@Heinonmatti@BrianNosek@LorneJCampbell@psforscher Your best bet to avoid recursion (and also likely to encourage citation of the main data set by other researchers) is to make each publication/sub-study into its own project and link the data/materials into each of those.
This article aims to help researchers who are new to Open and Reproducible Research Practices get a handle on the topics involved and pick up some practices to incorporate in their own work. @OSFramework is used as the example but also includes principles for picking other tools.
📣New #CP in Essential Laboratory Techniques Alert! Do you need help getting started with open science and open data? Here are some short straightforward steps you can take: https://t.co/QwBsI5WjRO @OSFramework@ianatcos @EvoMellor #FreeToRead#OSF#openscience#opendata
I think the rigor and reproducibility efforts at Core Facilities solve real problems for researchers and could solve more, including some that researchers may not even consider. Explaining in the #ABRF2019 Rigor and Reproducibility session today. Slides @ https://t.co/uo8WEbDhRs.
A must read!
"The most productive response to #PlanS is to endorse the plan wholeheartedly, simply because it is right, & then work positively with funders & institutions to adjust to the new publishing reality. Many funders & researchers are doing exactly that." #openaccess
Excited to announce a new #rstats package for interacting with #OSF projects and files. Thanks to @aaronwolen @timothypyork5 @chartgerink @SimplyApprox for all the great work. https://t.co/nUwau8cJnY
@syeducation@OSFramework You can also check out the blog post from this summer on this: https://t.co/49onUMN1t3 It has some other examples and introduces the Example Lab Project: https://t.co/YwjRTqp2a9
@leecronin Have you looked @OSFramework for that data? Free DOIs for public files and you can plug in your @github repo (or @gitlab, @Bitbucket & a long list of general cloud storage options). You can, of course, also just put files on it directly. :)
@jrosenberg6432@github@OSFramework And for data that you are not making public prior to peer review, @OSFramework lets you create a special view-only link to send reviewers. (https://t.co/dVFEldtOFB) It can even anonymize contributor names for blinded review.
A fantastic list of journal policies from one of the leaders in the field. I think a lot of people are going to be interested in the "Protected Access" badge for data that cannot legally be shared on the open web. (Clinical, etc)
Thread on two research transparency initiatives we are launching today at the journal Cortex, where I serve as an editor. This is a big day for us, in preparation for a long time. /1
We replicated 21 social science experiments in Science or Nature. We succeeded with 13. Replication effect sizes were half of originals. All materials, data, code, & reports: https://t.co/Uq1R5SUHNo, preprint https://t.co/aDEctL7yUx, Nature Human Behavior https://t.co/5VSJ86avAC
Looking for more examples of organizing your lab with OSF? Check out the @JohnsHopkins lab template (https://t.co/LabaV0N59W) @reidbee built for @mselibrary. JHU has a great page on using OSF on campus, related library services, & benefits for researchers: https://t.co/yk15vzDW05