This article reviews PsyToolkit, a free web-based service designed for setting up, running, and analyzing online questionnaires and reaction-time (RT) experiments. It comes with extensive documentation, videos, lessons, and libraries of free-to-use psychological scales and RT experiments. It provides an elaborate interactive environment to use (or modify) the existing questionnaires and experiments from the PsyToolkit library or to design new studies. Once users have set up their study, they can recruit participants for online participation, and data can be downloaded in spreadsheet format after collection. This article provides examples of how questionnaires and RT experiments can be set up using the website. The PsyToolkit links to online...
Abstract: Behavioral researchers are increasingly conducting their studies online, to gain access to...
In this Methods Showcase Article, we outline a workflow for running behavioral experiments online, w...
This is a student project in which we designed a simple reaction time experiment in Psytoolkit. We t...
Researchers interested in greater access to participants and reduced data administration costs are f...
Amazon Mechanical Turk (AMT) is an online crowdsourcing service where anonymous online workers compl...
This article provides an overview of the recent literature on the use of internet-based testing to a...
Online labor markets provide new opportunities for behavioral research, but conducting economic expe...
The popularity of online behavioral experiments grew steadily even before the COVID-19 pandemic. Wit...
This half-day tutorial will cover how to build and deploy on-line experiments using jsPsych, psiTurk...
A major proportion of psychological research uses subjects from undergraduate populations. Increasin...
Moving from the lab to an online environment opens up enormous potential to collect behavioural data...
Conducting psychophysical experiments on the internet might constitute a useful addition to the exis...
To test the effectiveness of the Internet-based instrument PsyToolkit for use with complex choice ta...
PsyToolkit is a set of software tools for programming psychological experiments on Linux computers. ...
To test the effectiveness of the Internet-based instrument PsyToolkit for use with complex choice ta...
Abstract: Behavioral researchers are increasingly conducting their studies online, to gain access to...
In this Methods Showcase Article, we outline a workflow for running behavioral experiments online, w...
This is a student project in which we designed a simple reaction time experiment in Psytoolkit. We t...
Researchers interested in greater access to participants and reduced data administration costs are f...
Amazon Mechanical Turk (AMT) is an online crowdsourcing service where anonymous online workers compl...
This article provides an overview of the recent literature on the use of internet-based testing to a...
Online labor markets provide new opportunities for behavioral research, but conducting economic expe...
The popularity of online behavioral experiments grew steadily even before the COVID-19 pandemic. Wit...
This half-day tutorial will cover how to build and deploy on-line experiments using jsPsych, psiTurk...
A major proportion of psychological research uses subjects from undergraduate populations. Increasin...
Moving from the lab to an online environment opens up enormous potential to collect behavioural data...
Conducting psychophysical experiments on the internet might constitute a useful addition to the exis...
To test the effectiveness of the Internet-based instrument PsyToolkit for use with complex choice ta...
PsyToolkit is a set of software tools for programming psychological experiments on Linux computers. ...
To test the effectiveness of the Internet-based instrument PsyToolkit for use with complex choice ta...
Abstract: Behavioral researchers are increasingly conducting their studies online, to gain access to...
In this Methods Showcase Article, we outline a workflow for running behavioral experiments online, w...
This is a student project in which we designed a simple reaction time experiment in Psytoolkit. We t...