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Jaleh Posted 4 years ago
Grammar

Presenting stimuli in a premuted order

Hi everybody. I was reading a paper and then I came across this phrase.

"Eleven trials of each rhythm type (isochronous, and nonisochronous sequences) in each modality (auditory and visual) and a subsequent rest period (12.4 s) will be presented in permuted order."

I want to make sure about what they mean by that. Does it mean:

1- They shuffled isochronous and nonisochronous sequences in each modality then they presented all isochronous and nonisochronous sequences in a shuffled matter in let's say auditory and when it was done they did it to the visual sequences.

2- They shuffled everything regardless of modality. So it means people might get an isochronous auditory then nonisochronous visual then nonisochrous of auditory etc. So it is totally shuffled.

  

Top answer

I suspect that you have copied it wrong. I cannot justify the comma in "isochronous, and nonisochronous sequences". I can't bring myself to work it out when I think it's wrong to begin with.

  • I suspect that you have copied it wrong.
  • I cannot justify the comma in "isochronous, and nonisochronous sequences".
  • I can't bring myself to work it out when I think it's wrong to begin with.
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1 Answers
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I suspect that you have copied it wrong. I cannot justify the comma in "isochronous, and nonisochronous sequences". I can't bring myself to work it out when I think it's wrong to begin with.

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