Academic Publications
Copyright Notice: The following documents have been posted on this website to facilitate the timely dissemination of scholarly work to individuals for personal research and study. By accessing any of the documents, you agree to adhere to the terms and constraints invoked by each author or copyright holder. You may not repost or reproduce any of the documents without the permission of the copyright holder. Please contact me to receive copies of any publications that are not available here as PDFs.
Open Research: I provide links to (where relevant) the data and analysis/modelling code for the majority of my outputs. If you have any questions about the data and/or code please do contact me.
Under review
Rydon-Grange, M. & Grange, J.A. (under review). Schema functioning across the psychosis continuum: A systematic review.
Bognar, M., van Ravenzwaaij, D., Varga, M.A., Kekecs, Z., Grange, J.A., Gyurkovics, M., & Aczel, B. (under review). Exploratory multiverse simulation approach to assess the impact of arbitrary decisions in reaction time studies.
Grange, J.A. (under review). Control of stimulus-set and response-set in task switching. — —
Grange, J.A. (under review). Depression symptomatology and perceptual categorisation: A computational modelling appraoch. Stage 1 Registered Report.
Martini, A., Edelstyn, N., Weis, L., Tamburin, S., Schifano, R., Books, J., Antovani, E., Grange, J.A., Lauriola, F., Pistonesi, F., Leoni, G., Antonini, A., & Biundo, R. (under review). Sensitivity to negative-feedback processing in people with Parkinson’s disease and impulsive-compulsive behaviours.
Rabi, R., Chow, J., Grange, J.A., Hasher, L., Alain, C., & Anderson, N.D. (under review). Computational modelling of selective attention differentiates different subtypes of amnesic mild cognitive impairment.
2024 / in press
Poole, D., Grange, J.A., & Milne, E. (in principal acceptance). Can location cues facilitate the suppression of non-target stimuli during selective attention? Accepted Stage-1 Registered Report.
Poole, D., Grange, J.A., & Milne, E. (2024). Putting the spotlight back onto the flanker task in autism: Autistic adults show increased interference from foils compared with non-autistic adults. Journal of Cognition, 7(1):46, 1–15. — — —
2023
Grange, J.A., & Schuch, S. (2023). A spurious correlation between difference scores in evidence accumulation models. Behavior Research Methods, 55, 3348–3369. — — —
Grange, J.A., De’Bell, H., Stafford, T., Partridge, A., Jacobs, N., Munafo, M., & the UK Reproducibility Network. (2023). Open research training resources and priorities. (Working Paper No. 01). UK Reproducibility Network.
Grange, J.A. (2023). Rumination and inhibition in task switching: no evidence for an association. Cognition and Emotion, 37, 162–181. — — —
2022
O’Connor, D.B., Abele, A.E., Baguley, T., Daly, M., Doherty, N., Grange, J.A., Leman, P., Pressmane, S.D., Rossit, S., & Simms, V. (2022). Improving psychological science: Further thoughts, reflections, and ways forward. Cogent Psychology, 9, 2103248.
Many Primates. (2022). The evolution of primate short-term memory. Animal Behavior & Cognition, 9, 428–516. — — —
Grange, J.A., & Moore, S.B. (2022). mixtur: An R package for designing, analysing, and modelling continuous report visual short-term memory studies. Behavior Research Methods, 54, 2071–2100. — — —
Grange, J.A. (2022). Computational modelling of the speed–accuracy tradeoff: No evidence for an association with depression symptomatology. Journal of Psychiatric Research, 147, 111–125. — — —
Grange, J.A., & Rydon-Grange, M. (2022). Computational modelling of attentional selectivity in depression reveals perceptual deficits. Psychological Medicine, 52, 904–913. — — —
2021
Stewart, A.J., Farran, E.K., Grange, J.A., MacLeod, M., Munafo, M., Newton, P., & Shanks, D.R. (2021). Improving research quality: The view from institutional leads for research improvement in the UK Reproducibility Network. BMC Research Notes, 14, 458.
