Spring 2021 ReproducibiliTea (Tuesday)

online Zoom meeting

Meetings will be on Tuesday afternoons (approximately every other week) 2-3pm

For more information contact Amy Riegelman [email protected], for zoom link contact [email protected].

This group is based on a journal club that was first launched at Oxford University in 2018 (ReproducibiliTea). It is devoted to discussions of issues related to replication and reproducibility, with special attention to graduate students and postdoctoral researchers. Subsequently, these journal clubs have spread around the globe and the University of Minnesota group has met since Fall 2019.

January 26: Besançon, L., Peiffer-Smadja, N., Segalas, C., Jiang, H., Masuzzo, P., Smout, C. A., ... & Leyrat, C. (2020). Open Science saves lives: lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic. BioRxiv. doi: 10.1101/2020.08.13.249847
February 9: Pownall, M., Talbot, C. V., Henschel, A., Lautarescu, A., Lloyd, K., Hartmann, H., … Siegel, J. A. (2020, October 13). Navigating Open Science as Early Career Feminist Researchers. PsyArXiv. doi: 10.31234/osf.io/f9m47
Jaclyn Siegel (Western University) will be joining the meeting.
February 23: Scheel, A. M., Tiokhin, L., Isager, P. M., & Lakens, D. (2020, September 6). Why hypothesis testers should spend less time testing hypotheses. Perspectives on Psychological Science. doi: 10.1177/1745691620966795
March 9: Hall, L., & Hendricks, A. E. (2020). High-throughput analysis suggests differences in journal false discovery rate by subject area and impact factor but not open access status. BMC Bioinformatics. doi: 10.1186/s12859-020-03817-7
April 20: Lundwall, R. A. (2019). Changing institutional incentives to foster sound scientific practices: One department. Infant Behavior and Development, 55, 69-76. doi: 10.1016/j.infbeh.2019.03.006
May 4: Research Culture: Framework for advancing rigorous research. (2020) eLife. doi: 10.7554/eLife.55915