Craig Leth-steensen
Professor
Psychology
Carleton University
Canada
Biography
Craig Leth-Steensen (Leave) Associate Professor Degrees: Ph.D. (McGill)
Research Interest
Craig Leth-Steensen is a cognitive psychologist with training in the application of quantitative/statistical techniques to the analysis of psychological data. One main focus of his research is the development of mathematical and computational models (including random walks and neural networks) that can provide theoretical accounts for human cognitive and psychophysical performance (especially with respect to reaction time and reaction time distributions). At present, Craig’s main experimental interests involve the study of comparative judgements of symbolically represented attributes (including numbers), speed –accuracy tradeoffs, and a wide variety of information processing phenomena
Publications
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Leth-Steensen, C. (June, 2007). What the Heck is Going on When You Add a Covariate to a Repeated Measures Design in SPSS? Poster presented at the 17th Annual Meeting of the Canadian Society of Brain, Behaviour, and Cognitive Science (CSBBCS), Victoria, BC, Canada.
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Leth-Steensen, C., & Mauro, D. (June, 2007). An Ex-Gaussian Analysis of Mental Rotation Response Times. Poster presented at the 17th Annual Meeting of the Canadian Society of Brain, Behaviour, and Cognitive Science (CSBBCS), Victoria, BC, Canada.
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Schoenherr, J., Leth-Steensen, C., & Petrusic, W. M. (June, 2007). The Involvement of Working Memory in Confidence Processing. Poster presented at the 17th Annual Meeting of the Canadian Society of Brain, Behaviour, and Cognitive Science (CSBBCS), Victoria, BC, Canada.