 Hi, my name is Sebastian Ato and today I would like to give you a preview of the next version of open sesame Which will be 3.1 codename Jesse James and in particular I would like to show you the the new integration with the open science framework that we now have in open sesame Now much of the work that I that I will show you in this video has actually been done by Daniel Schreij So big thanks to him and it has been funded largely by the Center for Open Science So also big shout out to them. Now Let's start with a simple attentional capture experiment that I prepared for this purpose So here you see continue with the recent experiment attentionalcapture.osx click on it to open it Now and what I want to do Is link this experiment to the open science framework? What this means is that if I link an experiment to the open science framework that Every version of the experiment so as I develop the experiment I create different versions and every version of this experiment will be saved Will be backed up to the open science framework In addition when you run the experiment And you collect data the data will be automatically uploaded to the open science framework So that's kind of the idea, right? So everything you do in open sesame is automatically synchronized to the open science framework And this all happens in a very user-friendly in a pretty sweet way. I I hope you will agree Now to log in to the open science framework you click here on this icon the login icon with the little OSF icon next to it But log in and it will open a browser window that allows you to log into the open science frame So I type my Email address and password which you're not see obviously and I sign it Now The open science framework asks you whether you're okay with open sesame using your account and accessing the files on your account So obviously you have to say yes, I allow that right, which is fine Okay, click and then you see it logs on and it shows my little my little photo that is associated with my account on the open science Now if I click on this this OSF button here You will see a few things you will see a show explorer option which if you if I select that it will show a Basically an overview of everything that I have on the open science framework So I have a a project here, which is called a very brief history of open sesame Which is something that I presented that at open corner conference and I have some some more stuff And you also see that there I have a project called attentional capture, which I have prepared for this demonstration so Every project has an OSF storage Component basically that's that the OSF storage is your virtual hard drive that you have on the on the open science framework Right the open science framework is kind of like a draw box for scientists It allows you to save files and the OSF storage is where you save these files So if I want to link my experiment to the OSF storage to the files of the attentional capture project I just select it right click and say sync experiment to this Up there we go We'll take a little while because my connection is kind of slow There we go, and then it says the experiment has been linked to the OSF Okay now And if I now unfolded you also see that I have a copy of my experiment actually in already uploaded to the OSF now I Also want to save my data now I ideally don't want to save my data in the same folder. I think that's kind of messy So I say create a new folder. I say data. Okay It will create a new folder called data. I select it and I say sync data to this folder. Okay Data upload folder has been set to about a lot now here above you see that you can choose whether You have these two options always upload the experiment on save and always upload collected data if you enable these Open Sesame will automatically save your experiment and the data to the open science frame if you don't enable these Open Sesame will ask you every time whether you want to do that, right? So I think it's kind of convenient to to enable Okay so now we have an experiment that is saved or linked to the open science framework and So basically say for example, I know I have an instruction screen here and I made a see instruction It's a little little typo here if I now fix this type. I say instructions and I save the experiment by clicking on the save button It will not only save the experiment locally on my hard drive But it will also save a new version of the experiment to the open science framework and it will say so right experiment Successfully synced to the open science framework. So that's pretty sweet If I run the experiment click here and I say for example, I have to indicate the subject number I say okay Subject zero dot CSV. Let's save it there. Okay Subject zero already exists. Okay. Yes. So now I'm running the experiment. It's pretty short. So bear with me It's just a typical attentional capture task of a few trials So I do the experiment up tick tick Tick Okay, and one experiment is finished Okay, so now I have a data file right very short data file And this data file is not only saved locally on my hard drive, but it is also saved to the open science framework as this message Chess here. So if I go to this OSF Explorer, you see that now in the data folder We actually have subject zero dot CSV, right? So this that's really I think is really very convenient very smooth so If I actually log in to the OSF you see all the things that I do in open sesame are also visible on the open Science framework, right? So that's kind of the whole idea So I go to OSF.io, which is the website of the science framework. I log in Okay, I Don't want to save it Serially here you see my attentional capture capture thing project Okay, if I click on it, you see you see the OSF storage, right? Where the files are you see the experiment You see the data file that we have here now also if I click on this experiment So if I select it You will actually see All the old versions of this experiment, right? So if I click here on revisions, you will see that I initially uploaded the experiment Which is ID 1 then I fixed this typo in the instructions. I saved it and that was ID 2, right? So you can always retrieve these old old old files Old versions of your experiment that you have in the open science framework