Explore projects
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This task shows you the drag and drop capabilities of PsychoPy and PsychoJS. The demonstration uses a drag and drop puzzle game. The task requires you to drag and drop the black and white pieces into the empty square.
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A basic n-back task in which sequential items are presented. Participants must click/tap the screen if this item is the same as n-back.
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This is the first part of a three-part study investigating how memory functions when dealing with missing information, through the use of internal models and formed predictions. In this first experiment, participants are presented with partially occluded scenes/images and are subsequently asked to fill in the occluded portions with some line drawings. Upon completion, we will average these line drawings across all participants to determine a generalized internal model - for each respective image. These generalized internal models will then be used as stimuli, in the next part of our study, when we introduce a memory component to our design.
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This task shows you the drag and drop capabilities of PsychoPy and PsychoJS. The demonstration uses a drag and drop puzzle game. The task requires you to drag and drop the black and white pieces into the empty square.
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Set of experiments used to test EEG equipment in real world driving.
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Open sourced Implicit Association Test (IAT) as a demonstration. This version will run locally in PsychoPy (mouse input) or online (including touchscreen input)
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An escape room ... of bugs.
Here I have delibrately planted a range of bugs for you to crack...
Good luck getting out!
Hopefully you learn some JS and web skills on the way!
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Discourse prominence experiment of my doctoral dissertation "Differential object indexing in Bulgarian"
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In this experiment participants are required to respond whenever the stimulus (square) location matches its location the previous trial (N-back-1). N-back-2 trials involve responding whenever the location of the square is the same as its location 2 trials before. This task is based on Kirchner (1958) experiment.
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The Eriksen (1974) flanker task shows the effects of incongruent flanker stimuli on perception of a central target
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