statistical significance of the necessity effect through permutation has been proposed. In the present simulation study, this method was found to give significant results already with a very weak true population necessity effect, i.e., exhibit high power, unless the sample size is very small. However, in some situations the significance of the necessity effect tends to increase with increased degree of sufficiency, which is paradoxical for a method whose objective is to …

Populationlcsh:BF1-990significancepermutation050105 experimental psychologyPlot (graphics)power03 medical and health sciencesPermutation0302 clinical medicineStatistical significanceSignificance testingStatisticsPsychology0501 psychology and cognitive scienceseducationGeneral Psychologyalternative hypothesissignificance testingeducation.field_of_studytype I errorGeneral Commentary05 social sciencesNCAp-valuenull hypothesis testingsimulationOutcome (probability)lcsh:PsychologySample size determinationPerspectivesufficiencynecessary condition analysisPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryFrontiers in Psychology
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