Abstract: Reproducible research is necessary to ensure that scientific work can be trusted. Funders and publishers are beginning to require that publications include access to the underlying data and the analysis code. The goal is to ensure that all results can be independently verified and built upon in future work. This is sometimes easier said than done! Sharing these research outputs means understanding data management, library sciences, software development, and continuous integration techniques: skills that are not widely taught or expected of academic researchers. The Turing Way is a handbook to support students, their supervisors, funders and journal editors in ensuring that reproducible research is "too easy not to do". It includes...
Reproducible research is necessary to ensure that scientific work can be trusted. By sharing data, a...
Reproducible research is necessary to ensure that scientific output can be trusted and built upon in...
Reproducible research is necessary to ensure that scientific work can be trusted. Funders and publis...
Description Kirstie Whitaker's keynote talk at PyData London on The Turing Way: a lightly opinionat...
Kirstie's slides for her talk at the MQ Mental Health Data Science Meeting in Edinburgh on 9 Septemb...
Slides for Kirstie's talk at the NESTA Hack STIR event on 22 October 2019 Website: https://www.nest...
Talk for the Rigor and Reproducibility Seminar Series hosted by the UF Movement Disorders and Neuror...
Slides from Kirstie's talk at the University of York on 27 October 2020 Abstract: Reproducible rese...
Slides from Kirstie's talk at OpenMR Benelux on 21 January 2020 Abstract: Reproducible research is ...
Slides from Kirstie's talk for the Data Science for Social Good fellows at the Alan Turing Institute...
Slides from Kirstie's talk at Love Your Code event on 14 February 2020 Abstract: Reproducible resea...
Slides from Kirstie's talk at the University of Exeter Data Science Week on 27 May 2020 Abstract: R...
Slides from Kirstie's keynote at PyData Cambridge on 16 November 2019 Abstract: Reproducible resear...
Kirstie's lightning talk at the Open Science Community Nijmegen launch event on 9 October 2019. Abs...
Presentation on The Turing Way for the COMPUTE research school at Lund University on 2021-03-22. We...
Reproducible research is necessary to ensure that scientific work can be trusted. By sharing data, a...
Reproducible research is necessary to ensure that scientific output can be trusted and built upon in...
Reproducible research is necessary to ensure that scientific work can be trusted. Funders and publis...
Description Kirstie Whitaker's keynote talk at PyData London on The Turing Way: a lightly opinionat...
Kirstie's slides for her talk at the MQ Mental Health Data Science Meeting in Edinburgh on 9 Septemb...
Slides for Kirstie's talk at the NESTA Hack STIR event on 22 October 2019 Website: https://www.nest...
Talk for the Rigor and Reproducibility Seminar Series hosted by the UF Movement Disorders and Neuror...
Slides from Kirstie's talk at the University of York on 27 October 2020 Abstract: Reproducible rese...
Slides from Kirstie's talk at OpenMR Benelux on 21 January 2020 Abstract: Reproducible research is ...
Slides from Kirstie's talk for the Data Science for Social Good fellows at the Alan Turing Institute...
Slides from Kirstie's talk at Love Your Code event on 14 February 2020 Abstract: Reproducible resea...
Slides from Kirstie's talk at the University of Exeter Data Science Week on 27 May 2020 Abstract: R...
Slides from Kirstie's keynote at PyData Cambridge on 16 November 2019 Abstract: Reproducible resear...
Kirstie's lightning talk at the Open Science Community Nijmegen launch event on 9 October 2019. Abs...
Presentation on The Turing Way for the COMPUTE research school at Lund University on 2021-03-22. We...
Reproducible research is necessary to ensure that scientific work can be trusted. By sharing data, a...
Reproducible research is necessary to ensure that scientific output can be trusted and built upon in...
Reproducible research is necessary to ensure that scientific work can be trusted. Funders and publis...