Shiny App Version (live updates)

Live Updating Schedule (official google doc)

OSF Page

Sunday

13:45

  • Justifications of study planning decisions: which types of decisions are taken, and what types of evidence can we distinguish? (Gjalt-Jorn Peters)
  • Building an open science knowledge base (Felix Henninger, Luisa Horsten, Frederik Aust)
  • Nudging Open Science Practices in CVs (Purav “Jay” Patel & Erik Anderson)
  • Replace journals’ writing-based authorship guidelines with a contributorship model (Alex Holcombe, Simine Vazire, Chris Chartier)
  • Poster cohort 1 on display
  • Finding value in anonymized data: exploring scenarios for secondary use (Gustav Nilsonne)
  • Creating a pre-registration tool for human neuroimaging studies (M/EEG, fMRI) (Johannes Algermissen, David Mehler, Stephan Heunis, Remi Gau)
  • Making open psychological datasets more accessible and useful for research and teaching (Cameron Brick)
  • Helping researchers identify their smallest effect size of interest (Farid Anvari, Amy Orben, Peder Isager, Felix Singleton Thorn)
  • Introduction to R for psychology (Nicholas Michalak)
  • Improving psychological science by formalizing psychological theories: The value of computational modeling (Donald Robinaugh & Eiko Fried)
  • Preparing code and data for computationally reproducible collaboration and publication: a hands-on workshop for researchers (April Clyburne-Sherin)
  • Redesigning methods curricula for reproducibility (Dale Barr, Heather Cleland Woods, Lisa DeBruine, Rebecca Lai, Phil McAleer, Shanon McNee, Emily Nordmann, Helena Paterson, Niamh Stack)
  • Ethics: it’s already hard enough without it! (but why it is important!) (Sil Aarts)
  • Open science for mid-career plus researchers (Clare Conry-Murray & Benjamin Le)
  • Ontologies for psychological science (Simon Columbus, Daniel Balliet, Giuliana Spadaro)
  • Measurement error in psychology (Koen Neijenhuijs & Sam Parsons)
  • Encouraging data sharing and signposting in clinical psychology (Ian Hussey & Olivia Kirtley)

14:30

  • Justifications of study planning decisions: which types of decisions are taken, and what types of evidence can we distinguish? (Gjalt-Jorn Peters)
  • Building an open science knowledge base (Felix Henninger, Luisa Horsten, Frederik Aust)
  • Nudging Open Science Practices in CVs (Purav “Jay” Patel & Erik Anderson)
  • Replace journals’ writing-based authorship guidelines with a contributorship model (Alex Holcombe, Simine Vazire, Chris Chartier)
  • Poster cohort 1 on display
  • Finding value in anonymized data: exploring scenarios for secondary use (Gustav Nilsonne)
  • Creating a pre-registration tool for human neuroimaging studies (M/EEG, fMRI) (Johannes Algermissen, David Mehler, Stephan Heunis, Remi Gau)
  • Making open psychological datasets more accessible and useful for research and teaching (Cameron Brick)
  • Helping researchers identify their smallest effect size of interest (Farid Anvari, Amy Orben, Peder Isager, Felix Singleton Thorn)
  • Introduction to R for psychology (Nicholas Michalak)
  • Improving psychological science by formalizing psychological theories: The value of computational modeling (Donald Robinaugh & Eiko Fried)
  • Preparing code and data for computationally reproducible collaboration and publication: a hands-on workshop for researchers (April Clyburne-Sherin)
  • Redesigning methods curricula for reproducibility (Dale Barr, Heather Cleland Woods, Lisa DeBruine, Rebecca Lai, Phil McAleer, Shanon McNee, Emily Nordmann, Helena Paterson, Niamh Stack)
  • Ethics: it’s already hard enough without it! (but why it is important!) (Sil Aarts)
  • Open science for mid-career plus researchers (Clare Conry-Murray & Benjamin Le)
  • Ontologies for psychological science (Simon Columbus, Daniel Balliet, Giuliana Spadaro)
  • Measurement error in psychology (Koen Neijenhuijs & Sam Parsons)
  • Encouraging data sharing and signposting in clinical psychology (Ian Hussey & Olivia Kirtley)

