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David L. Strayer

Researcher at University of Utah

Publications -  373
Citations -  31907

David L. Strayer is an academic researcher from University of Utah. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Cognition. The author has an hindex of 87, co-authored 363 publications receiving 29105 citations. Previous affiliations of David L. Strayer include Cornell University & Free University of Berlin.

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Modeling simple driving tasks with a one-boundary diffusion model

TL;DR: Results showed that distraction altered performance by affecting the rate of evidence accumulation (drift rate) and/or increasing the boundary settings, providing an interpretation of cognitive distraction whereby conversing on a cell phone diverts attention from the normal accumulation of information in the driving environment.
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Taxonomic bias and lack of cross-taxonomic studies in invasion biology

TL;DR: Plant-associated taxonomic bias detected in invasion biology in general was found to be more pronounced for certain hypotheses, less pronounced for others, and even reversed for one hypothesis where most studies have focused on vertebrates (island susceptibility; however, this hypothesis is the one affiliated with the fewest studies; Figure 2).
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An analysis of memory-based theories of automaticity.

TL;DR: Performance in consistently mapped (CM) conditions provided strong support for memory-based theories of automaticity and there was a temporal coupling in the reduction of these two effects with consistent practice.
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Drug delivery as control task: improving performance in a common anesthetic task.

TL;DR: Visual feedback of drug concentrations leads to superior performance in the delivery of anesthesia, and the drug display has significant clinical potential to increase patient safety.
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Biodiversity in Hudson River shore zones: influence of shoreline type and physical structure

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors measured selected physical characteristics (shore zone width, exposure, substrate roughness and grain size, shoreline complexity) of three examples of each of these shore types, and also sampled communities of terrestrial plants, fishes, and aquatic and terrestrial invertebrates.