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Gorilla images
Gorilla images












gorilla images
  1. #Gorilla images full#
  2. #Gorilla images trial#

In this example, one task involves identifying a shape, and the other task involves identifying the colour of that shape. Participants typically slow down between tasks as they shift attention. Participants complete two different tasks that alternate every two trials. Out of a set of four cards participants must work out which card must be turned over to see if a rule has been broken. Participants are given a group of 3 apparently unrelated words and must think of the 4th word which connects them. This task is used as a measure of creativity.

#Gorilla images trial#

Choose between a short demonstration version and a longer 80 trial version with varying difficulty levels. The participant has to choose an object to complete a puzzle display. This classic task assesses your ability to complete patterns across shape and colour. Participants are asked to connect 9 dots with four straight lines or fewer, without lifting the pen and without crossing the same dot more than once. This task is used as a measure of reasoning and the ability to 'think outside the box'.

gorilla images

This keyboard task measures response time and choice response times, which correlate with general intelligence. This is potentially a measure of implicit bias towards groups. View a classic Implicit Association Test, comparing RT and Accuracy in categorising different aged people against positive and negative words. Differences in accuracy and RT are used to potentially measure implicit bias. View a classic Implicit Association Test: Category sorting task, measuring strength of association between two sets of word categories. View a classic Implicit Association Test: Category sorting task, measuring strength of association between categories of images and word categories. Categories of images are paired with another category of interest. View a classic Implicit Association Test: Category sorting task. 75% of the time, a green circle will appear in the correct box before the stimulus appears.Ī classic sustained attention reaction test (or SART). This example requires the participant to press one of two keys when a green 'thumbs up’ appears in the corresponding box. This spatial orientation task measures the effects of cueing on reaction times to target stimuli.

#Gorilla images full#

This example has a jump rate of around 8% and lasts a minute, whereas a full task would jump around 0.5% of the time, and last much longer. Participants must stare at the image of a ticking clock and identify when the second hand jumps more than it should. This tests vigilance, a prolonged state of concentration.

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Baker, Dora Isabel Lozano, and Adrian Raine in 2009 on twins aged 9 and 10. This Inattention and Impulsivity experiment is loosely based on a lab study conducted by Serena Bezdjian, Laura A. The classic Flanker Task (or Eriksen Flanker Task) is a 'response inhibition' test used to assess participants' ability to suppress responses. The dot-probe is a classic task used to assess selective attention. Measure how long it takes participants to spot the difference! This is a classic 'Change Blindness' Task. Measure temporal limitations in the ability to deploy visual attention. We look forward to helping device manufacturers deliver this toughness on your next device.This is a classic 'Attentional Blink' Task. Gorilla Glass Victus is the tough device glass you’ve been asking for. Additionally, the scratch resistance of Gorilla Glass Victus is up to 4x better than competitive aluminosilicate. Competitive aluminosilicate glasses, from other manufacturers, typically fail when dropped from 0.8 meters. In our lab tests, Gorilla Glass Victus survived drops onto hard, rough surfaces from up to 2 meters. Introducing Corning® Gorilla® Glass Victus® - the toughest Gorilla® Glass yet, with significant improvement in both drop and scratch performance, for the first time ever in the Gorilla Glass family. But, it’s not one or the other - you want both. And you need better protection from the damage caused when these devices are dropped. You want your smartphone to be more scratch resistant. We’ve done the research - surveying nearly 90,000 consumers over the years.














Gorilla images