Free interval based on multiple subjects

Procedure

When working with multiple subjects per arena, you can define free intervals in two ways:

Under Nesting, choose Free interval to define a Free interval for each subject separately. The interval is based on the behavior of that subject, not the other(s).

As a result, for each subject a specific time period is selected.

Under Nesting over Subjects, choose Free interval to define an interval based on a combination of conditions based on two or more subjects. The resulting interval is applied to all subjects.

As a result, the same time period is selected for all subjects.

Example

Your arena contains two subjects. A free interval is defined that goes from Total Distance moved >= 100 to Total Distance moved >=200.

If you choose Free interval from Nesting, the start/stop criteria are applied per subject, resulting in most cases in different time periods being analyzed for each subject.

Below: Time plot of a dependent variable (in this example, Distance moved) after defining the Free interval from Nesting. Different time periods are analyzed for Subject 1 (from A1 to B1) and Subject 2 (from A2 to B2).

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If you choose Free Interval from Nesting over Subjects, the start/stop criteria are applied per subject, but the interval are defined after combining the criteria based on what is selected in the Actors tab.

Below: Time plots of a dependent variable (in this example distance moved) after defining a Free interval from Nesting over Subjects (compare with the previous figure). Depending on what is selected in the Actors tab:

With All selected subjects (top). The time period shared between subjects (from A1 to B2).

With Any selected subject (middle). The time period defined by at least one subject (from A2 to B1).

With one subject selected (bottom). The time period defined by the criterion met by that subject (in this example, subject 2; therefore, from A2 to B2).

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