Improving Openness and Reproducibility in Scholarly Research and Communication (featured speaker)

About This Session

There has been increasing attention in recent years to research that can’t be reproduced or even verified. The Open Science Framework is a free, open scholarly commons that aims to address this problem. OSF is an application framework connecting services across the research lifecycle and facilitates preregistration, project management, and archiving and sharing of data, protocols, and code.  Coupled with supporting public good infrastructure, the Center for Open Science, which maintains OSF, is addressing incentives to improve the alignment between researcher behaviors with the scholarly values of transparency and reproducibility.

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Moderator

photo of Kevin Hawkins

Kevin S. Hawkins

  • Assistant Dean for Scholarly Communication, University of North Texas Libraries
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Presenters

photo of Brian Nosek

Brian Nosek

  • Professor in the Department of Psychology at the Univesity of Virginia
  • Executive Director of the Center for Open Science

Prof. Nosek received a Ph.D. in from Yale University in 2002 and is a professor in the Department of Psychology at the University of Virginia. In 2007, he received early career awards from the International Social Cognition Network (ISCON) and the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues (SPSSI).

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