Hi David,
Welcome along…
Well, below is a quick code snippet to show you how a tiny bit of Python can go a long way…
You don’t need to break your trials into blocks. The easiest arrangement to have here is a single loop surrounding your trial routine so that it will run all 96 trials in random order. What you can then have is a pause routine that interrupts that single loop, but only on trials 32 and 64.
i.e. insert a new routine. Just put a text stimulus on it saying something like “Take a break. Then press any key to continue.” Set it to last indefinitely (i.e. don’t give it a duration). Insert a keyboard component too, also set to last indefinitely and to force the end of the routine. The trick is to use a tiny bit of code that will only let this routine appear on the two specified trials. So insert a code component. In its Begin routine
tab, put something like the code below. I’m assuming your loop is called trials
. If it is called something else, use that name instead. Also, remember that Python is zero-based, so we will insert the pause after trials 31 and 63:
# Conditionally execute this pause routine:
if not trials.thisN in [31, 63]: # on most trials:
continueRoutine = False # don't even start this routine