A joint process model of consensus and longitudinal dynamics

Abstract

The Extended Condorcet Model allows us to explore interindividual consensus concerning culturally held knowledge. At the same time, it enables a process-level description of interindividual differences in the knowledge a person has of the consensus, their willingness to guess in the absence of knowledge, and their bias in guessing. These person-specific characteristics potentially have an influence on one's everyday life experiences. Here, we develop a cognitive latent variable model in which dynamic process parameters from intensive longitudinal daily life data are systematically linked to parameters of the Extended Condorcet Model. We apply this joint model of consensus and longitudinal dynamics to study whether subjective beliefs on what makes people feel loved are linked to daily life experiences of love.

Citation

Oravecz, Z., & Vandekerckhove, J. (2020). A joint process model of consensus and longitudinal dynamics. Journal of Mathematical Psychology, 98, 102386.

Bibtex

@article{oravecz_vandekerckhove:2020:longitudinal,
    title   = {{A} joint process model of consensus and longitudinal dynamics},
    author  = {Oravecz, Zita and Vandekerckhove, Joachim},
    year    = {2020},
    journal = {Journal of Mathematical Psychology},
    volume  = {98},
    pages   = {102386}
}