This is the presentation given at the workshop on 'Reproducible research in Archaeology' at Durham University on 15th October 2021. The workshop included an introduction to what reproducibility is, why it is important for archaeological research and how you can make your research workflow reproducible. It also included some case studies demonstrating reproducible workflows used in archaeological research. This workshop was organised by Software Sustainability Institute Fellows - Alison Clarke and Emma Karoune. The video of this presentation can be found here: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.561553
Reproducibility and transparency can be regarded (at least in experimental research) as a hallmark o...
Reproducibility and transparency can be regarded (at least in experimental research) as a hallmark o...
Reproducibility of experiments is a key foundation in the empirical sciences. Yet, both the perceive...
This is the presentation given at the workshop on 'Reproducible research in Archaeology' at Durham U...
This presentation was given on 1st July 2022 to the German Chapter of the CAA (Computer Applications...
This presentation was made at the Association of Emvironmental Archaeology Spring Conference on Open...
The use of computers and complex software is pervasive in archaeology, yet their role in the analyti...
Rigor and reproducibility are the core of modern science and set apart scientific inquiry from pseud...
Poster presented by Esther Plomp on 16 September at the BABAO 2022 conference. Reproducible researc...
This data is the results of two similar polls. The first set of results, "Reproducible Archaeology: ...
Reproducibility workshop slides for reflecting upon the researcher's own research workflow and creat...
"Developing a Replicability Workshop for Our Community of Academic Medical Center Users" is a collab...
Scientific reproducibility has captured the attention of academics, technologists, government agenci...
Reproducible research is necessary to ensure that scientific work can be trusted. In addition to mak...
This presentation was given on 25 July 2022 as part of the AIM-RSF knowledge share series at the Ala...
Reproducibility and transparency can be regarded (at least in experimental research) as a hallmark o...
Reproducibility and transparency can be regarded (at least in experimental research) as a hallmark o...
Reproducibility of experiments is a key foundation in the empirical sciences. Yet, both the perceive...
This is the presentation given at the workshop on 'Reproducible research in Archaeology' at Durham U...
This presentation was given on 1st July 2022 to the German Chapter of the CAA (Computer Applications...
This presentation was made at the Association of Emvironmental Archaeology Spring Conference on Open...
The use of computers and complex software is pervasive in archaeology, yet their role in the analyti...
Rigor and reproducibility are the core of modern science and set apart scientific inquiry from pseud...
Poster presented by Esther Plomp on 16 September at the BABAO 2022 conference. Reproducible researc...
This data is the results of two similar polls. The first set of results, "Reproducible Archaeology: ...
Reproducibility workshop slides for reflecting upon the researcher's own research workflow and creat...
"Developing a Replicability Workshop for Our Community of Academic Medical Center Users" is a collab...
Scientific reproducibility has captured the attention of academics, technologists, government agenci...
Reproducible research is necessary to ensure that scientific work can be trusted. In addition to mak...
This presentation was given on 25 July 2022 as part of the AIM-RSF knowledge share series at the Ala...
Reproducibility and transparency can be regarded (at least in experimental research) as a hallmark o...
Reproducibility and transparency can be regarded (at least in experimental research) as a hallmark o...
Reproducibility of experiments is a key foundation in the empirical sciences. Yet, both the perceive...