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lab.js
makes it easy to build, run and share studies that help understand the mind. It allows everyone to construct and construct experiments and surveys within the browser; the graphical builder makes it easy to get started without writing code.
The graphical builder interface is the easiest way to create studies, and the best place to start. The tutorial will walk you through building your first study, step by step.
If you prefer working directly with code, you can build studies using the JavaScript library. Everything you need is bundled in the starter kit, which is provided with every release. There is also a tutorial to help you get started.
If you get stuck or things don't make sense, please don't hesitate to reach out!
The easiest and quickest way to find help is to join our Support channel, where there's someone around to discuss things and help out most of the time. You're welcome to just join and say hello, we'd love to have you around!
If you'd like to keep in the loop regarding the development, please subscribe to our newsletter to receive very occasional updates and release notifications.
lab.js
! ✨☀️We would love to have you as part of this project! There are lots of different ways to contribute, and we recognize and very warmly welcome all kinds of involvement:
lab.js
more useful, we'd love to!Please also let us know if you'd like to join in but are unsure how, we'd be thrilled to help you find something that suits your interests and resources. The contributor's guide provides further information about our process; we have some pointers regarding how to build the project in the documentation.
(in alphabetical order)
Felix Henninger · Pascal J. Kieslich · Ulf K. Mertens · Yury Shevchenko · Vanessa Sochat
Michael Kriechbaumer · Felix Ludwig · Folco Panizza · Merle M. Schuckart
Dilek Akkus · Angelo Belardi · Ursa Bernardic · Erin Buchanan · Emily Elliott · Jeffrey Fisher · Kerstin Fröber · Robert Gaschler · Benjamin E. Hilbig · Lea Hildebrandt · Alex Irvine · Dave Kleinschmidt · Kristian Lange · Dano Morrison · Karthikeya Pammi · Shivangi Patel · Kwame Porter Robinson · Nick Robinson · Sophie Scharf · Nikoletta Symeonidou · Hendrik Singmann · Dawid Strzelczyk · Kevin Tiede · Anne Voormann · Andreas Voss · Andrew White · Malte Zimdahl
The students and teaching assistants in the graduate course Research Methods in Cognitive Psychology at the University of Koblenz-Landau inspire the continued development of this software, have provided countless valuable insights, and sparked many of the ideas embodied in this project through questions and discussions.
We are wholeheartedly grateful to our generous sponsors for making possible the development of this tool:
FernUniversität in Hagen · GESS, University of Mannheim · Meta Reality Labs · Mozilla Science Lab · Rational Altruists Mannheim · Stifterverband · University of Koblenz-Landau · Volkswagen Foundation · Wikimedia Germany