Thanks David, I will check that out and see how things go, good to hear it is something doable!<br><br>On Tuesday, January 8, 2013 5:05:27 PM UTC-5, McFarlane, David wrote:<blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin: 0;margin-left: 0.8ex;border-left: 1px #ccc solid;padding-left: 1ex;">First, my generic answer to the recurring question of, "Can E-Prime
<br>do this?" In short, almost certainly Yes; in full, E-Prime is a
<br>fairly full-featured computer programming platform, and can in
<br>principle do anything that a Universal Turing Machine (e.g., a
<br>stored-program computer) can do, subject to performance limitations
<br>(e.g., speed and storage capacity). In practice, E-Prime provides a
<br>better representation for some tasks than for others, as is true of
<br>any representational system for anything (grammar, images, time
<br>series, music, etc.).
<br>
<br>Second, for what you want to do, you should look first at the
<br>"Study-Recall" example that you may download from PST. Good luck!
<br>
<br>-----
<br>David McFarlane
<br>E-Prime training
<br>online: <a href="http://psychology.msu.edu/Workshops_Courses/eprime.aspx" target="_blank">http://psychology.msu.edu/<wbr>Workshops_Courses/eprime.aspx</a>
<br>Twitter: @EPrimeMaster (<a href="https://twitter.com/EPrimeMaster" target="_blank">https://twitter.com/<wbr>EPrimeMaster</a>)
<br>
<br>/----
<br>Stock reminder: 1) I do not work for PST. 2) PST's trained staff
<br>take any and all questions at
<br><a href="http://support.pstnet.com/e%2Dprime/support/login.asp" target="_blank">http://support.pstnet.com/e%<wbr>2Dprime/support/login.asp</a> , and they
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<br>\----
<br>
<br>
<br>At 1/8/2013 04:41 PM Tuesday, Tim wrote:
<br>>I am currently designing a study and have run into a roadblock. I am
<br>>presenting subjects with a list of 100 words. Each word is presented
<br>>once at random and participants respond to by either pressing "1" or
<br>>"2." For the first trial, I want participants to completely go
<br>>through all words, which was obviously easy to set up.
<br>>
<br>>However, I next want participants to again go through the list of
<br>>words, but this time only using the words they previously pressed
<br>>"1" for. I also want to repeat this process until just 10 words
<br>>remain. My first question is this: is E-Prime even capable of doing
<br>>this? And then of course, if so, how would this be accomplished?
<br>>
<br>>
<br>>
<br>>Any help or advice would be very much appreciated, thank you!! And
<br>>for what it is worth, the words are things that people value and the
<br>>task is designed to help people clarify their deeply held values.
<br>
<br></blockquote>
<p></p>
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