2020
Sherman, S.M., & Grange, J.A. (2020). Exploring the impact of mindfulness on false-memory susceptibility. Psychological Science, 31, 968–977. — —
Kowalczyk, A.W., & Grange, J.A. (2020). The effect of episodic retrieval on inhibition in task switching: A diffusion model analysis. Psychological Research, 84, 1965–1999. — — —
Davenport, B., Jackson, M., Grange, J.A., & Rydon-Grange, M. (2020). The role of schema functioning in beliefs about voices among voice-hearers. Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy, 48, 584–597.
2019
Coetzer, R., Rydon-Grange, M., Roberts, C., & Grange, J.A. (2019). Cognitive function, self-awareness, and neuroimaging findings in OCD-type presentations after Traumatic Brain Injury. Panamerican Journal of Neuropsychology, 13, 15–28.
Schuch, S., & Grange, J.A. (2019). Investigating the n-3 effect in task switching: Does it increase cognitive control after task conflict? Psychological Research, 83, 1703–1721. —
Grange, J.A., & Becker, R. (2019). A meta-analysis on the effect of aging on response congruency in task switching. Journals of Gerontology Series B: Psychological Sciences & Social Sciences, 74, 389-396. — — —
Grange, J.A., Kedra, P., & Walker, L. (2019). Controlling for episodic retrieval, investigating the effect of practice on inhibition in task switching. Acta Psychologica, 192, 59–72. — — —
2018
Grange, J.A. (2018). Does task activation in task switching influence inhibition or episodic interference? Experimental Psychology, 65, 393–404. — — —
Martini, A., Dal Lago, D., Edelstyn, N.M.J., Grange, J.A., & Tamburin, S. (2018). A meta-analysis of cognitive, affective, and motivational correlates of impulse control disorder in Parkinson’s disease. Frontiers in Neurology, 9, 654.
Lakens, D., Adolfi, C., …Grange, J.A.…, & Zwaan, R. (2018). Justify your alpha. Nature Human Behaviour, 2, 168–171. —
Martini, A., Ellis, S.J., Grange, J.A., Tamburin, S., Dal Lago, D., Vianello, G., & Edelstyn, N.M.J. (2018). Risky decision-making and affective features of impulse control disorder in Parkinson’s disease. Journal of Neural Transmission, 125, 131–143.
2017
Grange, J.A., Kowalczyk, A.W., & O’Loughlin, R. (2017). The effect of episodic retrieval on inhibition in task switching. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception & Performance, 43, 1568–1583. — — —
Kowalczyk, A.W., & Grange, J.A. (2017). Inhibition in task switching: The reliability of the n–2 repetition cost. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 70, 2419–2433. — — —
Stephens, R., Holloway, K., Grange, J.A., Jones, K., & Owen, L. (2017). Does familial risk for alcohol use disorder predict alcohol hangover? Psychopharmacology, 234, 1795–1802.
2016
Edelstyn, N.M.J., Grange, J.A., Ellis, S.J., & Mayes, A.M. (2016). A deficit in familiarity driven recognition in a right-sided mediodorsal thalamic lesion patient. Neuropsychology, 30, 213–224.
Grange, J.A. (2016). Temporal distinctiveness in task switching: Assessing the mixture distribution assumption. Frontiers in Psychology, 7, 251. — —
Grange, J.A. (2016). flankr: An R package for implementing computational models of attentional selectivity. Behavior Research Methods, 48, 528–541. — —
Anderson, C.J., Bahnik, S., …Grange, J.A.…, & Zuni, K. (2016). Response to a comment on “Estimating the reproducibility of psychological science”. Science, 351, 1037.
Grange, J.A., Stephens, R., Jones, K., & Owen, L. (2016). The effect of alcohol hangover on choice response time. Journal of Psychopharmacology, 30, 654–661. — —
Grange, J.A. (2016). Time to stop insulting reviews. The Psychologist, 29, 158.
