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  1. Mycroft 🇪🇺 (mycroft@mastodon.social)'s status on Wednesday, 20-Mar-2019 03:45:06 EDT Mycroft 🇪🇺 Mycroft 🇪🇺

    Publishing Open, Reproducible Research With Undergraduates https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00564

    In conversation Wednesday, 20-Mar-2019 03:45:06 EDT from mastodon.social permalink

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      Publishing Open, Reproducible Research With Undergraduates
      from Frontiers
      In response to growing concern in psychology and other sciences about low rates of replicability of published findings (Open Science Collaboration, 2015), there has been a movement toward conducting open and transparent research (see Chambers, 2017). This has led to changes in statistical reporting guidelines in journals (Appelbaum et al., 2018), new professional societies (e.g, Society for the Improvement of Psychological Science), frameworks for posting materials, data, code, and manuscripts (e.g., Open Science Framework, PsyArXiv), initiatives for sharing data and collaborating (e.g., Psych Science Accelerator, Study Swap), and educational resources for teaching through replication (e.g., Collaborative Replications and Education Project). This “credibility revolution” (Vazire, 2018) provides many opportunities for researchers. However, given the recency of the changes and the rapid pace of advancements (see Houtkoop et al., 2018), it may be overwhelming for faculty to know whether and how to begin incorporating open science practices into research with undergraduates.In this paper, we will not attempt to catalogue the entirety of the open science movement (see recommended resources below for more information), but will instead highlight why adopting open science practices may be particularly beneficial to conducting and publishing research with undergraduates. The first author is a faculty member at Carleton College (a small, undergraduate-only liberal arts college) and...
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