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You may notice a “Switched to different application” violation appearing in a proctoring report even though the candidate did not actually switch applications. This is a known edge case that has negligible impact on real test scores.

Why False Positives Happen

AutoProctor detects application switches by monitoring browser focus events and visibility state changes. False positives can occur due to:
  • Operating system notifications — incoming notifications (such as calendar reminders or system updates) can momentarily shift focus away from the browser
  • Browser-level popups — permission dialogs, download prompts, or autofill suggestions can trigger a focus change event
  • Peripheral device activity — connecting or disconnecting USB devices, headphones, or external monitors can briefly interrupt browser focus
  • Multi-monitor setups — moving the cursor near screen edges on multi-monitor configurations may trigger false detections on some operating systems
These events register as an “app switch” even though the candidate never intentionally left the test.

Why This Does Not Affect Real Test Scores

An actual test lasts at least several minutes. Even if AutoProctor falsely detects a single “Switched to different application” event, its impact on the Trust Score is negligible because the score weighs violations relative to the total test duration. On demo tests, which last only a few seconds, a single false detection can noticeably lower the Trust Score. This is simply because the test is too short for the score to absorb it.
If you see this violation on a demo test, do not worry about it. On actual tests lasting several minutes or longer, a single false detection has no meaningful impact on the Trust Score.

How to Interpret This Violation

ScenarioLikely Explanation
One or two “app switch” events alongside a high Trust ScoreVery likely a false positive caused by notifications, popups, or peripheral activity
Many “app switch” events or events alongside other violationsWarrants further review of the full report and evidence photos