A huge thanks to everyone who attended our #SIPS2022 workshop on "Shareable, Reusable Experiments in @psychopy and Pavlovia.org"
Our tips - in a thread!🧵👇
1. Use an Experiment Builder.
Even confident coders can code experiments that are not very easy for others to use.
I've certainly made things even future me can't follow!
Using a builder interface makes it easier for others to follow your experimental flow.
2. Share it!
The pavlovia ecosystem has THOUSANDS of pre-created studies. If you're not sure where to start, search "demos" for tasks created and maintained by the PsychoPy team.
3. USE GITLAB VERSION CONTROL.
I CANNOT STRESS THIS ENOUGH.
YOU HAVE A WORKING EXPERIMENT.
YOU MAKE A CHANGE.
THE EXPERIMENT BREAKS.
VERSION CONTROL SAVES THE DAY.
(you can find the version history of your project in gitlab under "commits")
4. Add a README file.
You wouldn't share ingredients without a recipe!🍰
Adding a file called README.md to your experiment directory will:
a)render all pretty on the gitlab page
b) pop up when you open your experiment is opened (leave helpful tips!)
5. Fork 🍴 and Star ⭐️ others work on pavlovia.org. It will help others in finding shared experiments that researchers find helpful!
Thanks to everyone for your attention, engagement and questions!!! If you have more tips please do share!!
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OK let's be more specific here to help others make mods... in 5 steps..
1.I fork and clone Thomas’s project using the details found on this link pavlovia.org/docs/experimen…. I have a play to check it works. Basic mode is a square moves on screen relative to eye position.
Supporting users, tracking down bugs, creating bespoke exps, running workshops and training events - does your research group/ department fancy a demo session – get in touch 2/6
To preregister my hypothesis: I suspect people should be more susceptible to these illusions when the temporal statistics of the auditory signal is predictable and known. pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16272880/
Slightly different one with my fav task: "A standing posture is associated with increased susceptibility
to the sound‑induced flash illusion in fall‑prone older adults" @ExpBrainReslink.springer.com/article/10.100…