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Any ideas how I can make it so only key presses that start with the onset of the code can affect the color Thanks a ton for the help. The experiment waits for any keypress, and as soon as the condition is met, it goes on to the. It’s called using URL parameters and can be configured on the page of your study in prolific. Slight issue I'm having though, in that while the color resets, if I press a key in the preceding condition (a fixation cross), that key press carries over and makes the corresponding text red in the next frame. Level 6: PsychoPy - Response collection and saving data. Using prolific, you can send the ID of the participant to pavlovia without having the participant enter them.This makes it easier to analyse the data later You don’t have to have two keyboard components for two keys.Some other tips I thought of when looking at your experiment: every entry starting with “DATA” is a response that the participant gave and contains details on what that response was (Mouse, Keyboard, key, mouse position, etc.).in the two right columns you see what happened at this point in time.
![psychopy keypress enter psychopy keypress enter](http://www.s12600.net/psy/_images/20-1-07.png)
in the left column you see the seconds since the experiment was started.This is how you read the log file if you want to have a look yourself: To avoid something like this in the future, you may want to design your experiment in a way that it does not just go by if participants do nothingĪnyway, you definitely won’t be able to recover any data from the logs because there is nothing there. Did you ask your participants about how they completed the experiment? Specifically, if they used the arrow keys and what kind of device they used? Alternatively, there might be a bug where key presses are not registered or are registered as mouse inputs, but I’ve never heard of something like this.
PSYCHOPY KEYPRESS ENTER TRIAL
So they probably not paying attention to the experiment, just waiting for it to finish They probably took so long because every single trial was over 2 seconds for them (maximum duration of trial when no key is pressed). Sometimes they took multiple minutes after they were asked to press space to actually press space. Others did not respond at all and only clicked “space” when starting a new block. My guess is that these participants used a touch screen or their mouse to try to give responses and did not use the arrow keys. Hi so from a first look you can see that the logs of some of the incomplete participants contain a lot of “Mouse” data entries when you don’t even use a mouse for the responses.