Scarica Concealed Information Test - v1.0.1

Scarica Concealed Information Test - v1.0.1
Package Name io.gaspar.citapp
Category ,
Latest Version 1.0.1
Get it On Google Play
Update September 27, 2020 (4 years ago)

Hai sentito parlare di Concealed Information Test - v1.0.1, o Turbo VPN v3.7.4 APK + MOD (Real VIP/Premium) MOD APK, Togel Generator Nomor Jitu 2021, HA Tunnel Pro Free Custom Unlimited VPN, KUTO VPN - A free, fast, secure VPN, SWAP - No ROOT, Google Play services, uno dei più interessanti App della categoria Strumenti.

E ovviamente lo sai, non tutti i giochi o le applicazioni sono compatibili con tutti i telefoni. Il gioco o l'applicazione a volte non è disponibile sul tuo dispositivo, dipende dalla versione del sistema. Sistema operativo Android, risoluzione dello schermo o paesi a cui Google Play consente l'accesso. Ecco perché APKPanda fornisce file APK Android da scaricare e non si attiene a queste restrizioni.>
Concealed Information Test - v1.0.1 l'ultima versione è 1.0.1, data di rilascio 2020-09-26 e dimensione 5.0 MB.Sviluppato da Gaspar Lukacs, Concealed Information Test - v1.0.1 richiede almeno la versione Android Android 4.4+. Pertanto è necessario aggiornare il telefono se necessario.

Piuttosto caricato, circa 1000 download. Puoi aggiornare le app che sono state scaricate o installate singolarmente sul tuo dispositivo Android, se lo desideri. L'aggiornamento delle tue app ti dà il permesso di accedere alle funzioni più recenti e migliora la sicurezza e la stabilità delle applicazioni.

Concealed Information Test - v1.0.1

This app is the first implementation of the Response Time Concealed Information Test (RT-CIT) on smartphones available for general use.

The CIT is a lie detection (or more precisely: memory detection or recognition detection) method that aims to reveal whether or not a certain information detail is known to the tested person. For example, the CIT could include the actual murder weapon (the probe; e.g. "rifle") from a recent murder, and several other weapons (irrelevants; e.g. "knife," and "rope") as the items that would be sequentially presented to a suspect in a random order. When each item has to be responded to with a button press, the recognition of the probe (in this case, "rifle") by a guilty person (who is aware of the relevance of that item) will typically result in a slower response to that item than to the irrelevant items. Thereby, based on the probe-irrelevant RT differences, a guilty person can be distinguished from innocent ones. It is important that the method does not prove "guilt" per se, but only the recognition of the given probe (as different from the irrelevants), which may or may not be indicative of guilt in the given scenario.

The RT-CIT has been proven valid in dozens of independent scientific studies (see e.g. Suchotzki et al., 2017), and the present app has been separately validated in a recent study (Lukács et al., 2020). However, as of yet there has been no field testing to assess the precise accuracy of this method in real life cases. Correspondingly, this app is only for testing and research purposes, and no serious judgments should be based on its results.

The app is completely free (no fees, no restrictions, no ads, and open-source). It was created mainly to help perform studies using the RT-CIT, as well as to promote this method by making it easily available to the general public, with no technical knowledge required.

After the completion of each test, along with detailed summary of the main results, all raw data (response choices and response times, etc.) is immediately stored on the device as a text file (and available to be forwarded, shared, etc.; or to be deleted at any time).

Further information and detailed technical documentation (along with source code) is available via https://github.com/gasparl/citapp_mobile.

References:
Lukács, G., Kleinberg, B., Kunzi, M., & Ansorge, U. (2020). Response Time Concealed Information Test on Smartphones. Collabra: Psychology, 6(1), 4. http://doi.org/10.1525/collabra.255
Suchotzki, K., Verschuere, B., Van Bockstaele, B., Ben-Shakhar, G., & Crombez, G. (2017). Lying takes time: A meta-analysis on reaction time measures of deception. Psychological Bulletin, 143(4), 428–453. https://doi.org/10.1037/bul0000087

Repeated save bug fix.

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