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measure Child Gap Overlap Task - Antisaccade
Study: YOUth Mode of collection: MeasurementsAndTests Eyetracking Available measurements: Baby and Child 6 years
Child and Adolescent 9 years 12 yearsThe Gap-overlap task is a gaze contingent paradigm that measures visual attention shifting between a central and a peripheral stimulus. This is thought to be a key process underlying behavioral control. The Gap-overlap task contains three conditions; i) Gap, in which the central stimulus disappears 200ms before the appearance of the peripheral target; ii)...Created October 17, 2024 • Updated October 20, 2024 -
measure Child Gap Overlap Task - Prosaccade
Study: YOUth Mode of collection: MeasurementsAndTests Eyetracking Available measurements: Baby and Child 6 years
Child and Adolescent 9 years 12 yearsThe Gap-overlap task is a gaze contingent paradigm that measures visual attention shifting between a central and a peripheral stimulus. This is thought to be a key process underlying behavioral control. The Gap-overlap task contains three conditions; i) Gap, in which the central stimulus disappears 200ms before the appearance of the peripheral target; ii)...Created October 17, 2024 • Updated October 20, 2024 -
measure Looking While Listening
Study: YOUth Mode of collection: MeasurementsAndTests Eyetracking Available measurements: Baby and Child 3 yearsThe Looking While Listening task is an eye-tracking paradigm. It is a simplified version of a visual world paradigm, in which every trial presents pairs of familiar images/objects of roughly the same size (for example, a chair and a bath), accompanied by a pre-recorded Dutch sentence that asks the participant to look at one of these images (e.g., where is...Created October 17, 2024 • Updated October 20, 2024 -
measure Infant Face Popout
Study: YOUth Mode of collection: MeasurementsAndTests Eyetracking Available measurements: Baby and Child 5 months 10 months 3 years 6 yearsInfant Face Popout is a shortened version of the face-pop out experiment (Gliga et al, 2009 Exp1; Elsabbagh et al., 2013), a free viewing experiment in which children are presented with multiple five-item arrays (always: 1. Human face; 2. Car; 3. Mobile phone; 4. Bird; 5; Face-shaped noise figure). It tests whether children automatically orient to faces...Created October 17, 2024 • Updated October 20, 2024