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## Learning PsychoPy Youtube tutorials, guides and materials for creating experiments with PsychoPy can be found here: http://www.psychopy.org/resources/resources.html ### Pavlovia.org Pavlovia is a platform for storing, running, sharing, and versioning online psychology experiments. You can think of it as "GitHub" but explicitly for behavioural scientists. You can find many experiments there. The majority currently are PsychoPy-based but any software packages can use Pavlovia. On top of being useful for storing/sharing studies, Pavlovia can also run studies and save the data from suitable JavaScript-based frameworks. Jonathan Peirce gave a talk on Pavlovia that can be viewed here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bprYeBzkUc8 ### Original Papers on PsychoPy Peirce, J.W. (2007) PsychoPy - Psychophysics software in Python. J Neurosci Methods, 162(1-2):8-13 Peirce J. W. (2009) Generating stimuli for neuroscience using PsychoPy. Front. Neuroinform. 2:10. doi:10.3389/neuro.11.010.2008 ### Linking PsychoPy with R PsychoPy data files are csv files and should be immediately amenable to analysis by R scripts. Shared by Nicholas Tierney, the Reticulate package might be of use as an R interface to Python downstream at data analysis: https://rstudio.github.io/reticulate/.
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