Lightening talk presented by Esther Plomp on the 3rd of August 2020 for the Force11 Scholarly Communication Institute (FSCI2020). Reproducible research is necessary to ensure that scientific work can be trusted. By sharing data, analysis code and the computational environment used to generate the results, researchers can more effectively stand on the shoulders of their peers and colleagues and deliver high quality, trustworthy and verifiable outputs. This requires skills in data management, library sciences, software development, and continuous integration techniques: skills that are not widely taught or expected of academic researchers. Skills that are unreasonable, in fact, to expect in one individual team member. The Turing Way (https:/...
Reproducible research is necessary to ensure that scientific work can be trusted. Funders and publis...
Dates: 18 - 19 March 2021 Trainers: Malvika Sharan, Kirstie Whitaker, Sarah Gibson Workshop Format...
This talk was given at CogX 2020 on 9 June 2020 by Malvika Sharan. The Turing Way is a community-dr...
Poster presented by Esther Plomp for the Research Data Alliance 16th Plenary Meeting. Reproducible ...
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...
Slides from Kirstie's talk for the Data Science for Social Good fellows at the Alan Turing Institute...
Slides from Kirstie's talk at the University of York on 27 October 2020 Abstract: Reproducible rese...
As researchers, we make complex choices around project design and decision-making throughout the lif...
Abstract: Reproducible research is necessary to ensure that scientific work can be trusted. Funders ...
Reproducible research is necessary to ensure that scientific output can be trusted and built upon in...
This talk and workshop was delivered by Malvika Sharan at the Data Science Perspectives conference o...
Slides from Kirstie's talk at OpenMR Benelux on 21 January 2020 Abstract: Reproducible research is ...
Talk for the Rigor and Reproducibility Seminar Series hosted by the UF Movement Disorders and Neuror...
Presentation by Esther Plomp on the Turing Way during the FORCE2021 Conference on the 8th of Decembe...
Reproducible research is necessary to ensure that scientific work can be trusted. Funders and publis...
Dates: 18 - 19 March 2021 Trainers: Malvika Sharan, Kirstie Whitaker, Sarah Gibson Workshop Format...
This talk was given at CogX 2020 on 9 June 2020 by Malvika Sharan. The Turing Way is a community-dr...
Poster presented by Esther Plomp for the Research Data Alliance 16th Plenary Meeting. Reproducible ...
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...
Slides from Kirstie's talk for the Data Science for Social Good fellows at the Alan Turing Institute...
Slides from Kirstie's talk at the University of York on 27 October 2020 Abstract: Reproducible rese...
As researchers, we make complex choices around project design and decision-making throughout the lif...
Abstract: Reproducible research is necessary to ensure that scientific work can be trusted. Funders ...
Reproducible research is necessary to ensure that scientific output can be trusted and built upon in...
This talk and workshop was delivered by Malvika Sharan at the Data Science Perspectives conference o...
Slides from Kirstie's talk at OpenMR Benelux on 21 January 2020 Abstract: Reproducible research is ...
Talk for the Rigor and Reproducibility Seminar Series hosted by the UF Movement Disorders and Neuror...
Presentation by Esther Plomp on the Turing Way during the FORCE2021 Conference on the 8th of Decembe...
Reproducible research is necessary to ensure that scientific work can be trusted. Funders and publis...
Dates: 18 - 19 March 2021 Trainers: Malvika Sharan, Kirstie Whitaker, Sarah Gibson Workshop Format...
This talk was given at CogX 2020 on 9 June 2020 by Malvika Sharan. The Turing Way is a community-dr...