In this episode, Will is joined by Lianne Wolsink, PhD candidate at Ruhr University Bochum and current steering committee member of ReproducibiliTea. Will and Lianne discuss the ReproducibiliTea reading lists, created to help journal clubs do deep dives on metascience topics. Lianne created reading lists on replication and science communication; Will created an introductory reading list on Open Science, preregistration, and theory in psychology.
Reading lists: https://rpt-rl.netlify.app
Books mentioned:
Science Fictions by Stuart J Ritchie
Against Method by Paul Feyerabend
Nobody's Fool by Daniel Simons and Christopher Chabris
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In this episode, Will is joined by Lianne Wolsink, PhD candidate at Ruhr University Bochum and current steering committee member of ReproducibiliTea. Will and Lianne discuss the ReproducibiliTea reading lists, created to help journal clubs do deep dives on metascience topics. Lianne created reading lists on replication and science communication; Will created an introductory reading list on Open Science, preregistration, and theory in psychology.
Reading lists: https://rpt-rl.netlify.app
Books mentioned:
Science Fictions by Stuart J Ritchie
Against Method by Paul Feyerabend
Nobody's Fool by Daniel Simons and Christopher Chabris
Today, Will sits down with Max Korbmacher, Thomas Rhys Evans, and Flavio Azevedo, some of the authors of the paper "The replication crisis has led to positive structural, procedural, and community changes" to talk about the paper, FORRT, and Open Science communities.
Show notes:
The paper we discuss for this episode: Korbmacher, M., Azevedo, F., Pennington, C. R., Hartmann, H., Pownall, M., Schmidt, K., ... & Evans, T. (2023). The replication crisis has led to positive structural, procedural, and community changes. Nature Communications Psychology, 1(1), 3. https://www.nature.com/articles/s44271-023-00003-2
FORRT – The Framework for Open and Reproducible Research Training: https://forrt.org
Getting involved with FORRT: https://forrt.org/about/get-involved/
Charlotte Pennington’s new book: A Student's Guide to Open Science: Using the Replication Crisis to Reform Psychology https://www.mheducation.co.uk/a-student-s-guide-to-open-science-using-the-replication-crisis-to-reform-psychology-9780335251162-emea-group
UK Reproducibility Network: https://www.ukrn.org/
Project Teaching Integrity in Empirical Research (TIER): https://www.projecttier.org/
Reproducibility Wiki: https://replication.uni-goettingen.de/
Paper Trail: https://thepapertrailjc.squarespace.com/
Brain Imaging Data Structure (BIDS): https://bids.neuroimaging.io/
Collaborative Replication Education Project (CREP): https://www.crep-psych.org/
The Center for Open Science: https://www.cos.io/
Nowhere Lab: http://nowherelab.com/
Advancing Big-team Reproducible Science through Increased Representation (ABRIR): https://abrirpsy.org/
Open Life Science: https://openlifesci.org/
Turing Way: https://the-turing-way.netlify.app/index.html
For more info go to ReproducibiliTea.org
For comments, questions, tips and tricks use our feedback form: forms.gle/H6jgUzbbpyauLxUC8
ReproducibiliTea Podcast
In this episode, Will is joined by Lianne Wolsink, PhD candidate at Ruhr University Bochum and current steering committee member of ReproducibiliTea. Will and Lianne discuss the ReproducibiliTea reading lists, created to help journal clubs do deep dives on metascience topics. Lianne created reading lists on replication and science communication; Will created an introductory reading list on Open Science, preregistration, and theory in psychology.
Reading lists: https://rpt-rl.netlify.app
Books mentioned:
Science Fictions by Stuart J Ritchie
Against Method by Paul Feyerabend
Nobody's Fool by Daniel Simons and Christopher Chabris