LogoLogo
  • Start Here
    • Introduction to NCIL
      • Welcome
      • Mission Statement
      • Getting Started
      • Make this handbook better!
  • Policies & Expectations
    • Working in NCIL
      • Aaron's Philosophy on Supervision
      • General Policies
      • Roles & Expectations
        • Interpersonal and Working Relationships
        • Lab Director: Aaron Newman
        • Lab Manager: Cindy Hamon-Hill
        • Collaborators
        • Postdocs
        • Lab Research Assistants
        • Graduate Students
        • Undergraduate Students
      • Work Ethic
        • Vacations & Absences
      • Money
        • Employment
        • Undergraduate Research Awards
        • Graduate Student Funding
    • Communication
      • Basecamp
      • Lab Meetings
      • Communication Among Lab Members
      • Communicating with Research Participants
      • Website & Social Media
      • Meetings with Supervisor
      • Response Times
    • Lab Space and Resources
      • Hours of Operation
        • After-Hours Research
      • Safety
    • Intellectual Property
      • Data
      • Authorship
      • Publishing: Where and When
  • Data Management & Analysis
    • Data Science Tools
      • Jupyter
        • JupyterLab
      • Python
      • R
      • How to set up your computer for NCIL data science
    • Servers & Computers
      • Accounts
      • File Server (NCILNAS)
        • Accessing NCILNAS
      • Compute Server
        • Jupyter
        • VS Code - Setup
        • VS Code - Everyday Use
      • GitHub Copilot
    • Data Analysis
      • Behavioural Data
      • EEG Analysis
      • fMRI Analysis
        • Processing fMRI Data with SPM
        • fMRI Analysis in SPM
      • Power analysis with simR in R
    • Data Management
      • Github
      • Open Science
    • Learn Some Coding
  • How To Run Experiments
    • How to Get a Research Study Started
      • Research Ethics
      • Your Research Protocol
        • Components of a Research Protocol
      • Pilot Testing
    • Running a Participant
      • Communicating With Participants
      • Recruiting
      • Before Each Participant Arrives
      • When a Participant is in the Lab
    • Experiment Programming
      • Stimulus Presentation Programs
      • Brain-Computer Interface Programs (BCI)
      • EEG Trigger Codes
        • Lab Streaming Layer
        • Trigger Code Hardware Setup
        • Timing Test
    • Data Storage & Protection
    • Word Similarity Measures
  • Communicating Science
    • Submitting papers to Aaron for review
    • Lab Meeting Talks
    • Independent Study Course
    • Honours Thesis
      • Getting Started
    • Master's Thesis
    • 😓PhD Dissertation
    • PhD Comps
    • Conferences
    • Publications
    • Reviewing Journal Manuscripts
  • Old
    • VS Code on NCIL server
Powered by GitBook
On this page

Was this helpful?

  1. Policies & Expectations

Communication

PreviousGraduate Student FundingNextBasecamp

Last updated 2 years ago

Was this helpful?

For lab-related communication, is the preferred means of communication. Email can also be used for one-on-one communication, but BaseCamp is preferred when multiple lab members are involved. You can also use Basecamp "pings" to communicate with me or any other lab member one-on-one. Detailed onboarding instructions and help for Basecamp are available online, and are linked on the lab's Basecamp site.

Instant messaging (text, iMessage, etc.) to Aaron or the Lab Manager may be used for urgent communication such as running late for meetings, or issues such as a technical problem in the lab when a participant is present and time is of the essence. Instant messaging should not be used as a way of communicating less urgent or more elaborated thoughts or concerns.

Basecamp