There were three strands to his research. The first strand, as a mathematical psychologist, he developed a Theory of Choice to explain the process of decision-making (Audley, 1960; Audley & Pike, 1965). His second strand was on reaction time (Audley, Caudrey, Howell and Powell, 1975) and the third was on medical accidents (Audley, Vincents & Ennis, 1993).
Publications
Audley, R.J. (1960). A stochastic model for individual choice behaviour.[5]
Audley, R.J., & Pike, A.R. (1965). Some alternative models of choice.[6]
Audley, R.J. (1970). Choosing.
Audley RJ; Caudrey DJ; Howell P; Powell DJ (1975) Reaction Time Exchange Functions in Choice Tasks. In Attention and Performance V, (pp. 281–295).[7]
Audley, R.J., Vincent, C., & Ennis, M. (Eds)(1993) Medical Accidents. OUP.
^Audley, Robert (1960). "A stochastic model for individual choice behaviour". Psychological Review. 67: 1–15. doi:10.1037/h0046438. PMID13795057.
^Audley, Robert (1965). "Some alternative models of choice". British Journal of Mathematical and Statistical Psychology. 18: 207–225. doi:10.1111/j.2044-8317.1965.tb00342.x.