Timothy A. Salthouse
University of Virginia
295 Papers
4.5K Citations
Timothy A. Salthouse is an academic researcher from University of Virginia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cognition & Cognitive skill. The author has an hindex of 94, co-authored 295 publications. Previous affiliations of Timothy A. Salthouse include University of Michigan & Georgia Institute of Technology.
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Papers
Dealing W ith S hort-term F luctuation in L ongitudinal R esearch
Timothy A. Salthouse,John R. Nesselroade +1 more
- 01 Jan 2010
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated one possible solution to this problem in the form of a measurement-burst design in which research participants perform several versions of each test at each measurement occasion and found that more sensitive assessments of change can be obtained by taking short-term fl uctuation into account with measurement burst designs.
Contextual determinants of visual recognition with verbal and nonverbal stimuli
TL;DR: In this paper, the presence of a meaningful non-verbal context facilitates the recognition of an element (i.e., a facial feature) embedded in that context, while verbal stimuli did not exhibit a context facilitation effect, and a significant interaction of Stimulus Type by Presentation Form resulted in both experiments because the nonverbal stimuli exhibited a context impairment effect.
American Differences in Arithmetical a Recent Phenomenon
David C. Geary,Guo-Peng Chen,Timothy A. Salthouse,Liu Fan +3 more
- 01 Jan 1996
TL;DR: The first systematic cross-national study of mathematical abilities was conducted in 1964 (Hu#n, 1967). The results of this study showed that American adolescents were among the most poorly educated students in mathematics in the industrialized world.
An Examination of the Hofer and
Timothy A. Salthouse,John R. Nesselroade +1 more
- 01 Jan 2016
TL;DR: Karger et al. as mentioned in this paper suggested that Hofer and Sliwinski may have been overly pessimistic with respect to the potential usefulness of cross-sectional designs for certain research questions.
How localized are age-related effects on neuropsychological measures?
TL;DR: In this paper, the degree of independence of the age-related influences on measures sometimes postulated to be sensitive to functioning in different regions of the brain was examined, which led to speculation that certain brain structures are more sensitive to agerelated decline than others.