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Parametric Go No/Go Stop with Shapes 2target, 3 target, 6 blocks
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Multicultural faces Cows instead of primates Faces first then animals
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Semantic Priming: Assessing how related meanings (e.g., "doctor" and "nurse") affect response times.
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A minimalist antisaccade task measuring attention and response control, can be adapted for eye tracking.
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The Simon task is a psychological test where participants respond to the color of a stimulus, ignoring its spatial location, to measure the effect of spatial cues on reaction time and cognitive control.
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Participants repeatedly choose between options (arms of a bandit) with different and unknown probabilities of reward. This task models exploration versus exploitation trade-offs.
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Sustained Attention to Response Time Task (SART)
This SART task is modeled on the framework used in The Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing (TILDA)
Participants must press a button (mouse or onscreen) in response to a series of digits and withold responses on the number 3)
Each digit appears for 300ms, with an interval of 800ms between digits. The cycle of digits 1–9 is repeated 23 times, giving a total of 207 trials. The task lasts approximately for 4min
Citations
Robertson I. H. Manly T. Andrade J. Baddeley B. T. Yiend J . (1997). ‘Oops!’: Performance correlates of everyday attentional failures in traumatic brain injured and normal subjects. Neuropsychologia, 35, 747–758. doi:S0028-3932(97)00015-8 [pii]
Aisling M. O’Halloran, Ciaran Finucane, George M. Savva, Ian H. Robertson, Rose Anne Kenny, Sustained Attention and Frailty in the Older Adult Population, The Journals of Gerontology: Series B, Volume 69, Issue 2, March 2014, Pages 147–156, https://doi.org/10.1093/geronb/gbt009
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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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