15:45

  • Justifications of study planning decisions: which types of decisions are taken, and what types of evidence can we distinguish? (Gjalt-Jorn Peters)
  • Building an open science knowledge base (Felix Henninger, Luisa Horsten, Frederik Aust)
  • Less data cleaning, more data adventures with Psych-DS: What could we do if datasets lived in a common format? (Melissa Kline)
  • Replace journals’ writing-based authorship guidelines with a contributorship model (Alex Holcombe, Simine Vazire, Chris Chartier)
  • Poster cohort 1 on display
  • ((( OPEN )))
  • Creating a pre-registration tool for human neuroimaging studies (M/EEG, fMRI) (Johannes Algermissen, David Mehler, Stephan Heunis, Remi Gau)
  • Many (validity) analysts, one dataset: Making transparent how variations in measurement practices impact conclusions about validity (Ian Hussey & Sean Hughes)
  • Helping researchers identify their smallest effect size of interest (Farid Anvari, Amy Orben, Peder Isager, Felix Singleton Thorn)
  • Introduction to R for psychology (Nicholas Michalak)
  • Improving psychological science by formalizing psychological theories: The value of computational modeling (Donald Robinaugh & Eiko Fried)
  • Preparing code and data for computationally reproducible collaboration and publication: a hands-on workshop for researchers (April Clyburne-Sherin)
  • Redesigning methods curricula for reproducibility (Dale Barr, Heather Cleland Woods, Lisa DeBruine, Rebecca Lai, Phil McAleer, Shanon McNee, Emily Nordmann, Helena Paterson, Niamh Stack)
  • Contemporary Philosophy of Scientific Practices for Practicing Scientists (Fallon Mody, Martin Bush, Eden Smith)
  • Working with editors to correct the literature (Nick Brown & Harris Friedman)
  • Open science considerations for researchers working with qualitative data. (Crystal Steltenpohl, Alyssa Counsell, Sophia Crüwell, Amie McKibban)
  • Going real-time! Utilizing continuous data deposition, sharing, analysis and reporting to facilitate openness and credibility (Zoltan Kekecs, Balazs Aczel, Marton Kovacs)
  • Registered Reports & PLOS ONE (Yann Benetreau)

16:30

  • Justifications of study planning decisions: which types of decisions are taken, and what types of evidence can we distinguish? (Gjalt-Jorn Peters)
  • Building an open science knowledge base (Felix Henninger, Luisa Horsten, Frederik Aust)
  • Less data cleaning, more data adventures with Psych-DS: What could we do if datasets lived in a common format? (Melissa Kline)
  • Replace journals’ writing-based authorship guidelines with a contributorship model (Alex Holcombe, Simine Vazire, Chris Chartier)
  • Poster cohort 1 on display
  • ((( OPEN )))
  • Creating a pre-registration tool for human neuroimaging studies (M/EEG, fMRI) (Johannes Algermissen, David Mehler, Stephan Heunis, Remi Gau)
  • Many (validity) analysts, one dataset: Making transparent how variations in measurement practices impact conclusions about validity (Ian Hussey & Sean Hughes)
  • Helping researchers identify their smallest effect size of interest (Farid Anvari, Amy Orben, Peder Isager, Felix Singleton Thorn)
  • Introduction to R for psychology (Nicholas Michalak)
  • Improving psychological science by formalizing psychological theories: The value of computational modeling (Donald Robinaugh & Eiko Fried)
  • Preparing code and data for computationally reproducible collaboration and publication: a hands-on workshop for researchers (April Clyburne-Sherin)
  • Redesigning methods curricula for reproducibility (Dale Barr, Heather Cleland Woods, Lisa DeBruine, Rebecca Lai, Phil McAleer, Shanon McNee, Emily Nordmann, Helena Paterson, Niamh Stack)
  • Contemporary Philosophy of Scientific Practices for Practicing Scientists (Fallon Mody, Martin Bush, Eden Smith)
  • Working with editors to correct the literature (Nick Brown & Harris Friedman)
  • Open science considerations for researchers working with qualitative data. (Crystal Steltenpohl, Alyssa Counsell, Sophia Crüwell, Amie McKibban)
  • Going real-time! Utilizing continuous data deposition, sharing, analysis and reporting to facilitate openness and credibility (Zoltan Kekecs, Balazs Aczel, Marton Kovacs)
  • Registered Reports & PLOS ONE (Yann Benetreau)

