A heated debate surrounds the significance of reproducibility as an indicator for research quality and reliability, with many commentators linking a "crisis of reproducibility" to the rise of fraudulent, careless and unreliable practices of knowledge production. Through the analysis of discourse and practices across research fields, I point out that reproducibility is not only interpreted in different ways, but also serves a variety of epistemic functions depending on the research at hand. Given such variation, I argue that the uncritical pursuit of reproducibility as an overarching epistemic value is misleading and potentially damaging to scientific advancement. Requirements for reproducibility, however they are interpreted, are one of man...
The outsized importance of publications has meant too many research students focus on featuring pape...
The history of QBism is interestingly complex (see Stacey 2019) leading to misunderstandings and mis...
We examine the role of trustworthiness and trust in statistical inference, arguing that it is the ex...
A heated debate surrounds the significance of reproducibility as an indicator for research quality a...
The use of art as research has greatly matured, and, despite the current preoccupation with measurem...
Van Witteloostuijn’s (2016) commentary “What happened to Popperian Falsification?” is an excellent s...
Traditional scholarship views quantitative people-categorization in the workplace—i.e. the use of bi...
In this paper, I investigate the nature of empirical findings that provide evidence for the characte...
Pre-printThe PhD is the highest formal qualification and signifies a scholar’s rite of passage as a ...
Dieter Henrich ‘s “Notion of a Deduction” (1989), opened up approaches to both Deductions in terms o...
In this chapter we examine the relationship between biological information, the key biological conce...
Reputations are an essential feature of human sociality and the evolution of cooperation and group l...
This thesis interrogates incapacitation as it developed in the 1970s and 1980s in the United States ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Ubiquity Press via the D...
This full paper offers a critical reflection of a design practice in which a speculative approach to...
The outsized importance of publications has meant too many research students focus on featuring pape...
The history of QBism is interestingly complex (see Stacey 2019) leading to misunderstandings and mis...
We examine the role of trustworthiness and trust in statistical inference, arguing that it is the ex...
A heated debate surrounds the significance of reproducibility as an indicator for research quality a...
The use of art as research has greatly matured, and, despite the current preoccupation with measurem...
Van Witteloostuijn’s (2016) commentary “What happened to Popperian Falsification?” is an excellent s...
Traditional scholarship views quantitative people-categorization in the workplace—i.e. the use of bi...
In this paper, I investigate the nature of empirical findings that provide evidence for the characte...
Pre-printThe PhD is the highest formal qualification and signifies a scholar’s rite of passage as a ...
Dieter Henrich ‘s “Notion of a Deduction” (1989), opened up approaches to both Deductions in terms o...
In this chapter we examine the relationship between biological information, the key biological conce...
Reputations are an essential feature of human sociality and the evolution of cooperation and group l...
This thesis interrogates incapacitation as it developed in the 1970s and 1980s in the United States ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Ubiquity Press via the D...
This full paper offers a critical reflection of a design practice in which a speculative approach to...
The outsized importance of publications has meant too many research students focus on featuring pape...
The history of QBism is interestingly complex (see Stacey 2019) leading to misunderstandings and mis...
We examine the role of trustworthiness and trust in statistical inference, arguing that it is the ex...