10-21-2024, 04:42 PM
Hi Sten,
I think you'll run the risk of collecting more data you want (and a disclosure issue as well), but here's a way to hack it:
1. Include a background audio response to collect audio recording (which you should tell your participants).
2. Set its duration as relative to the audio stimulus (https://docs.findingfive.com/en/designs/...e-duration) by something like half a second (or maybe +0 could even work)
3. Add both the audio response and the choice response to the trial.
That way, the trial should behave like what you described. The core principle here is that you'll need some other response that has a "duration" parameter to prevent the trial from ending too early. The relative duration is the only trick I can think of though.
Ting
I think you'll run the risk of collecting more data you want (and a disclosure issue as well), but here's a way to hack it:
1. Include a background audio response to collect audio recording (which you should tell your participants).
2. Set its duration as relative to the audio stimulus (https://docs.findingfive.com/en/designs/...e-duration) by something like half a second (or maybe +0 could even work)
3. Add both the audio response and the choice response to the trial.
That way, the trial should behave like what you described. The core principle here is that you'll need some other response that has a "duration" parameter to prevent the trial from ending too early. The relative duration is the only trick I can think of though.
Ting