New tools and practices to promote open and efficient science
Currently, innovative ideas are abundant in science, yet we are still short of practical tools to implement these ideas in everyday practice. A tool is practical if it can achieve its aim without requiring too much or no extra effort from the user. The consideration of user experience, efficiency, and user-friendliness is still weak in the development of scientific tools. In this workshop, three early career researchers will present their innovations that aim to improve scientific practice in an efficient way and we invite the audience to a discussion to formalise our thinking about the development of new tools.
Programme (times GMT+1 / BST)
10:00 – Welcome
10:10 – Marton Kovacs (ELTE, Hungary) – Documenting contributorship: Tenzing
10:30 – Angelika Stefan (University of Amsterdam) – An R package for Bayesian sample size specification
10:50 – Alexandra Sarafoglou (University of Amsterdam), Balazs Aczel (ELTE, Hungary) – Transparency Checklist
11:10 – Panel discussion and Q&A with the speakers – Chair: Marcus Munafò
11:40 – End