2015
Open Science Collaboration (2015). Estimating the reproducibility of psychological science. Science, 349, 943. — —
Schuch, S., & Grange, J.A. (2015). The effect of n–3 on n–2 repetition costs in task switching. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, & Cognition, 41, 760–767. —
Grange, J.A., & Juvina, I. (2015). The effect of practice on n–2 repetition costs in set switching. Acta Psychologica, 154, 14–25.
Grange, J.A., & Cross, E. (2015). Can time-based decay explain temporal distinctiveness effects in task switching? Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 68, 19–45. —
2014
Grange, J.A., & Houghton, G. (Eds.) (2014). Task Switching and Cognitive Control. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
Grange, J.A., & Houghton, G. (2014). Task switching and cognitive control: An introduction. In J.A. Grange & G. Houghton (Eds.), Task Switching and Cognitive Control, New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
Grange, J.A., & Houghton, G. (2014). Models of cognitive control in task switching. In J.A. Grange & G. Houghton (Eds.), Task Switching and Cognitive Control, New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
Stephens, R., Grange, J.A., Jones, K., & Owen, L. (2014). A critical analysis of alcohol hangover research methodology for surveys or studies of effects on cognition. Psychopharmacology, 231, 2223–2236.
Brandt, M.J., IJzerman, H., Dijksterhuis, A., Farach, F.J., Geller, J., Giner-Sorolla, R., Grange, J.A., Perugini, M., Spies, J.R., & van ’t Veer, A.E. (2014). The replication recipe: What makes for a convincing replication? Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 50, 217–224.
2013
Grange, J.A. (2013). What’s all this business about Bayes? PsyPAG Quarterly, 89, 12–13.
Open Science Collaboration (2013). The Reproducibility Project: A model of large-scale collaboration for empirical research on reproducibility. In V. Stodden, F. Leisch, & R. Peng (Eds.), Implementing Reproducible Computational Research (A Volume in the R Series), New York, NY: Taylor & Francis.
Grange, J.A., Juvina, I., & Houghton, G. (2013). On costs and benefits of n–2 repetitions in task switching: Towards a behavioral marker of cognitive inhibition. Psychological Research, 77, 211–222.
2012
Juvina, I., & Grange, J.A. (2012). From repetition suppression in Stroop to backward inhibition in task switching: An example of model reusability. In A. V. Samsonovich & K. R. Johannsdottir (Eds.). Frontiers in Artificial Intelligence, Volume 233: Biologically Inspired Cognitive Architectures, IOS Press (pp.168–173).
Open Science Collaboration (2012). An open, large-scale, collaborative effort to estimate the reproducibility of psychological science. Perspectives on Psychological Science, 7, 657–670.
Grange, J.A., Lody, A., & Bratt, S. (2012). Cost-benefit and distributional analyses of accessory stimuli. Psychological Research, 76, 626–633.
2011
Houghton, G., & Grange, J.A. (2011). CDF-XL: Computing cumulative distribution frequencies of reaction time data in Excel. Behavior Research Methods, 43, 1023–1032.
Grange, J.A., & Houghton, G (2011). Task preparation and task inhibition: A comment on Koch, Gade, Schuch, & Philip (2010). Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 18, 211–216.
Grange, J.A. (2011). Control of working memory contents during task switching. In E.S.Levin (Ed.), Working Memory: Capacity, Development, & Improvement Techniques. New York, NY: Nova Science Publishers.
2010
Grange, J.A., & Houghton, G (2010). Heightened conflict in cue–target translation increases backward inhibition in set switching. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, & Cognition, 36, 1003–1009.
Grange, J.A., & Houghton, G (2010). Cue-switch costs in task-switching: Cue priming or control processes?. Psychological Research, 74, 481–490.
2009
Grange, J.A., & Houghton, G (2009). Temporal cue–target overlap is not essential for backward inhibition in task switching. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 62, 2069–2080.
Houghton, G., Pritchard, R., & Grange, J.A. (2009). The role of cue-target translation in backward inhibition of attentional set. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, & Cognition, 35, 466–476.