No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
'''Effect''' may refer to: |
'''Effect''' may refer to: |
||
* A [[result]] or change of something |
* A [[result]] or change of something |
||
+ | |||
**[[Effect of depression on mortality in heart disease]] |
**[[Effect of depression on mortality in heart disease]] |
||
− | **[[Effects |
+ | **[[Effects and aftermath of rape]] |
+ | **[[Effects of alcohol use]] |
||
+ | **[[Effects of bullying]] |
||
**[[Effects of cannabis]] |
**[[Effects of cannabis]] |
||
**[[Effect of placebo]] |
**[[Effect of placebo]] |
||
− | **[[Effects |
+ | **[[Effects on cognitive functioning in mental health]] |
+ | **[[Long-term effects of benzodiazepines]] |
||
+ | **[[Psychological effects of exposure to white noise]] |
||
+ | **[[Psychological effects of illness]] |
||
+ | **[[Psychological effects of single parenting]] |
||
+ | |||
*[[List of effects in psychology]] |
*[[List of effects in psychology]] |
||
**[[Abney effect]] |
**[[Abney effect]] |
||
+ | **[[Abraham Lincoln effect]] |
||
**[[Audience effect]] |
**[[Audience effect]] |
||
**[[Baldwin effect]] |
**[[Baldwin effect]] |
||
Line 30: | Line 39: | ||
**[[Acceleration effects]] |
**[[Acceleration effects]] |
||
***[[Altitude effects]] |
***[[Altitude effects]] |
||
+ | ***[[Cold effects]] |
||
***[[Decompression effects]] |
***[[Decompression effects]] |
||
***[[Doppler effect]] |
***[[Doppler effect]] |
||
Line 38: | Line 48: | ||
****[[Heat effects]] |
****[[Heat effects]] |
||
***[[Underwater effects]] |
***[[Underwater effects]] |
||
+ | **[[Experience curve effects]] |
||
**[[Experimenter effect]] |
**[[Experimenter effect]] |
||
+ | **[[False consensus effect]] |
||
**[[Flynn effect]] |
**[[Flynn effect]] |
||
**[[First pass effect]] |
**[[First pass effect]] |
||
Line 51: | Line 63: | ||
**[[Hawthorne effect]] |
**[[Hawthorne effect]] |
||
**[[Ideomotor effect]] |
**[[Ideomotor effect]] |
||
+ | **[[Kinetic screen effect]] |
||
+ | **[[Lake Wobegon effect]] |
||
+ | **[[Levels-of-processing effect]] |
||
**[[Levitin Effect]] |
**[[Levitin Effect]] |
||
**[[Lombard effect]] |
**[[Lombard effect]] |
||
+ | **[[Lunar effect]] |
||
**[[McClintock effect]] |
**[[McClintock effect]] |
||
**[[McGurk effect]] |
**[[McGurk effect]] |
||
**[[McCollough effect]] |
**[[McCollough effect]] |
||
**[[Maternal effect]] |
**[[Maternal effect]] |
||
+ | **[[Mere exposure effect]] |
||
+ | **[[Misinformation effect]] |
||
**[[Mozart effect]] |
**[[Mozart effect]] |
||
**[[Negativity effect]] |
**[[Negativity effect]] |
||
**[[Nocebo effect]] |
**[[Nocebo effect]] |
||
+ | **[[Numerosity adaptation effect]] |
||
**[[Observer effect]] |
**[[Observer effect]] |
||
**[[Observer-expectancy effect]] |
**[[Observer-expectancy effect]] |
||
Line 65: | Line 84: | ||
**[[Overjustification effect]] |
**[[Overjustification effect]] |
||
**[[Partner effects]] |
**[[Partner effects]] |
||
+ | **[[Picture superiority effect]] |
||
**[[Piston effect]] |
**[[Piston effect]] |
||
**[[Positivity effect]] |
**[[Positivity effect]] |
||
Line 70: | Line 90: | ||
**[[Primacy effect]] |
**[[Primacy effect]] |
||
**[[Propinquity effect]] |
**[[Propinquity effect]] |
||
+ | **[[Pseudocertainty effect]] |
||
**[[Pulfrich effect]] |
**[[Pulfrich effect]] |
||
**[[Purkinje effect]] |
**[[Purkinje effect]] |
||
Line 76: | Line 97: | ||
**[[Rebound effect]] |
**[[Rebound effect]] |
||
**[[Recency effect]] |
**[[Recency effect]] |
||
+ | **[[Ringelmann effect]] |
||
+ | **[[Serial position effect]] |
||
**[[Simon effect]] |
**[[Simon effect]] |
||
**[[Sleeper effect]] |
**[[Sleeper effect]] |
||
+ | **[[Split attention effect]] |
||
+ | **[[Stiles–Crawford effect]] |
||
**[[Stroop effect]] |
**[[Stroop effect]] |
||
**[[Subject-expectancy effect]] |
**[[Subject-expectancy effect]] |
||
+ | **[[Sylvia Plath effect]] |
||
+ | **[[Testing effect]] |
||
**[[Thatcher effect]] |
**[[Thatcher effect]] |
||
**[[Tinkerbell effect]] |
**[[Tinkerbell effect]] |
||
**[[Tunnel effect]] |
**[[Tunnel effect]] |
||
**[[Valence effect]] |
**[[Valence effect]] |
||
+ | **[[Wagon-wheel effect]] |
||
**[[Westermarck effect]] |
**[[Westermarck effect]] |
||
