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**<h4>Workshop: 2018-10-22</h4>** **Event Link**: https://libcal.library.harvard.edu/event/4233672 There are many actions researchers can take to increase the openness and reproducibility of their work. Please join us for a day-long workshop, hosted by the Center for Open Science, to learn easy, practical steps to increase the reproducibility of your work. The workshop will be hands-on and is aimed at graduate students, postdocs, and faculty across disciplines. No knowledge of programming or other specialized tools is required. In the morning session participants will gain a foundation for incorporating reproducible, transparent practices into their current workflows by creating a reproducible project from start to finish. The afternoon session will build on this foundation by examining case studies and designing appropriate open workflows for each situation. Morning topics: - Project documentation - Version control - Pre-Analysis plans - Open source tools like the Center for Open Science’s OSF to easily implement these concepts in a scientific workflow Afternoon topics: - Build structures to support complex workflows - Tie projects together across studies and teams - Design for long term reuse and replication - Incorporate privacy protections and IRB concerns **Instructor**: Ian Sullivan, Transparency and Openness Training Coordinator, Center for Open Science **<h4>Workshop Materials</h4>** **Slides**: https://osf.io/8ednt/ **Data/Files**: https://osf.io/tazyx/files
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