Inhaltspezifische Aktionen

Workshop: Offene Wissenschaftspraktiken für zukunftssichere Forschung

Referentin: Frau Anne Scheel (MSc), TU Eindhoven. Nur für angemeldete Teilnehmer(innen), wenden Sie sich bei Interesse bitte an Dr. C. Palmer (Carolin.Palmer@psychol.uni-giessen.de). Bitte bringen Sie Ihren eigenen Laptop mit.

  • Workshop: Offene Wissenschaftspraktiken für zukunftssichere Forschung
  • 2018-11-16T09:15:00+01:00
  • 2018-11-16T17:00:00+01:00
  • Referentin: Frau Anne Scheel (MSc), TU Eindhoven. Nur für angemeldete Teilnehmer(innen), wenden Sie sich bei Interesse bitte an Dr. C. Palmer (Carolin.Palmer@psychol.uni-giessen.de). Bitte bringen Sie Ihren eigenen Laptop mit.
Wann

16.11.2018 von 09:15 bis 17:00 (Europe/Berlin / UTC100)

Wo

Philosophikum I, Otto-Behaghel-Straße 10 E, Raum E 105

Termin zum Kalender hinzufügen

iCal

Der Schwerpunkt Personnel Psychology & Organizational Behavior (PPOB) und die GGS Sektion Organizational Behavior & Human Resource Management (OBHR) laden ein zum Workshop mit Frau Anne Scheel (MSc), TU Eindhoven.

 

Abstract:

The standards for psychological research are shifting. After several large-scale replication projects in the last years suggested that the results of more than 50% of published studies cannot be reproduced, psychologists have taken action: New practices and tools have been developed to maximise transparency and reproducibility of the research process, and they are quickly setting new norms.

 

Growing numbers of researchers share their data and study materials on public repositories, use reproducible analysis scripts, preregister their hypotheses, methods, and planned analyses before collecting data, and join forces with other labs to gather larger samples and increase statistical power. Perhaps more importantly for individual researchers, some of these practics are increasingly being required by journals and funding agencies.

 

The goal of this workshop is to show how we can future-proof our research with transparent, reproducible methods, leading to results with a low risk of fooling ourselves and others. We will first take a look at the causes of the replication crisis and then cover the basics of preregistration, data sharing, and reproducible analyses, including an introduction to the Open Science Framework (OSF). Participants will gain basic knowledge of open science practices and associated techniques and tools to make their own research more transparent and reproducible.

Please bring your own laptop.