Resources
Most of the readings for the course will come from the published scientific literature.
Required Text
We will make extensive use of the following book:
Ritchie, S. (2021). Science Fictions: Exposing Fraud, Bias, Negligence, and Hype in Science. Penguin Random House.
This book is required for the course.
Other readings
Scanned copies of other readings are available as PDFs on Canvas.
Web-based resources
- Glossary of open science terms by the Framework for Open and Reproducible Research Training (FORT). (Parsons et al. 2022).
- (Nordmann et al., n.d.) site and its set of web-books on data analysis, visualization, and reproducible research.
- (The Turing Way, n.d.), a web book about open research practices
- (Ball et al. 2015), a collection of course syllabi for open and reproducible methods.
References
Ball, Richard, Sara Bowman, Garret Christensen, Michael C Frank, David Funder, Konrad Hinsen, Nicole Janz, Norm Medeiros, Edward Miguel, and Brian A Nosek. 2015. “Course Syllabi for Open and Reproducible Methods.” https://osf.io/vkhbt/; OSF. https://osf.io/vkhbt/.
Nordmann, Emily, Heather Cleland-Woods, Phil McAleer, Carolina Kuepper-Tetzel, Helena Paterson, Dale Barr, Lisa DeBruine, et al. n.d. “PsyTeachR.” https://psyteachr.github.io/. https://psyteachr.github.io/.
Parsons, Sam, Flávio Azevedo, Mahmoud M Elsherif, Samuel Guay, Owen N Shahim, Gisela H Govaart, Emma Norris, et al. 2022. “A Community-Sourced Glossary of Open Scholarship Terms.” Nature Human Behaviour 6 (3): 312–18. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41562-021-01269-4.
The Turing Way. n.d. “Open Research.” https://the-turing-way.netlify.app/reproducible-research/open.html. https://the-turing-way.netlify.app/reproducible-research/open.html.