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Moves a pulsating circle around the screen like an eye tracker calibration cue. Paths are read from an Excel file but implemented in code.
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In this task participants are required to sort the presented cards based on a rule. The rule is unknown to the participants, however they receive feedback whether their answer was correct. The rule changes after certain amount of trials. This experiment is based on Grant & Berg (1948) experiment.
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In this task participants are required to sort the presented cards based on a rule. The rule is unknown to the participants, however they receive feedback whether their answer was correct. The rule changes after certain amount of trials. This experiment is based on Grant & Berg (1948) experiment.
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Long context biased towards low with feedback given every 10 trials.
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In this task participants are required to sort the presented cards based on a rule. The rule is unknown to the participants, however they receive feedback whether their answer was correct. The rule changes after certain amount of trials. This experiment is based on Grant & Berg (1948) experiment.
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This experiment is designed to measure participants' forwards, backwards, and sequential digit spans. It uses visual presentation. Sequence length increases every two trials. If participants make an error on both trials of the same length, they move onto the next trial.
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This experiment is designed to measure participants' forwards, backwards, and sequential digit spans. It uses visual presentation. Sequence length increases every two trials. If participants make an error on both trials of the same length, they move onto the next trial.
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Balloon Analogue Risk Task (BART)
The experiment: ——
This is a simplified (and prettified) version of the BART task by Lejuez et al (2002). Participants have to blow up a balloon that they know will burst at some point. They ‘earn’ rewards for getting the balloons to be larger, but increase the risk of bursting it, in which case they earn no reward for that balloon. The question is, how many times does someone pump each balloon trying to optimise their rewards.
The measure is designed to quantify individual differences in risk-taking.
Analysing your data: ——
You should filter out data where the balloon burst and measure the number of pumps made for the remaining trials.
Notes: ——
WARNING: This is an advanced demo involving lots of code components
This can be extended to be more similar to the original paper by adding further colours of balloons with different bursting profiles.
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Distractor Salience Task when On MEDICATION. Dissertation (Flanker Task)
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