Results

T-Test

One Sample T-Test
95% Confidence Interval
  t df p Lower Upper
EitherVScontrol 0.385 39 0.702 -0.469 0.689
Note.  Student's T-Test.

Bayesian T-Test

Bayesian One Sample T-Test
  BF₀₊ error %
EitherVScontrol 4.241 ~ 9.476e -8
Note.  All tests, hypothesis is population mean is greater than 0

Descriptives

Descriptives
  N Mean SD SE
EitherVScontrol 40 0.110 1.811 0.286

Descriptives Plot

EitherVScontrol

Inferential Plots

EitherVScontrol

Prior and Posterior
Bayes Factor Robustness Check

A wider prior means that larger effect sizes are probable. The figure suggests that a wider width does not change the results much. 

Sequential Analysis

This shows how the evidence changes as subjects are added. There are slight variations as subjects are added, but the result does not change for the last 10 subjects. However, if you were not convinced by these results, it is completely fine to add more subjects until you perceive the results to be robust. Note that such a sequential analysis is problematic in NHST (Neyman-Pearson) because an important prerequisite is that the total number of subjects (sampling plan) is predetermined; otherwise, the alpha is not valid. Further, the order in which subjects are entered may change how the evidence develops. Nonetheless, the final results will be identical irrespective of the order.