Licence/Citation

This book is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License (CC-BY-SA 4.0). You are free to share and adapt this book. You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. If you adapt the material, you must distribute your contributions under the same license as the original.

10.4 Citation

DOI

citation("reprores")
## 
## To cite reprores in publications use:
## 
##   Lisa DeBruine and Dale Barr (2022, Septmeber). Data Skills for
##   Reproducible Research. R package version 3.0. Zenodo.
##   http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6527194
## 
## A BibTeX entry for LaTeX users is
## 
##   @Manual{,
##     title = {Data Skills for Reproducible Science},
##     author = {Lisa DeBruine and Dale Barr},
##     doi = {10.5281/zenodo.6527194},
##     publisher = {Zenodo},
##     year = {2022},
##     month = {September},
##     note = {R package version 3.0},
##     url = {https://psyteachr.github.io/reprores-v3/},
##   }

10.5 Acknowledgements

The whole psyTeachR team at the University of Glasgow School of Psychology deserves enormous thanks for making it possible and rewarding to teach methods with a focus on reproducibility and open research. Particularly Heather Cleland Woods, Phil McAleer, Helena Paterson, Emily Nordmann, Carolina Keuper-Tetzel, and Niamh Stack.

We greatly appreciate Iris Holzleitner's volunteer in-class assistance with the first year of this course. We were ever so lucky to get Rebecca Lai as a teaching assistant in the second year; her kind and patient approach to teaching technical skills is an inspiration. Benedict Jones made invaluable contributions to the ethos of reproducible research at Glasgow. Thanks to Daniƫl Lakens for many inspirational discussions and resources.

Contributors

Several people contributed to testing these materials.