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Samantha Bouwmeester

Researcher at Erasmus University Rotterdam

Publications -  60
Citations -  1466

Samantha Bouwmeester is an academic researcher from Erasmus University Rotterdam. The author has contributed to research in topics: Latent class model & Transitive relation. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 59 publications receiving 1327 citations. Previous affiliations of Samantha Bouwmeester include Tilburg University & Leiden University.

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Registered Replication Report: Schooler and Engstler-Schooler (1990)

Victoria K. Alogna, +90 more
TL;DR: This article found that participants who described the robber were 25% worse at identifying the robber in a lineup than were participants who instead listed U.S. states and capitals, which has been termed the verbal overshadowing effect.
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Students' and teachers' cognitions about good teachers

TL;DR: The research method of collecting free essays and utilising correspondence analysis to represent conceptual items and groups of participants seems promising as long as a theoretical framework is available to interpret the resulting representation of similarities between items andgroups of participants.
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Does intuition cause cooperation

TL;DR: The results of the present study could not corroborate the idea that people are intuitively cooperative, hence suggesting that the theoretical relationship between intuition and cooperation should be further scrutinized.
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Registered Replication Report : Rand, Greene, and Nowak (2012)

TL;DR: The size and variability of the effect of time pressure on cooperative decisions are assessed by combining 21 separate, preregistered replications of the critical conditions from Study 7 of the original article and the results are consistent with the presence of selection biases and the absence of a causal effect ofTime pressure on cooperation.
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Nonparametric IRT analysis of Quality-of-Life Scales and its application to the World Health Organization Quality-of-Life Scale (WHOQOL-Bref).

TL;DR: The nonparametric monotone homogeneity model is highly suited for data analysis in a health-related quality-of-life context, and the parametric graded response model may add interesting features to measurement provided the model fits the data well.