Monday

09:30

  • QRP Reviewer Guidelines (Monica Gonzalez-Marquez & Remi Gau)
  • Arguments that Need to Die (John Protzko)
  • Building an open science knowledge base - project coordination (Jackie Thompson, Brian Nosek, Luisa Horsten, Henrik Danielsson, Frederik Aust)
  • More working with editors to correct errors. (Joe Hilgard, Nick Brown, Harris Friedman
  • Poster Cohort 2 on display
  • Formalizing verbal models (Kimberly Quinn & Leonid Tiokhin)MOVED TO ALEXIA
  • Open research documentation (Daniel Lakens & Lisa DeBruine)
  • ((( OPEN )))
  • Mapping degrees of freedom in systematic review (Natasha Godkin & Gjalt-Jorn)MOVED TO DOWNSTAIRS LOBBY
  • Introducing meta-analytic methods for psychological scientists (Sho Tsuji)
  • Doing open, transparent, and reproducible research with RMarkdown and Git (Mark Andrews)
  • Introduction to pre-registration (Marjan Bakker, Lorne Campbell, & Olmo van der Akker)
  • Meeting of the Minds: a practical introduction to current philosophy of science (Noah van Dongen, Felipe Romero, Jan Sprenger, Michal Sikorski)
  • Formalizing verbal models (Kimberly Quinn & Leonid Tiokhin)
  • ((( OPEN )))
  • FORRT: Supporting teaching of open and reproducible research practices (Sam Parsons, Flavio Azevedo)
  • Bayesian Inference with JASP (Eric-Jan Wagenmakers)
  • ((( OPEN )))
  • Creating (and Mapping) the History of Scientific Reform (Bobbie Spellman & Fiona Fidler)
  • When meta is not better: Towards a framework for transparent and robust systematic-reviews (Jade Pickering & Oliver Clark)
  • Project Free Our Knowledge: Accelerating Open Science with Collective Action Campaigns (Cooper Smout)
  • ((( OPEN )))

10:15

  • QRP Reviewer Guidelines (Monica Gonzalez-Marquez & Remi Gau)
  • Arguments that Need to Die (John Protzko)
  • Building an open science knowledge base - project coordination (Jackie Thompson, Brian Nosek, Luisa Horsten, Henrik Danielsson, Frederik Aust)
  • More working with editors to correct errors. (Joe Hilgard, Nick Brown, Harris Friedman
  • Poster Cohort 2 on display
  • Formalizing verbal models (Kimberly Quinn & Leonid Tiokhin)MOVED TO ALEXIA
  • Open research documentation (Daniel Lakens & Lisa DeBruine)
  • ((( OPEN )))
  • Mapping degrees of freedom in systematic review (Natasha Godkin & Gjalt-Jorn)MOVED TO DOWNSTAIRS LOBBY
  • Introducing meta-analytic methods for psychological scientists (Sho Tsuji)
  • Doing open, transparent, and reproducible research with RMarkdown and Git (Mark Andrews)
  • Introduction to pre-registration (Marjan Bakker, Lorne Campbell, & Olmo van der Akker)
  • Meeting of the Minds: a practical introduction to current philosophy of science (Noah van Dongen, Felipe Romero, Jan Sprenger, Michal Sikorski)
  • Formalizing verbal models (Kimberly Quinn & Leonid Tiokhin)
  • ((( OPEN )))
  • FORRT: Supporting teaching of open and reproducible research practices (Sam Parsons, Flavio Azevedo)
  • Bayesian Inference with JASP (Eric-Jan Wagenmakers)
  • ((( OPEN )))
  • Creating (and Mapping) the History of Scientific Reform (Bobbie Spellman & Fiona Fidler)
  • When meta is not better: Towards a framework for transparent and robust systematic-reviews (Jade Pickering & Oliver Clark)
  • Project Free Our Knowledge: Accelerating Open Science with Collective Action Campaigns (Cooper Smout)
  • ((( OPEN )))

