Messages de Rogue Scholar

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Do you have code that accompanies a research project or manuscript? How do you review and archive that code before you submit a paper? Our next Community Call will present different perspectives on this hot topic, with plenty of time for Q&A.What’s the culture of the group around feedback and code collaboration?What are the use cases?What are some practices that can adopted?

Publié in rOpenSci - open tools for open science
Auteur Rafael Pilliard Hellwig

Background Surveys are ubiquitous in the social sciences, and the best of them are meticulously planned out. Statisticians often decide on a sample size based on a theoretical design, and then proceed to inflate this number to account for “sample losses”. This ensures that the desired sample size is achieved, even in the presence of non-response.

Publié in rOpenSci - open tools for open science
Auteur Max Joseph

Hundreds of thousands of people in east Africa have been displaced and hundreds have died as a result of torrential rains which ended a drought but saturated soils and engorged rivers, resulting in extreme flooding in 2018.This post will explore these events using the R package smapr, which provides access to global satellite-derived soil moisture data collected by the NASA Soil Moisture Active-Passive (SMAP) mission and abstracts away some of

Publié in rOpenSci - open tools for open science

You can find members of the rOpenSci team at various meetings and workshops around the world. Come say ‘hi’, learn about how our software packages can enable your research, or about our process for open peer software review and onboarding, how you can get connected with the community or tell us how we can help you do open and reproducible research.Where’s rOpenSci?

Auteur Dom Bennett

In this technote I will outline what phylotaR was developed for, how to install it and how to run it with some simple examples.What is phylotaR? In any phylogenetic analysis it is important to identify sequences that share the same orthology – homologous sequences separated by speciation events. This is often performed by simply searching an online sequence repository using sequence labels.

Auteur Matthew Strimas-Mackey

eBird is an online tool for recording birdobservations. The eBird database currently contains over 500 millionrecords of bird sightings, spanning every country and nearly every birdspecies, making it an extremely valuable resource for bird research andconservation. These data can be used to map the distribution andabundance of species, and assess how species’ ranges are changing overtime. This dataset is available for download as a text file;

Auteurs Sean Hughes, Angela Li, Ju Kim, Malisa Smith, Ted Laderas

Motivation A few weeks ago, as part of the rOpenSci Unconference, a group of us (Sean Hughes, Malisa Smith, Angela Li, Ju Kim, and Ted Laderas) decided to work on making the UMAP algorithm accessible within R. UMAP (Uniform Manifold Approximation and Projection) is a dimensionality reduction technique that allows the user to reduce high dimensional data (multiple columns) into a smaller number of columns for visualization purposes (github,

Publié in rOpenSci - open tools for open science
Auteurs Laura Ación, Mara Averick, Auriel Fournier, Alison Hill, Sean Kross, Lincoln Mullen

tl;dr : we propose three calls to action:Share your curricular materials in the open.Participate in the rOpenSci Education profile series.Discuss with us how you want to be involved in rOpenSci Educators’ Collaborative.

Publié in rOpenSci - open tools for open science
Auteurs Laura Ación, Mara Averick, Auriel Fournier, Alison Hill, Sean Kross, Lincoln Mullen

In the first post of this series, we sketched out some of the common challenges faced by educators who teach with R across scientific domains. In this post, we delve into what makes a “good” educational resource for teaching science with R. For instructors teaching sciences with R, there are a number of open educational resources that they can reuse, tailor to their own teaching style, or use to inspire them in creating their own materials.

Publié in rOpenSci - open tools for open science
Auteurs Laura Ación, Mara Averick, Auriel Fournier, Alison Hill, Sean Kross, Lincoln Mullen

Educators who teach science using R tend to face common pedagogical problems, regardless of their scientific domain. Yet instructors who teach with R often feel isolated at their institutions. They may be the only ones in their departments to teach using R. Even if there are others, the culture of collaboration around teaching is generally impoverished, unlike the rich culture of collaboration around research.