reproducibilitea.org
Serving Reproducibili☕️ at 100+ locations: Blends include transparency, openess and robustness + spoonfuls of science. Find out more on our website and checkout our podcast.
https://reproducibilitea.org/
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And Alessandra Rampinini and Valentina Borghesani @vborghesani.bsky.social gave a thought-provoking presentation on challenges and experiences in sharing open data 📊🧠
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minimizing risk (e.g. crisis denial), maximizing risk (e.g. moral panic), minimizing intervention effectiveness (e.g. anti-medicine, anti-government) and maximizing effectiveness (e.g. drug lobbyism).”
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“Biases may be classified along two axes pertaining to the perception of the risk and the perception of the effectiveness of the intervention:
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"As part of the ReproducibiliTea initiative, our aim is to turn the journal club into a discussion forum open to teaching and research staff, administrative and service personnel, as well as students."
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A few words from the organisers:
"In today’s world, reproducibility becomes a fundamental pillar to strengthen science and make it more reliable. It’s the tool we have to increase rigor and quality."
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◾ Share good practices
◾ Foster collaboration between researchers and research topics
◾ Create a network of researchers interested in science reproducibility
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Their goals are:
◾ Be inclusive in terms of types of research discussed (i.e., not limited to psychological sciences)
◾ Discuss the issues posed by the lack of reproducibility in science
◾ Discuss how we can best promote efforts for advancing reproducibility in science
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"We believe that the only way to advance science is through openness, transparency, collaboration, and a strong commitment to reproducibility.”
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A few words from the organisers:
“We are an interdisciplinary team of researchers based in Copenhagen, Denmark passionate about mental health, the brain, the microbiome, and advancing reproducibility in sciences."
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We explore the boundaries of Open Research expectations with disciplinary context in mind, reshape understandings of ‘data’ outside the sciences, discuss challenges facing empirical and practice-based arts, and dive into some case studies across the field.
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🔵Zurich
Thursday, 22 May, from 16:30 to 17:15 CEST
Topic: "Catching the wave: Language models accelerate evidence management"
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🔵Open Science Trento
Thursday, 22 May, 14:00-15:00 CEST
Topic: "Bringing an Intersectional Lens to “Open” Science: An Analysis of Representation in the Reproducibility Project" doi.org/10.1177/0361...
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🔵Lund Biomedicine
Wednesday, 21 May, 17:00-18:30 CEST
Topic: TBD
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🔵Galway
Tuesday, 20 May, 11am-12pm (UTC)
Topic: "Easing into open science" doi.org/10.1525/coll...
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🔵Newcastle Uni
Thursday, 15 May, 12.00pm UK time
Topic: [Retracted] High replicability of newly discovered social-behavioural findings is achievable.
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🔵Tokyo
Thursday, 15 May, 10:45am (JST)
Topic: Research Ethics and Ethics Review
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🔵Cologne
Monday, 12 May, 16:00 CEST
Topic: Beyond the gold standard: Transparency in qualitative corpus analysis, Nathan Dykes (Department Digital Humanities and Social Studies, FAU Erlangen-Nürnberg)
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🔵Oslo
Monday, 12 May, 14:00 CEST
Topic: Student presentation! "How research on honesty turned our dishonest?"
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TODAY (Monday) 16-17:30 CEST #ReproducibiliTea in the HumaniTeas goes qualitative! ✨ Nathan Dykes (Department of #DigitalHumanities and Social Studies @FAU) will give a 20-min input talk entitled "Beyond the gold standard: Transparency in qualitative corpus […]
[Original post on fediscience.org]
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📚 The academic impact of Open Science: a scoping review
royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/...
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🔵Bioclues
Friday, 9 May, 5:30pm IST
Topic: Aja, P. M. et al. (2020). Hesperidin ameliorates hepatic dysfunction and dyslipidemia in male Wistar rats exposed to cadmium chloride. Toxicology reports, 7, 1331–1338. doi.org/10.1016/j.to...
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Slide is available for use and modification here: docs.google.com/presentation...