
A selection of recent and relevant publications from Project Team Members on different facets of reproducibility:
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Kummerfeld, E. and G.L. Jones. 2023. One data set, many analysts: Implications for practicing scientists. Frontiers in Psychology 14:1094150.
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Barrick, K., & Riegelman, A. (2021). Phrasing in reproducible search methodology: The consequences of straight and curly quotation marks. College & Research Libraries, 82(7), 978. https://doi.org/10.5860/crl.82.7.978
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Berger, A.T., K.L. Wahlstrom, and R. Widome. 2019. Relationships between sleep duration and adolescent depression: a conceptual replication. Sleep Health 5(2):175–179.
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Davies, R. 2013. Good research practice: it is time to do what others think we do. Quasar (July): 21-23.
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Davies, R., C. London, B. Lascelles, and M. Conzemius. 2017. Quality assurance and best research practices for non-regulated veterinary clinical studies. BMC Veterinary Research 13(1):242.
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Fletcher, S.C. 2018. What's hot in mathematical philosophy. The Reasoner 12(6):50–51.
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Fletcher, S.C. 2021. The role of replication in psychological science. European Journal for Philosophy of Science 11:23. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13194-020-00329-2
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Fletcher, S.C. 2021. How (not) to measure replication. European Journal for Philosophy of Science 11:57. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13194-021-00377-2
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Giordano, C. and N.G. Waller. 2019. A neglected aspect of the reproducibility crisis: reproducing Monte Carlo research. Poster presented at the 34th annual meeting of the Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology, Gaylord National, Washington DC / National Harbor.
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Guttinger, S. and A.C. Love. 2019. Characterizing scientific failure. EMBO Reports 20:e48765.
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Knudtson, K.L., R.H. Carnahan, R.L. Hegstad-Davies, N.C. Fisher, B. Hicks, P.A. Lopez, S.M. Meyn, S.M. Mische, F. Weis-Garcia, L.D. White, and K. Sol-Church. 2019. Survey on scientific shared resource rigor and reproducibility. Journal of Biomolecular Techniques 30(3):36–44.
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MacLean, P.S., A.J. Rothman, H.L. Nicastro, S.M. Czajkowski, T. Agurs-Collins, E.L. Rice, A.P. Courcoulas, D.H. Ryan, D.H. Bessesen, and C.M. Loria. 2018. The accumulating data to optimally predict obesity treatment (ADOPT) core measures project: rationale and approach. Obesity 26:S6–S15.
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Murren, C.J., J.R. Auld, H. Callahan, C K. Ghalambor, C.A. Handelsman, M.A. Heskel, J.G. Kingsolver, H.J. Maclean, J. Masel, H. Maughan, D.W. Pfennig, R.A. Relyea, S. Seiter, E. Snell-Rood, U.K. Steiner and C.D. Schlichting. 2015. Constraints on the evolution of phenotypic plasticity: limits and costs of phenotype and plasticity. Heredity 115(4):293–301.
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Mische,S.M., N.C. Fisher, S.M. Meyn, K. Sol Church, R.L. Hegstad-Davies, F. Weis-Garcia, M. Adams, J.M. Ashton, K.M. Delventhal, J.A. Dragon, L. Holmes, P. Jagtap, C.E. Mason, M. Palmblad, B.C. Searle,13 C.W. Turck, and K.L. Knudtson. 2020. A review of the scientific rigor, reproducibility, and transparency studies conducted by the ABRF research groups. Journal of Biomolecular Techniques 31.
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Redish, A.D., E. Kummerfeld, R.L. Morris, and A.C. Love. 2018. Reproducibility failures are essential to scientific inquiry. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA 115:5042–5046.
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Sayre, F. and A. Riegelman. 2018. The reproducibility crisis and academic libraries. College & Research Libraries 79(1):2–9.
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Sayre, F. and A. Riegelman. 2019. Replicable services for reproducible research: a model for academic libraries. College & Research Libraries 80(2):260–272.
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Sheeran, P.S., W.M.P. Klein, and A.J. Rothman. 2017. Health behavior change: moving from observation to intervention. Annual Review of Psychology 68:573–600.
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Suls, J., Rothman, A.J., & Davidson, K.W. 2022. Now is the time to assess the effects of open science practices with randomized control trials. American Psychologist.
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Uhlmann, E.L., C.R. Ebersole, C.R. Chartier, T.M. Errington, M.C. Kidwell, C.K. Lai, R.J. McCarthy, A. Riegelman, R. Silberzahn, and B.A. Nosek. 2019. Scientific Utopia III: crowdsourcing science. Perspectives on Psychological Science 14(5):711–733.
- Zuk, M. 2016. Temperate assumptions: how where we work influences how we think. The American Naturalist 188:S1–S7.