Postagens de Rogue Scholar

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Publicados in rOpenSci - open tools for open science

We first introduced our Coworking andOffice Hour sessions in August 2021 after a successful pilot of several’label-athon’s in the April and May prior. We’ve had a successful couple of years since then and the coworking sessionshave evolved into themed events with different community hosts and me asa facilitator. It’s been a lovely change and we thought it was time to share these updates with the rOpenSci community! 🎉 What are these sessions?

Publicados in Andrew Heiss's blog

In a couple days, I’m going to drive across the country to Utah, my home state. I haven’t been out west with my whole family in four years—not since 2019 when we moved from Spanish Fork, Utah to Atlanta, Georgia. According to Google Maps, it’s a mere 1,900 miles (3,000 kilometers) through the middle of the United States and should take 28 hours, assuming no stops.

Publicados in rOpenSci - open tools for open science

I’m thrilled to share that CRediTas has passed peer review and been accepted to rOpenSci as well as to CRAN. I am glad to acknowledge the editor Emily Riedered and the two reviewers Marcelo S. Perlin and João Martins. Their comments and support were really insightful. CRediTas is a tiny package to facilitate the tedious job of creating CRediT authors statements for scientific publications.

Publicados in Andrew Heiss's blog

I’ve been working on converting a couple of my dissertation chapters into standalone articles, so I’ve been revisiting and improving my older R code. As part of my dissertation work, I ran a global survey of international NGOs to see how they adjust their programs and strategies when working under authoritarian legal restrictions in dictatorship.

Publicados in rOpenSci - open tools for open science

I’m thrilled to share that waywiser, my R package focused on providing framework-agnostic (but tidymodels-friendly) methods for assessing models fit to spatial data 1 , has passed peer review and been accepted to rOpenSci.

Publicados in The Ideophone
Autor Mark Dingemanse

A lot of our recent work revolves around working with conversational data, and one thing that’s struck me is that there are no easy ways to create compelling visualizations of conversation as it unfolds over time. The most common form seems to be pixelated screenshots of transcription software not made for this purpose.

Publicados in Data & Molecule Bits
Autor Giorgio Luciano

List of packages I’ve found useful in my workflow during 2022 (in no particular order) Plot ggvoronoi: Voronoi Diagrams and Heatmaps with ‘ggplot2’ tags : #ggplot #tidyverse #voronoi [cran package link] https://CRAN.R-project.org/package=ggvoronoi description from the author/vignette ggh4x: Hacks for ‘ggplot2’ tags : #ggplot #tidyverse [cran package link]