For example, participants in an experiment may all view the same video clip of a car crash.
Participants simply view the statement as having higher value when the author has higher prestige.
Participants must view the video and decipher the emotion they believe is being portrayed.
Participants viewed pictures taken from art books that were profiles or human faces and bodies in two blocks.
To test this, researchers measured brain activity while participants viewed an extended narrative film.
In assemblage experiments, participants viewed, at a single sitting, a collection of news stories taken from the three major networks.
Participants are involved in field trips, hospital duties, and even view medical procedures as they are performed.
Participants either viewed or imagined individual named object images on which they had been trained prior to the scan.
These two methods allow the scientist or the participant, respectively, to view activation in the brain.
Participants view either the subject-focus or equal-focus version of the confession.