Re-using the same 'random' order later in an experiment
David McFarlane
mcfarla9 at msu.edu
Mon Jun 9 18:53:12 UTC 2014
Chad,
Very possible, in fact several years ago with help from PST Support I
did something very like this using ExplicitOrder, see that topic in
the E-Basic Help facility.
-----
David McFarlane
E-Prime training
online: http://psychology.msu.edu/Workshops_Courses/eprime.aspx
Twitter: @EPrimeMaster (https://twitter.com/EPrimeMaster)
/----
Stock reminder: 1) I do not work for PST. 2) PST's trained staff
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strive to respond to all requests in 24-48 hours, so make full use of
it. 3) In addition, PST offers several instructional videos on their
YouTube channel (http://www.youtube.com/user/PSTNET ). 4) If you do
get an answer from PST staff, please extend the courtesy of posting
their reply back here for the sake of others.
\----
At 6/9/2014 12:23 PM Monday, Chad Fernandez wrote:
>I have created a program using e-prime 2.0 that shows participants a
>set of 10 images one at a time in a random order. I used a nested
>list and the random option from the sequencing drop-down menu, and
>it works perfectly. Each image is loaded from the file location and
>is presented randomly. However at the end of the experiment I am
>hoping to be able to show the participants smaller versions of all
>10 images (on the same screen) with them labelled 1-10, in the same
>order they originally saw them in. The reason being is there is a
>manipulation that we are checking for and if they failed the
>manipulation, we want to know which image they failed it on. The
>order is important because we may be able to use the data - if the
>participant failed the manipulation on the 10th image - for the
>other nine images.
>
>I have no idea if this is even possible and I would also like to add
>that my extent of e-prime knowledge extends to only the
>point-and-click so far. I am starting to learn manual coding, but
>the learning curve there is much steeper than just the point and
>click. Any help would be appreciated.
>
>Thanks,
>Chad
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