11:30

  • Using replication as a teaching tool in the classroom (Nicole Sorhagen & Meghan Caulfield)
  • Challenges in ESM research: Developing a dynamic taxonomy of best practices (Eeske van Roekel, Olivia Kirtley, Ginette Lafit, Janne Adolf, Gerine Lodder)
  • Avoiding conflicts of interest in academic awards and prizes: Assessing the guidelines provided by scientific societies. (Andrea Stoevenbelt, Jelte Wicherts, Michèle Nuijten)
  • More working with editors to correct errors. (Joe Hilgard, Nick Brown, Harris Friedman
  • Poster Cohort 2 on display
  • Formalizing verbal models (Kimberly Quinn & Leonid Tiokhin)
  • Teaching research methods, statistics, and open science to high school and undergraduate students through video games (Crystal N. Steltenpohl & Katie Daniels)
  • ((( OPEN )))
  • ((( OPEN )))
  • Introducing meta-analytic methods for psychological scientists (Sho Tsuji)
  • Doing open, transparent, and reproducible research with RMarkdown and Git (Mark Andrews)
  • Introduction to pre-registration (Marjan Bakker, Lorne Campbell, & Olmo van der Akker)
  • Reproducible Data Visualizations Using R and Binder (Andrew Stewart & Oli Clark)
  • Open and reproducible research with sensitive, (private, and proprietary) data and methods (Maia Salholz-Hillel, Daan Ornee, Maud Grol, Lena Matyjek, Gabriela Hofer
  • Registered Reports at PLOS: follow-up (Yann Benetreau)
  • QRP The Board Game (Roger Giner-Sorolla)
  • Bayesian Inference with JASP (Eric-Jan Wagenmakers)
  • Introducing the Platform for Young Meta-Scientists (Sarahanne Field, Anne Scheel, Noah van Dongen, Olmo van den Akker)
  • How to promote open science in stagnant communities: experience from Russia (Elena Rybina & Maria Servetnik)
  • What do first year psychology students think about (open) science? (Jennifer Beaudry)
  • Open Science in Time-Limited Student Projects (Clare Conry-Murray, Bianca Dietrich, Mariella Paul)
  • ((( OPEN )))

13:30

  • Using replication as a teaching tool in the classroom (Nicole Sorhagen & Meghan Caulfield)
  • Challenges in ESM research: Developing a dynamic taxonomy of best practices (Eeske van Roekel, Olivia Kirtley, Ginette Lafit, Janne Adolf, Gerine Lodder)
  • Avoiding conflicts of interest in academic awards and prizes: Assessing the guidelines provided by scientific societies. (Andrea Stoevenbelt, Jelte Wicherts, Michèle Nuijten)
  • More working with editors to correct errors. (Joe Hilgard, Nick Brown, Harris Friedman
  • Poster Cohort 2 on display
  • Formalizing verbal models (Kimberly Quinn & Leonid Tiokhin)
  • Teaching research methods, statistics, and open science to high school and undergraduate students through video games (Crystal N. Steltenpohl & Katie Daniels)
  • ((( OPEN )))
  • Leveraging Libraries: PsyArXiv Fundraising (Grace Binion & Benjamin Brown)
  • Introducing meta-analytic methods for psychological scientists (Sho Tsuji)
  • Doing open, transparent, and reproducible research with RMarkdown and Git (Mark Andrews)
  • Introduction to pre-registration (Marjan Bakker, Lorne Campbell, & Olmo van der Akker)
  • Reproducible Data Visualizations Using R and Binder (Andrew Stewart & Oli Clark)
  • Open and reproducible research with sensitive, (private, and proprietary) data and methods (Maia Salholz-Hillel, Daan Ornee, Maud Grol, Lena Matyjek, Gabriela Hofer
  • Registered Reports at PLOS: follow-up (Yann Benetreau)
  • QRP The Board Game (Roger Giner-Sorolla)
  • Bayesian Inference with JASP (Eric-Jan Wagenmakers)
  • Introducing the Platform for Young Meta-Scientists (Sarahanne Field, Anne Scheel, Noah van Dongen, Olmo van den Akker)
  • How to promote open science in stagnant communities: experience from Russia (Elena Rybina & Maria Servetnik)
  • What do first year psychology students think about (open) science? (Jennifer Beaudry)
  • Open Science in Time-Limited Student Projects (Clare Conry-Murray, Bianca Dietrich, Mariella Paul)
  • ((( OPEN )))

