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Averaging learning curves across and within participants

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-05-09, 10:42 authored by Scott BrownScott Brown, A. Heathcote
We examine recent concerns that averaged learning curves can present a distorted picture of individual learning. Analyses of practice curve data from a range of paradigms demonstrate that such concerns are well founded for fits of power and exponential functions when the arithmetic average is computed over participants. We also demonstrate that geometric averaging over participants does not, in general, avoid distortion. By contrast, we show that block averages of individual curves and similar smoothing techniques cause little or no distortion of functional form, while still providing the noise reduction benefits that motivate the use of averages. Our analyses are concerned mainly with the effects of averaging on the fit of exponential and power functions, but we also define general conditions that must be met by any set of functions to avoid distortion from averaging.

History

Journal title

Behavior Research Methods, Instruments, and Computers

Volume

35

Issue

1

Pagination

11-21

Publisher

Psychonomic Society

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Science and Information Technology

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