Main content

Home

Menu

Loading wiki pages...

View
Wiki Version:
**Subjects** <br> We will aim for usable data from 50 subjects per condition, for a total of 300 subjects after exclusions. Results from a previous study suggest that we can expect to exclude approximately 45% of all data collected; as such, we will recruit 600 subjects. Subjects will be recruited through Amazon's Mechanical Turk service and will receive $0.10 in exchange for completing the experiment. **Stimuli** <br> The stimuli consist of eight objects presented against a light blue (#58ACFA) background measuring 666 x 546 pixels. These objects consist of two triangles (53 pixel base x 53 pixel height), squares (44 x 44 pixels), diamonds (53 x 53 pixels), and circles (radius 20 pixels). Across trials, these shapes can be pink (#FFC0CB), purple (#6E24A5), red (#E41A1A), or yellow (#E8F212). One color is randomly assigned to be constant throughout the experiment and appears on each trial; the other colors appear in random sequence. One of each shape is the constant color, and the other shapes the varying color. A blue (#0000FF) fixation square measuring 11 x 11 pixels is positioned in the center of the display. The unexpected object is a random shape (triangle, square, diamond, or circle), and can be either pink, purple, yellow, red, or green (#1B7E39) depending on the condition. **Condition Assignment** <br> Subjects can be asked to attend either to the constant color (e.g. "purple") or the varying colors ("non-purple"). The unexpected object can be either the same color as the varying color on the final, critical trial, a varying color encountered previously in the experiment, or a novel color (green). This yields six possible conditions resulting from the combinations of attended set (2) x unexpected object (3). Upon starting the experiment, the script counts how many subjects have completed the study so far and takes that number modulo 6. Each number 0-5 corresponds to one of the attended object x unexpected object color combinations. **Procedure** <br> A demonstration of the task may be viewed [here][1]. After accepting the HIT on Amazon's website and having their worker ID confirmed as new by TurkGate [(Gideon & Goldin, 2013)][2], subjects will be redirected to an external website running the experiment in Javascript. _Instructions._ Subjects are instructed that they will see a set of objects move and bounce around, and that they will be asked to track one group of these objects and count how many times they bounce off the sides of the display window. <br> _Noncritical Trials._ Two trials. Subjects are told which set of objects, constant or varying, they should monitor; they are also instructed to keep their eyes fixed on the blue square in the center. Then the trial begins, and the objects bounce (roughly 5-8 times per object) around the display at randomly varying velocities for 17 seconds. Objects always pass behind the fixation square. Subjects are asked to enter the number of bounces they counted after each trial into a text box which only accepts integer inputs. <br> _Critical Trial._ The critical trial proceeds just like the noncritical trials. After 5 seconds, the unexpected object appears and travels across the experiment window from right to left, passing behind the fixation square. It remains on screen for 6750 ms. The trial terminates after 17 seconds total. Subjects are asked to report their count, and then are asked whether they saw something that had not been present on the previous trials. Then they are asked to select the shape and color of the object from a set of pre-determined options, or to guess if they did not notice anything. <br> _Demographic Questions._ Subjects are asked to select their age range, gender, country of residence, whether their vision needs correction and if they were wearing it during the experiment, the status of their color vision, the number contained in Ishihara Plate 9, whether they experienced any problems with playback, and whether they had prior experience with a similar inattentional blindness task. After submitting their final response, subjects are presented with a completion code and told to return to Mechanical Turk to enter the code and receive payment. [1]: http://simonslab.com/mot/scramble_demo.html [2]: https://github.com/gideongoldin/TurkGate/wiki/Installation
OSF does not support the use of Internet Explorer. For optimal performance, please switch to another browser.
Accept
This website relies on cookies to help provide a better user experience. By clicking Accept or continuing to use the site, you agree. For more information, see our Privacy Policy and information on cookie use.
Accept
×

Start managing your projects on the OSF today.

Free and easy to use, the Open Science Framework supports the entire research lifecycle: planning, execution, reporting, archiving, and discovery.