S3E13: From Crisis To FORRTsitive Change

Published: Sept. 1, 2023, 1 p.m.

b'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.\\n\\nShow notes:\\nThe 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\\nFORRT \\u2013 The Framework for Open and Reproducible Research Training: https://forrt.org\\nGetting involved with FORRT: https://forrt.org/about/get-involved/\\nCharlotte Pennington\\u2019s 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\\nUK Reproducibility Network: https://www.ukrn.org/\\nProject Teaching Integrity in Empirical Research (TIER): https://www.projecttier.org/\\nReproducibility Wiki: https://replication.uni-goettingen.de/\\nPaper Trail: https://thepapertrailjc.squarespace.com/\\nBrain Imaging Data Structure (BIDS): https://bids.neuroimaging.io/\\nCollaborative Replication Education Project (CREP): https://www.crep-psych.org/\\nThe Center for Open Science: https://www.cos.io/\\nNowhere Lab: http://nowherelab.com/\\nAdvancing Big-team Reproducible Science through Increased Representation (ABRIR): https://abrirpsy.org/\\nOpen Life Science: https://openlifesci.org/\\nTuring Way: https://the-turing-way.netlify.app/index.html\\n\\nFor more info go to ReproducibiliTea.org\\nFor comments, questions, tips and tricks use our feedback form: forms.gle/H6jgUzbbpyauLxUC8'