**[[Whitten effect]] |
**[[Whitten effect]] |
||
+ | **[[Worse-than-average effect]] |
||
**[[Zeigarnik effect]] |
**[[Zeigarnik effect]] |
||
Line 93: | Line 122: | ||
It may also refer to: |
It may also refer to: |
||
*[[Effect size (statistical)]] |
*[[Effect size (statistical)]] |
||
− | *[[Effectiveness] |
+ | *[[Effectiveness]] |
⚫ | |||
**[[Management effectiveness]] |
**[[Management effectiveness]] |
||
**[[Organizational effectiveness]] |
**[[Organizational effectiveness]] |
||
− | **[[ |
+ | **[[Therapist effectiveness]] |
+ | **[[Teacher effectiveness evaluation]] |
||
+ | |||
+ | |||
*[[Efficacy]] |
*[[Efficacy]] |
||
*[[Efficacy expectations]] |
*[[Efficacy expectations]] |
||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
+ | *[[Effect of outcome/progress feedback on clinical effectiveness]] |
||
*[[Side effects (treatment)]] |
*[[Side effects (treatment)]] |
||
*[[Therapeutic effect]] |
*[[Therapeutic effect]] |
||
+ | |||
⚫ | |||
In pharmacy and pharmacology: |
In pharmacy and pharmacology: |
||
Line 113: | Line 147: | ||
==See also== |
==See also== |
||
+ | *[[Fixed effects estimator]] |
||
*[[Late effect]] |
*[[Late effect]] |
||
*[[Law of Effect]] |
*[[Law of Effect]] |
||
*[[Main effect]] |
*[[Main effect]] |
||
+ | *[[Random effects model]] |
||
+ | *[[Sparsity-of-effects principle]] |
Latest revision as of 15:50, 30 September 2012
- Not to be confused with Affect (disambiguation).
Effect may refer to:
- A result or change of something
- Effect of depression on mortality in heart disease
- Effects and aftermath of rape
- Effects of alcohol use
- Effects of bullying
- Effects of cannabis
- Effect of placebo
- Effects on cognitive functioning in mental health
- Long-term effects of benzodiazepines
- Psychological effects of exposure to white noise
- Psychological effects of illness
- Psychological effects of single parenting
- List of effects in psychology
- Abney effect
- Abraham Lincoln effect
- Audience effect
- Baldwin effect
- Bandwagon effect
- Bezold effect
- Blocking effect
- Boomerang effect
- Bruce effect
- Bystander effect
- Ceiling effect
- Cinderella effect
- Contrast effect
- Coolidge effect
- Discontinuity effect
- Endowment effect
- Environmental effects
- Acceleration effects
- Experience curve effects
- Experimenter effect
- False consensus effect
- Flynn effect
- First pass effect
- Forer effect
- Generation effect
- Halo effect
- Hawthorne effect
- Ideomotor effect
- Kinetic screen effect
- Lake Wobegon effect
- Levels-of-processing effect
- Levitin Effect
- Lombard effect
- Lunar effect
- McClintock effect
- McGurk effect
- McCollough effect
- Maternal effect
- Mere exposure effect
- Misinformation effect
- Mozart effect
- Negativity effect
- Nocebo effect
- Numerosity adaptation effect
- Observer effect
- Observer-expectancy effect
- Overconfidence effect
- Overjustification effect
- Partner effects
- Picture superiority effect
- Piston effect
- Positivity effect
- Practice effects
- Primacy effect
- Propinquity effect
- Pseudocertainty effect
- Pulfrich effect
- Purkinje effect
- Pygmalion effect
- Rashomon effect
- Rebound effect
- Recency effect
- Ringelmann effect
- Serial position effect
- Simon effect
- Sleeper effect
- Split attention effect
- Stiles–Crawford effect
- Stroop effect
- Subject-expectancy effect
- Sylvia Plath effect
- Testing effect
- Thatcher effect
- Tinkerbell effect
- Tunnel effect
- Valence effect
- Wagon-wheel effect
- Westermarck effect
- Whitten effect
- Worse-than-average effect
- Zeigarnik effect
- Cause and effect, an idiom describing causality
It may also refer to:
- Efficacy
- Efficacy expectations
In Health care
- Effect of outcome/progress feedback on clinical effectiveness
- Side effects (treatment)
- Therapeutic effect
In pharmacy and pharmacology:
- Drug effect, a change resulting from the administration of a drug
- Therapeutic effect, a beneficial change in medical condition, often caused by a drug
- Adverse effect or side effect, an unwanted change in medical condition caused by a drug
- Dose-response effect, the relationship between a drug dose and its effect, plotted on a dose-response curve