Open source project to tackle the problem of long development cycles required to produce software to conduct multi-participant and real-time human experiments online.
This is a REAL beta - this means that you will be using a version of Empirica that is not yet ready for public release and still lacks proper documentation and examples. You should be prepared to find things which don't work perfectly, so please give us feedback on how to make them better. You can provide us with feedback by sending an email to [email protected] or by creating an issue on GitHub. The more feedback you give us, the better!
The easy way to create an Empirica app.
You’ll need to have Node.js >= 8 on your local development machine. See Usage bellow if you don't have it installed.
npx create-empirica-app my-experiment
cd my-experiment
meteor
Then open http://localhost:3000/ to see your experiment.
create-empirica-app
requires Node.js >= 8. If you don't already have Node.js
8+ setup, we recommend you use the official installer:
https://nodejs.org/en/download/.
Then you can simply run the following command, where my-experiment
is the name
of the experiment you wish to create:
npx create-empirica-app my-experiment
It will create a directory called my-experiment
inside the current folder.
Inside that directory, it will generate the initial project structure and
install the transitive dependencies:
my-experiment
├── .meteor
├── README.md
├── node_modules
├── package.json
├── package-lock.json
├── .gitignore
├── public
├── client
│ ├── main.html
│ ├── main.js
│ ├── main.css
│ ├── game
│ │ └── ...
│ ├── intro
│ │ └── ...
│ └── exit
│ └── ...
└── server
├── main.js
├── callbacks.js
└── bots.js
No configuration or complicated folder structures, just the files you need to build your app. Once the installation is done, you can open your project folder:
cd my-experiment
Inside the newly created project, you can run the standard meteor
command to
start you app locally:
meteor
meteor
runs the app in development mode.
Open
http://localhost:3000 to view it in the browser.
The page will automatically reload if you make changes to the code.
You will
see the build errors in the console.
As new versions of Empirica become available, you might want to update the version you are using in your app. To do so, simply run:
meteor update empirica:core
To run an Empirica app against a development version of empirica:core
, you
will need to use the
METEOR_PACKAGE_DIRS
environment variable.
From an Empirica app, simply point to your copy of empirica:core
as so (in
this example, your meteor-empirica-core
dir would be a child of
/usr/local/my_packages/
, .i.e /usr/local/my_packages/meteor-empirica-core
):
METEOR_PACKAGE_DIRS="/usr/local/my_packages/" meteor
For more information on how to contribute please take a look at our contribution guide.
If you use Empirica in a scientific publication, we would appreciate citing the following:
Nicolas Paton, & Abdullah Almaatouq. (2018, November 15). Empirica: Open-Source, Real-Time, Synchronous, Virtual Lab Framework (Version v0.0.5). Zenodo. http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1488413
@misc{nicolas_paton_2018_1488413,
author = {Nicolas Paton and
Abdullah Almaatouq},
title = {Empirica: Open-Source, Real-Time, Synchronous,
Virtual Lab Framework},
month = nov,
year = 2018,
doi = {10.5281/zenodo.1488413},
url = {https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1488413}
}