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Open Research

 

Please join us for a workshop, hosted by the Office of Scholarly Communication in collaboration with the Center for Open Science, to learn easy, practical steps to increase the openness and reproducibility of your work.

 

This hands-on workshop is aimed at graduate students and postdocs, across disciplines, who are engaged in quantitative research. Using example studies, attendees will actively participate in creating a reproducible project from start to finish. The workshop does not require any specialized knowledge of programming. Participants will gain a foundation for incorporating reproducible, transparent practices into their current workflows.

Topics covered

  • Project documentation
  • Version control
  • Pre-Analysis plans
  • Open source tools like the Center for Open Science’s Open Science Framework to easily implement these concepts in a scientific workflow.

Speaker: Courtney Soderberg

Courtney is the Statistical and Methodological Consultant at the Center for Open Science and heads up their training programs for reproducible research methods. She has a Ph.D. in Experimental Social Psychology with a minor in Quantitative Psychology from UC Davis.

Notes

  • Booking here requires a Raven login. If you would like to attend and are not a member of the University of Cambridge, please contact training@osc.cam.ac.uk and we will book a place on your behalf.
  • Please bring your own internet-enabled device to the session in order to fully participate. Power sockets will be available.

 

Event date: 
Monday, 10 April, 2017 - 01:00
Who is this event for?: 
Event location: 
Glass Room, Lower Ground Floor, Betty and Gordon Moore Library, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge
Event time: 
13:00 - 16:00
Audience: 
15

Open Research Newsletter sign-up

Please contact us at info@osc.cam.ac.uk to be added to the mailing list to receive our quarterly e-Newsletter.

The Office of Scholarly Communication sends this Newsletter to its subscribers in order to disseminate information relevant to open access, research data management, scholarly communication and open research topics. For details on how the personal information you enter here is used, please see our privacy policy