Journal article

Analyzing Response Times and Other Types of Time-to-Event Data Using Event History Analysis: A Tool for Mental Chronometry and Cognitive Psychophysiology


Authors listPanis, S; Schmidt, F; Wolkersdorfer, MP; Schmidt, T

Publication year2020

Journali-Perception

Volume number11

Issue number6

Open access statusGold

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1177/2041669520978673

PublisherSAGE Publications


Abstract

In this Methods article, we discuss and illustrate a unifying, principled way to analyze response time data from psychological experiments—and all other types of time-to-event data. We advocate the general application of discrete-time event history analysis (EHA) which is a well-established, intuitive longitudinal approach to statistically describe and model the shape of time-to-event distributions. After discussing the theoretical background behind the so-called hazard function of event occurrence in both continuous and discrete time units, we illustrate how to calculate and interpret the descriptive statistics provided by discrete-time EHA using two example data sets (masked priming, visual search). In case of discrimination data, the hazard analysis of response occurrence can be extended with a microlevel speed-accuracy trade-off analysis. We then discuss different approaches for obtaining inferential statistics. We consider the advantages and disadvantages of a principled use of discrete-time EHA for time-to-event data compared to (a) comparing means with analysis of variance, (b) other distributional methods available in the literature such as delta plots and continuous-time EHA methods, and (c) only fitting parametric distributions or computational models to empirical data. We conclude that statistically controlling for the passage of time during data analysis is equally important as experimental control during the design of an experiment, to understand human behavior in our experimental paradigms.




Authors/Editors




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation stylePanis, S., Schmidt, F., Wolkersdorfer, M. and Schmidt, T. (2020) Analyzing Response Times and Other Types of Time-to-Event Data Using Event History Analysis: A Tool for Mental Chronometry and Cognitive Psychophysiology, i-Perception, 11(6), Article 2041669520978673. https://doi.org/10.1177/2041669520978673

APA Citation stylePanis, S., Schmidt, F., Wolkersdorfer, M., & Schmidt, T. (2020). Analyzing Response Times and Other Types of Time-to-Event Data Using Event History Analysis: A Tool for Mental Chronometry and Cognitive Psychophysiology. i-Perception. 11(6), Article 2041669520978673. https://doi.org/10.1177/2041669520978673


Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 11:19