Published: Feb. 17, 2019, 8 p.m.
In this episde, we chat with Lisa DeBruine (University of Glasgow) about her experience with large-scale collaborative science and how her psychology department made the switch from SPSS to R.
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Discussion points and links galore:
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\n- Deborah Apthorp's tweet on having to teach SPSS, "because that's what students know"
\n- People who are involved with teaching R for psychology at the University of Glasgow: @Eavanmac @dalejbarr @McAleerP @clelandwoods @PatersonHelena @emilynordmann
\n- Why the #psyTeachR started teaching R for reproducible science
\n- Data wrangling vs. statistical analysis
\n- The psyTeachR website
\n- Danielle Navarro, and her R text book that you should read
\n- Lisa's "faux" package for data simulation
\n- Sometimes you can't share data, simulations are a good way around this problem
\n- "synthpop" is the name of the package that Dan mentioned that can simulate census data
\n- Power analysis can be hard once you go beyond the more conventional statistical tests (e.g., t-tests, ANOVAs etc...)
\n- Lisa's OSF page
\n- Dirty code is always better than no code (but the cleaner the better)
\n- Live coding is terrifying but a useful teaching tool. Here's Dan live coding how to build a website in R, typos and all
\n- Using a Slack group for help
\n- The psychological science accelerator
\n- Chris Chartier (Psych Science Accelerator Director) on Twitter
\n- A few of the other (hundreds) of folks involved with the Psych Science Accelerator Director: @PsySciAcc: @CRChartier @Ben_C_J @JkayFlake @hmoshontz
\n- Lisa's Registered Report project on face rating
\n- The challenges associated with collaborating with 100+ labs
\n- Authorship order
\n- Author contributions: CRediT taxonomy
\n- The DARPA-funding project on using AI to determine reproducibility
\n- Interacting Minds workshop in Denmark in March on open science and reproducibility
\n- Lisa shares what Glasgow is like
\n- Lisa has changed her mind about the importance of research metrics (h-index, impact factors etc...)
\n- Lisa thinks you should read this paper on equivalence testing, which includes two former guests, Daniel Lakens, Anne Scheel, and friend of the show Peder Isager.
\n- Here's the latest episode from Psych Soc O'Clock
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Other links
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Music credits: [Lee Rosevere](freemusicarchive.org/music/Lee_Rosevere/)
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Episode citation and permanent link
\nQuintana, D.S., Heathers, J.A.J. (Hosts). (2019, February 18) "Large-scale collaborative science (with Lisa DeBruine)", Everything Hertz [Audio podcast], doi: 10.17605/OSF.IO/JDT6F
Special Guest: Lisa DeBruine.
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