Results 291 to 300 of about 3,301,881 (350)
Time is, time was, time's past : Byron's struggle with time
openaire
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Related searches:
Related searches:
Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2001
Because reaction time (RT) tasks are generally repetitive and temporally regular, participants may use timing strategies that affect response speed and accuracy. This hypothesis was tested in 3 serial choice RT experiments in which participants were presented with stimuli that sometimes arrived earlier or later than normal.
Grosjean, M. +2 more
openaire +3 more sources
Because reaction time (RT) tasks are generally repetitive and temporally regular, participants may use timing strategies that affect response speed and accuracy. This hypothesis was tested in 3 serial choice RT experiments in which participants were presented with stimuli that sometimes arrived earlier or later than normal.
Grosjean, M. +2 more
openaire +3 more sources
SSRN Electronic Journal, 2015
If you were a neoclassical economist, the most dominant strategy to maximize your life would be to know or control you point of death and spend your last penny the minute before exodus, according to the standard neoclassical rules. However, if you are human and heterodox economist, you realize, the world does not function this way. If it were efficient
openaire +1 more source
If you were a neoclassical economist, the most dominant strategy to maximize your life would be to know or control you point of death and spend your last penny the minute before exodus, according to the standard neoclassical rules. However, if you are human and heterodox economist, you realize, the world does not function this way. If it were efficient
openaire +1 more source
History of European Ideas, 2013
This essay is an analysis of a series of writings by the Australian intellectual historian Ian Hunter on the subject of 'theory'. It examines the methodological issues raised by attempting to write a history of theory. The essay particularly seeks to analyse the various aporias at stake in Hunter's project: between the empirical and the transcendental,
openaire +3 more sources
This essay is an analysis of a series of writings by the Australian intellectual historian Ian Hunter on the subject of 'theory'. It examines the methodological issues raised by attempting to write a history of theory. The essay particularly seeks to analyse the various aporias at stake in Hunter's project: between the empirical and the transcendental,
openaire +3 more sources

