The PSYCHLAB programming system: A tool for developing experimental control programs |
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Authors: | Kenneth J. Maxwell Roger W. Schvaneveldt |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychology, New Mexico State University, Box 3452, 88003, Las Cruces, New Mexico
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Abstract: | The PSYCHLAB system is designed to facilitate the task of writing experimental control programs. The system consists of two major components: (1) a collection of procedures and functions to facilitate presenting stimuli, collecting responses, and measuring response times and (2) a high-level language (LAB-TALK) designed to organize and sequence events in experiments. The PSYCHLAB system is formally an interpreter that will interpret programs written in LAB-TALK. The interpreter is customized to perform the detailed functions of each trial in an experiment. The occurrence of these trials is controlled by the LAB-TALK program. Thus, once a particular experimental paradigm has been represented in a customized version of the interpreter, many different experiments in that paradigm can be programmed by variations in the LAB-TALK program. |
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