Carl et al., As some of you may remember, Frostburg State University recently changed the platform we are using the run TIPS. Unfortunately in doing this they had to delete the previous page for changing your status (unsubcribing, setting nomail, etc.) and problems have developed in constructing a new one.
So until further notice, if you wish to change your status (unsubscribe, set to nomail) or if you know someone who wishes to join TIPS or turn email on, please contact me directly and tell me exactly what you would like to do since as listowner I will have to do it for you. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Best wishes, Bill Bill Southerly Department of Psychology Frostburg State University Frostburg, MD 21532 301-687-4778 [EMAIL PROTECTED] -----Original Message----- From: C Griffin [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Sat 9/29/2007 3:04 PM To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS) Subject: RE:[tips] stopping emails Hello everyone Can someone tell me how I can stop receiving these emails? Many thanks Carl _____ From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thu 9/27/2007 8:24 PM To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS) Subject: Re: [tips] Feedback on Perceptual Set online experiment Michael, I would say (with tongue-in-cheek) that the experiment worked perfectly: your subconscious mind had to time to mull over the images of the animals and by the second time through the experiment when you saw the horse your brain had it all figured out. I don't know how to explain it. That's not what's supposed to happen according to what I know about perceptual set research. Maybe someone else has an explanation. Someone already suggested to me that I need a picture of a horse among the animal pictures. Maybe the experiment would have worked as expected if I did that. Guess I have to find myself a picture of a horse. Michael Michael Britt Host of The Psych Files www.thepsychfiles.com > I didn't read your description, but just clicked on the link. My attempt > at clicking on condition 1 didn't work at first, so I chose condition 2. > After seeing all of the animals, I couldn't see the horse. Then, I went > through condition 1 (no animals), and saw the horse and rider clearly! > How do you explain that? > > > Michael T. Scoles, Ph.D. > Associate Professor of Psychology & Counseling > University of Central Arkansas > Conway, AR 72035 > 501-450-5418 > > > --- --- --- ---
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