04-02-2021, 09:16 AM
Hi there!
Without seeing the crosshairs in action (+ and Xs), I'm thinking the reason why it is moving is because you are putting all of the crosshairs on the same trial. When you do that, they all have to occupy their own space. I'd recommend using the yoked trials feature, so that you can split the audio stimulus and crosshair (X/+s) up and put them on their own trials. If you do this, they'll still be generated from the same trial template.
We have a great tutorial that you can use to learn more about the yoked trial feature: https://news.findingfive.com/2019/07/17/...ed-trials/. The only thing that may be different is if you choose not to have your stimulus pairs randomized. If this is the case, go ahead and use "alternate" pattern rather than alternate random.
Without seeing the crosshairs in action (+ and Xs), I'm thinking the reason why it is moving is because you are putting all of the crosshairs on the same trial. When you do that, they all have to occupy their own space. I'd recommend using the yoked trials feature, so that you can split the audio stimulus and crosshair (X/+s) up and put them on their own trials. If you do this, they'll still be generated from the same trial template.
We have a great tutorial that you can use to learn more about the yoked trial feature: https://news.findingfive.com/2019/07/17/...ed-trials/. The only thing that may be different is if you choose not to have your stimulus pairs randomized. If this is the case, go ahead and use "alternate" pattern rather than alternate random.