- Decision-Making and Behavioral Economics
- Mental Health Research Topics
- Advanced Causal Inference Techniques
- Behavioral Health and Interventions
- Neurobiology of Language and Bilingualism
- Assistive Technology in Communication and Mobility
- Entrepreneurship Studies and Influences
- Stroke Rehabilitation and Recovery
- Language Development and Disorders
- Hearing Impairment and Communication
- Phonetics and Phonology Research
- Advanced Database Systems and Queries
Erasmus University Rotterdam
2020-2022
Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics
2011
Max Planck Society
2011
Radboud University Nijmegen
2011
Abstract Background: A well-known test for measuring verbal adequacy (i.e., effectiveness) in mildly impaired aphasic speakers is the Amsterdam-Nijmegen Everyday Language Test (ANELT; Blomert, Koster, & Kean, Citation1995). Aphasia therapy practitioners score qualitatively when they administer ANELT to their clients clinical practice. Aims: The current study investigated whether construct validity of could be further improved by substituting qualitative a quantitative one, which takes number...
Abstract Risk behavior has substantial consequences for health, well-being, and general behavior. The association between real-world risk on experimental tasks is well documented, but their modeling challenging several reasons. First, many may end prematurely leading to censored observations. Second, certain outcome values can be more attractive than others. Third, a priori unknown groups of participants react differently risk-levels. Here, we propose the mixture model which models taking...
Abstract We analyze the relationship between entrepreneurship and decision‐making under risk uncertainty using Columbia Card Task: an experimental task eliciting affective conditions of uncertainty. In a sample 127 university students, we find robust evidence that individual entrepreneurial orientation (IEO) is negatively related to addition, show distinguishing subscales IEO key understanding this relationship, since while negative for Proactiveness Innovativeness subscales, it positive...
Risk behavior can have substantial consequences for health, well-being, and functioning. Previous studies shown an association between real-world risk on experimental tasks, such as the Columbia Card Task, but their modeling is challenging several reasons. First, many of tasks may end prematurely leading to censored observations. Second, certain outcome values be more attractive than others. Third, a priori unknown groups participants react differently risk-levels. Here, we propose Censored...