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#' Data 12.1 from Maxwell & Delaney
#'
#' Hypothetical Reaction Time Data for 2 x 3 Perceptual Experiment: Example data for chapter 12 of Maaxwell and Delaney (2004, Table 12.1, p. 574) in long format. Has two within.subjects factors: angle and noise.
#'
#' Description from pp. 573:
#'
#' Suppose that a perceptual psychologist studying the visual system was interested in determining the
#' extent to which interfering visual stimuli slow the ability to recognize letters. Subjects are
#' brought into a laboratory and seated in front of a tachistoscope. Subjects are told that they will
#' see either the letter T or the letter I displayed on the screen. In some trials, the letter appears
#' by itself, but in other trials, the target letter is embedded in a group of other letters. This
#' variation in the display constitutes the first factor, which is referred to as noise. The noise
#' factor has two levels?absent and present. The other factor varied by the experimenter is where in
#' the display the target letter appears. This factor, which is called angle, has three levels. The
#' target letter is either shown at the center of the screen (i.e., 0° off-center, where the subject
#' has been instructed to fixate), 4° off-center or 8° off-center (in each case, the deviation from the
#' center varies randomly between left and right). Table 12.1 presents hypothetical data for 10
#' subjects. As usual, the sample size is kept small to make the calculations easier to follow. The
#' dependent measure is reaction time (latency), measured in milliseconds (ms), required by a subject
#' to identify the correct target letter. Notice that each subject has six scores, one for each
#' combination of the 2 x 3 design. In an actual perceptual experiment, each of these six scores would
#' itself be the mean score for that subject across a number of trials in the particular condition.
#' Although "trials" could be used as a third within-subjects factor in such a situation, more
#' typically trials are simply averaged over to obtain a more stable measure of the individual's
#' performance in each condition.
#'
#' @docType data
#' @keywords dataset
#' @name md_12.1
#' @usage md_12.1
#' @format A data.frame with 60 rows and 4 variables.
#' @source Maxwell, S. E., & Delaney, H. D. (2004). Designing experiments and analyzing data: a model-comparisons perspective. Mahwah, N.J.: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. p. 574
#'
#' @encoding UTF-8
#'
#' @examples
#' data(md_12.1)
#'
#' # Table 12.5 (p. 578):
#' aov_ez("id", "rt", md_12.1, within = c("angle", "noise"),
#' args.return=list(correction = "none", es = "none"))
#'
#'
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