Login / Signup

Inclusion Bayes factors for mixed hierarchical diffusion decision models.

Udo BoehmNathan J EvansQuentin F GronauDora MatzkeEric-Jan WagenmakersAndrew J Heathcote
Published in: Psychological methods (2023)
Cognitive models provide a substantively meaningful quantitative description of latent cognitive processes. The quantitative formulation of these models supports cumulative theory building and enables strong empirical tests. However, the nonlinearity of these models and pervasive correlations among model parameters pose special challenges when applying cognitive models to data. Firstly, estimating cognitive models typically requires large hierarchical data sets that need to be accommodated by an appropriate statistical structure within the model. Secondly, statistical inference needs to appropriately account for model uncertainty to avoid overconfidence and biased parameter estimates. In the present work, we show how these challenges can be addressed through a combination of Bayesian hierarchical modeling and Bayesian model averaging. To illustrate these techniques, we apply the popular diffusion decision model to data from a collaborative selective influence study. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
Keyphrases
  • electronic health record
  • high resolution
  • emergency department
  • mass spectrometry
  • deep learning
  • single cell
  • quality improvement
  • drug induced