14:45

  • Using replication as a teaching tool in the classroom (Nicole Sorhagen & Meghan Caulfield)
  • Challenges in ESM research: Developing a dynamic taxonomy of best practices (Eeske van Roekel, Olivia Kirtley, Ginette Lafit, Janne Adolf, Gerine Lodder)
  • Improving the CREP (Jordan Wagge)
  • Setting Up A Large Scale Replication Project of Cognitive Dissonance Theory (Willem Sleegers, David Vaidis
  • Poster Cohort 2 on display
  • Extending {papaja} to prepare (even better) APA journal articles with R Markdown (Frederik Aust)
  • Meeting of the Minds: working towards sustainable interaction between science and philosophy (Noah van Dongen, Felipe Romero, Jan Sprenger, Michal Sikorski)
  • Many Validity Analysts (Ian Hussey & Sean Hughes)
  • Leveraging Libraries: PsyArXiv Fundraising (Grace Binion & Benjamin Brown)
  • Finding, using and making Open Educational Resources (Rima-Maria Rahal)
  • Introduction to version control using git (Tobias Heycke)
  • RepliCATS: evaluating the replicability of Social and Behavioural science claims (Bonnie Wintle, Fiona Fidler, Hannah Fraser, Fallon Mody)
  • Reproducible Data Visualizations Using R and Binder (Andrew Stewart & Oli Clark)
  • Is there ethical p-hacking? Intermediate pre-registrations during analyses (Johannes Algermissen)
  • Build the prediction markets and deep-thinking survey before a massive collaborative study (Sau-Chin Chen & Anna Szabelska)
  • QRP The Board Game (Roger Giner-Sorolla)
  • Open Sampling: Challenges in using MTurk and other crowdsourced samples? (Gabriele Paolacci, Jesse Chandler, Itay Sisso)
  • Introducing the Platform for Young Meta-Scientists (Sarahanne Field, Anne Scheel, Noah van Dongen, Olmo van den Akker)
  • Why everyone should care about evidence-based science reading skills training, especially the Open Science movement (Monica Gonzalez-Marquez)
  • The Inaugural Meeting of the Open Toolmakers’ Guild (Felix Henninger)
  • Implications of Teaching Bayesian Statistics to Undergraduate Psychology Students (Henk Kiers, Rink Hoekstra, Jorge Tendeiro, Don van Ravenzwaaij)
  • ((( OPEN )))

15:30

  • Using replication as a teaching tool in the classroom (Nicole Sorhagen & Meghan Caulfield)
  • Challenges in ESM research: Developing a dynamic taxonomy of best practices (Eeske van Roekel, Olivia Kirtley, Ginette Lafit, Janne Adolf, Gerine Lodder)
  • Improving the CREP (Jordan Wagge)
  • Setting Up A Large Scale Replication Project of Cognitive Dissonance Theory (Willem Sleegers, David Vaidis
  • Poster Cohort 2 on display
  • Extending {papaja} to prepare (even better) APA journal articles with R Markdown (Frederik Aust)
  • Meeting of the Minds: working towards sustainable interaction between science and philosophy (Noah van Dongen, Felipe Romero, Jan Sprenger, Michal Sikorski)
  • Many Validity Analysts (Ian Hussey & Sean Hughes)
  • Leveraging Libraries: PsyArXiv Fundraising (Grace Binion & Benjamin Brown)
  • Finding, using and making Open Educational Resources (Rima-Maria Rahal)
  • Introduction to version control using git (Tobias Heycke)
  • RepliCATS: evaluating the replicability of Social and Behavioural science claims (Bonnie Wintle, Fiona Fidler, Hannah Fraser, Fallon Mody)
  • Reproducible Data Visualizations Using R and Binder (Andrew Stewart & Oli Clark)
  • Is there ethical p-hacking? Intermediate pre-registrations during analyses (Johannes Algermissen)
  • Build the prediction markets and deep-thinking survey before a massive collaborative study (Sau-Chin Chen & Anna Szabelska)
  • QRP The Board Game (Roger Giner-Sorolla)
  • Open Sampling: Challenges in using MTurk and other crowdsourced samples? (Gabriele Paolacci, Jesse Chandler, Itay Sisso)
  • Introducing the Platform for Young Meta-Scientists (Sarahanne Field, Anne Scheel, Noah van Dongen, Olmo van den Akker)
  • Why everyone should care about evidence-based science reading skills training, especially the Open Science movement (Monica Gonzalez-Marquez)
  • The Inaugural Meeting of the Open Toolmakers’ Guild (Felix Henninger)
  • Implications of Teaching Bayesian Statistics to Undergraduate Psychology Students (Henk Kiers, Rink Hoekstra, Jorge Tendeiro, Don van Ravenzwaaij)
  • ((( OPEN )))

