By Blackadder - 2/7/2017
We just discovered a severe error in Inquisit Web. The bug occurred with this script: http://research.millisecond.com/persike/simcomparegs.web
The script is supposed to show faces compsed from two face halves. In total, there are 200 lower and 200 upper face halves. The names of the image files uploaded to the Inquisit server accordingly have the prefix "UPPER" or "LOWER".
Multiple subjects have mentioned the same problem while running the experiment from their web browser. On their machines, stimuli are not composed from one upper and one lower face half. Instead, Inquisit shows two bottom halves.
We can definitely exclude that this is due to a script error. The data files logged by Inquisit Web contain the correct filenames (i.e., 1x "UPPER", 1x "LOWER") while only two "LOWER" variants are actually displayed. Below I have posted an image from one of our subjects documenting the bug, and attached you find a data file containing data from this exact experimental run.
This needs to be fixed.
Kind regards, Malte
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By Dave - 2/7/2017
+xWe just discovered a severe error in Inquisit Web. The bug occurred with this script: http://research.millisecond.com/persike/simcomparegs.webThe script is supposed to show faces compsed from two face halves. In total, there are 200 lower and 200 upper face halves. The names of the image files uploaded to the Inquisit server accordingly have the prefix "UPPER" or "LOWER". Multiple subjects have mentioned the same problem while running the experiment from their web browser. On their machines, stimuli are not composed from one upper and one lower face half. Instead, Inquisit shows two bottom halves. We can definitely exclude that this is due to a script error. The data files logged by Inquisit Web contain the correct filenames (i.e., 1x "UPPER", 1x "LOWER") while only two "LOWER" variants are actually displayed. Below I have posted an image from one of our subjects documenting the bug, and attached you find a data file containing data from this exact experimental run. This needs to be fixed. Kind regards, Malte As weird as it may sound, but this may not actually be a bug in Inquisit, but a bug in the graphics card driver on the affected machines. We have seen a few similar instances over the years. If you can get one of the affected participants to update the graphics card driver to the latest one available from the respective vendor and then try again, that should either confirm or disconfirm the theory.
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By Blackadder - 2/8/2017
+x+xWe just discovered a severe error in Inquisit Web. The bug occurred with this script: http://research.millisecond.com/persike/simcomparegs.webThe script is supposed to show faces compsed from two face halves. In total, there are 200 lower and 200 upper face halves. The names of the image files uploaded to the Inquisit server accordingly have the prefix "UPPER" or "LOWER". Multiple subjects have mentioned the same problem while running the experiment from their web browser. On their machines, stimuli are not composed from one upper and one lower face half. Instead, Inquisit shows two bottom halves. We can definitely exclude that this is due to a script error. The data files logged by Inquisit Web contain the correct filenames (i.e., 1x "UPPER", 1x "LOWER") while only two "LOWER" variants are actually displayed. Below I have posted an image from one of our subjects documenting the bug, and attached you find a data file containing data from this exact experimental run. This needs to be fixed. Kind regards, Malte As weird as it may sound, but this may not actually be a bug in Inquisit, but a bug in the graphics card driver on the affected machines. We have seen a few similar instances over the years. If you can get one of the affected participants to update the graphics card driver to the latest one available from the respective vendor and then try again, that should either confirm or disconfirm the theory. Interesting. We'll try that.
Thanks a lot!
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By Dave - 2/8/2017
+x+x+xWe just discovered a severe error in Inquisit Web. The bug occurred with this script: http://research.millisecond.com/persike/simcomparegs.webThe script is supposed to show faces compsed from two face halves. In total, there are 200 lower and 200 upper face halves. The names of the image files uploaded to the Inquisit server accordingly have the prefix "UPPER" or "LOWER". Multiple subjects have mentioned the same problem while running the experiment from their web browser. On their machines, stimuli are not composed from one upper and one lower face half. Instead, Inquisit shows two bottom halves. We can definitely exclude that this is due to a script error. The data files logged by Inquisit Web contain the correct filenames (i.e., 1x "UPPER", 1x "LOWER") while only two "LOWER" variants are actually displayed. Below I have posted an image from one of our subjects documenting the bug, and attached you find a data file containing data from this exact experimental run. This needs to be fixed. Kind regards, Malte As weird as it may sound, but this may not actually be a bug in Inquisit, but a bug in the graphics card driver on the affected machines. We have seen a few similar instances over the years. If you can get one of the affected participants to update the graphics card driver to the latest one available from the respective vendor and then try again, that should either confirm or disconfirm the theory. Interesting. We'll try that. Thanks a lot! Please let me know what you find.
To illustrate why I think this may be what's happening, here's one relatively recent example of a similar issue caused by a faulty graphics card driver:
-------- Forwarded Message -------- Subject: Re: Problem with script Date: Wed, 20 Apr 2016 13:29:07 +1000 From: [EMAIL REDACTED] To: support@millisecond.com
Hi David,
Thank you for the advice. It worked. Excellent work!
Regards, [NAME REDACTED]
-- [NAME REDACTED], PhD Research Fellow [INSTITUTION REDACTED] --
On Wed, Apr 20, 2016 at 12:31 PM, Support <support@millisecond.com <mailto:support@millisecond.com>> wrote:
Hi [NAME REDACTED],
The problem is almost certainly caused by a faulty graphics card driver on the affected system, not by an issue in the script or in the Inquisit application. We have seen a (small) number of similar cases over the years. In all of these cases updating the graphics card driver to the latest version available from the card's manufacturer resolved the problem.
Hope this helps, -David
On 4/20/2016 3:28 AM, [NAME REDACTED] wrote:
Hi Support
I experience the following problem: When I run the attached script on he computer I am writing from now it does not work as expected. The script is a slightly modified version of a script from your website. It works correctly on some other computers. The problem is that the script should show 5 fishes where the middle one in 50% of cases should look at the opposite direction compared to the others. It never happens on this computer. All fish always look at the same direction on screen although when I press the correct key according to what I see the program reports an incorrect input. The code and the log are attached. Please advise what should I do to fix it.
Regards, [NAME REDACTED]
-- [NAME REDACTED], PhD Research Fellow
[INSTITUTION REDACTED] --
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