Chuan-Peng Lab
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Self-referencing prioritizes moral character on perceptual matching
Evidence for the prioritization of moral information in cognitive processes is mixed.
Chuan-Peng, H
,
Kaiping Peng
,
Jie Sui
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DOI
The WEIRD problem in a "non-WEIRD" context A meta-research on therepresentativeness of human subjects in Chinese psychological research
Psychological science aims at understanding human mind and behavior, but it primarily relies on subjects from Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, and Democratic regions, i.e., the WEIRD problem.
Lei Yue
,
Xi-Nian Zuo
,
Chuan-Peng, H
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DOI
Reliability Assessment of Self-Prioritization Effect as Measured by the Perceptual Matching Task
The self-prioritization effect (SPE) refers to the effect that performance on cognitive tasks is better when stimuli are related to the self than when they are not.
Zheng, Liu
,
Mengzhen Hu
,
Yuanrui Zheng
,
Jie Sui
,
Chuan-Peng, H
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DOI
Cognitive Ontology A Unified Framework for Psychological Constructs
A construct is a concept proposed by a researcher to represent an object of interest. Constructs serve as core media for scientific communication in research.
Chuan-Peng, H
,
Zheng, Liu
,
Xinyang, Wang
,
Shangzhi, Lu
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DOI
A Unified Approach to Demographic Data Collection for Research with Young Children Across Diverse Cultures.
Culture is a key determinant of children’s development both in its own right and for understanding the generalizability of developmental phenomena.
Singh, L
,
Barokova, M
,
Baumgartner, H. A
,
Lopera, D
,
Omane, P. O
,
... Chuan-Peng, H
,
... Frank, M. C
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DOI
A Hitchhiker's Guide to Bayesian Hierarchical Drift-Diffusion Modeling with dockerHDDM.
Drift diffusion models (DDM) are widely used to investigate decision-making processes in psychology.
Chuan-Peng, H
,
Geng, H
,
Zhang, L
,
Fengler, A
,
Frank, M
,
ZHANG, R. Y
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DOI
No evidence for neuroscience bias in adult or juvenile cases:A pre-registered mock juror study
In the last two decades, developmental neuroscience results had been cited in legal cases around the world. It may concern that these neuroscientific results are over-persuasive, i.e., neuroscience bias, as previous studies reported such an over-persuasiveness effect of neuroscientific results when compared to behavioral results in adult cases.
Yin, J-X
,
Xu, Y
,
Hu C-P
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DOI
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