email
Phone: 902–494–8848
Laboratory: LSC 2345 C (main hallway)
Office: LSC 3326
Office hours:
For undergraduate classes, i.e., Research Methods (2000), Learning (2140), Animal Behaviour (2160), Advanced Animal Behaviour (3162), please see the syllabus.
For Honours and Graduate seminars, i.e., Topics in Animal Learning (4140/6240), Topics in Behavioural Biology (4160/6160), and the Animal Behaviour Certificate (ANBH): By appointment.
For advising, i.e., for general questions for Neuroscience and/or Experimental Psychology students, Transfer Credits, Letters of Permissions, Letters of Agreement, please book an appointment here. For Honours advising, please book with an Honours advisor.
Postal address:
Dr. Simon Gadbois
(Wildlife Ethology and Canine Olfaction Lab)
Department of Psychology & Neuroscience
Life Sciences Centre
6287 Alumni Crescent, room 3263
P.O. BOX 15000
Dalhousie University
Halifax, Nova Scotia
B3H 4R2, Canada
Lab staff, volunteers, and students (for independent research projects, Honours, etc): We use mostly « Dal Canines » on Microsoft Teams. Internally we also use WhatsApp to contact each other for field work coordination. Instagram (DalCanines & Dal_Canines) is used for less formal communications, often with the humans that volunteered their dogs.
Other social media: Gadbois and the lab can be found on Facebook, Instagram, Threads, BlueSky, LinkedIn.
This page is a static page for an entirely static site. It follows on purpose a minimalistic approach, using Markdown with Marked 2 for the output in html. It started as an experiment (proof-of-concept) for a one-source publishing approach to creating class material (i.e., from one plain text document, produce a web page, a slide deck (using Deckset), and a PDF document). All the Markdown files (plain text files) are created and edited with text editors (e.g., iA Writer, Typora). Functionality, speed, small bandwidth and footprint are the goal. The html produced by markdown (any of its flavour) is clean and uncluttered. Gadbois.org was acquired in March of 2001 for a “Gadbois family” genealogy project from the US (Vermont) that never took-off.