Two strategies used to solve a navigation task: A different use of the hippocampus by males and females? A preliminary study in rats
There is abundant research (both in rodents and in humans) showing that males and females often use different types of information in spatial navigation. Males prefer geometry as a source of information, whereas females tend to focus on landmarks (which are often near to a goal objects). However, when considering the role of the hippocampus, the research focuses primarily on males only. In the present study, based on Rodríguez, Torres, [...]
Lexical associative norms and psycholinguistic indexes of 407 Spanish words in a Latinamerican sample
El diseño de tareas experimentales en psicología y lingüística suele requerir [...]
A combined IRT and SEM approach for individual-level assessment in test-retest studies
The standard two-wave multiple-indicator model (2WMIM) commonly used to analyze test-retest [...]
Power and Sample Size Calculations for Testing Linear Combinations of Group Means under Variance Heterogeneity with Applications to Meta and Moderation Analyses
The general formulation of a linear combination of population means [...]
Context Specificity of Extinguished Schedule-Induced Drinking Within an ABA Renewal Design in Rats
The main goal of this study was to explore whether [...]
