Michael F. Verde
University of Plymouth
26 Papers
311 Citations
Michael F. Verde is an academic researcher from University of Plymouth. The author has contributed to research in topics: Belief bias & Forgetting. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 26 publications. Previous affiliations of Michael F. Verde include University of Massachusetts Amherst.
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Papers
Measures of sensitivity based on a single hit rate and false alarm rate: the accuracy, precision, and robustness of d', Az, and A'.
TL;DR: This work examines three statistical properties of these sensitivity indexes of sensitivity: accuracy, precision, and robustness, and their relative statistical performances suggest that Az is preferable to A’.
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Type I error rates and power analyses for single-point sensitivity measures.
TL;DR: Using large-scale Monte Carlo simulations, this work evaluates the Type I error rates and power that result from four commonly used single-point measures: d’, A', percent correct, and γ, and test a newly proposed measure called γinC.
The SDT model of belief bias: complexity, time, and cognitive ability mediate the effects of believability.
TL;DR: The observed effects on reasoning accuracy indicate that beliefs influence more than response bias when conditions are conducive to the use of certain reasoning strategies and underscore the need to consider individual differences in reasoning.
Does familiarity change in the revelation effect
TL;DR: The revelation effect is not the result of a memory retrieval mechanism and seems to be generic and all-or-nothing, which is consistent with response bias rather than familiarity change.
ROC curves show that the revelation effect is not a single phenomenon
TL;DR: The revelation effect encompasses at least two distinct phenomena: a shift in response bias and a change in memory sensitivity, which occurs when revealed items are identical to the subsequent recognition probes.
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