Tuesday

09:30

  • Reviewing for Replicability: Maximizing the Effectiveness of Manuscript Reviews and Decision Letters (Kimberly Quinn, Rich Lucas, Simine Vazire)
  • Promoting the Use of Diverse Statistical Methods (Alexandra Sarafoglou, Balazs Aczel, Eric-Jan Wagenmakers)
  • Tracking and Visualizing OSF adoption across time, seniority, and university (Brian Nosek)
  • Developing Resources for Open Qualitative Research (Crystal Steltenpohl, Sophia Crüwell, Alyssa Counsell, Amie McKibban)
  • Poster Cohort 3 on display
  • Nudging Good Science Practices(Jason Tangen, Ruben Laukkonen, Brian Nosek, Gianni Ribeiro, Rachel Searston)
  • Helping researchers find existing data (Cameron Brick)
  • The fake news effect in science research: Do overstated seminal findings misdirect research and practice (Robert Thibault)
  • Still more working with editors to correct the literature(Joseph Hilgard, Nick Brown, Harris Friedman)
  • Dealing with publication bias in a meta-analysis (Robbie C.M. van Aert)
  • Developing your personal workflow for transparent & reproducible research (Frederik Aust & Johannes Breuer)
  • Statistics are useless without suitable data: How to implement and assess for data quality (Erin M. Buchanan & Flavio Azevedo)
  • Metadata, ontologies, and standards (Simon Columbus, Lisa DeBruine, Daniel Lakens, Gjalt-Jorn Peters, Melissa Kline)
  • Open Science Challenges for Industrial-Work-Organizational Psychology (Brenton Wiernik)
  • The power of open science communities (Stephan Heunis, Loek Brinkman, Antonio Schettino, Eirini Zompra, Alexandra Sarafogulou, Olmo van den Akker)
  • Increasing Transparency in Exploratory Model Building (Marieke Woensdregt, Elise Gould)
  • Questionable Measurement Practices and How to Avoid Them (Jessica Kay Flake & Eiko Fried)
  • What are we doing to make open science normative in our own institutions? (Jennifer Beaudry)
  • Promoting diversity at SIPS and in Open Science (Clare Conry-Murray, Melissa Kline, Priya Silverstein)
  • Looking for an Editor and Editorial Board Members for the Journal of Open Psychology Data (Jelte Wicherts)
  • ((( OPEN )))

10:15

  • Reviewing for Replicability: Maximizing the Effectiveness of Manuscript Reviews and Decision Letters (Kimberly Quinn, Rich Lucas, Simine Vazire)
  • Promoting the Use of Diverse Statistical Methods (Alexandra Sarafoglou, Balazs Aczel, Eric-Jan Wagenmakers)
  • Tracking and Visualizing OSF adoption across time, seniority, and university (Brian Nosek)
  • Developing Resources for Open Qualitative Research (Crystal Steltenpohl, Sophia Crüwell, Alyssa Counsell, Amie McKibban)
  • Poster Cohort 3 on display
  • Nudging Good Science Practices(Jason Tangen, Ruben Laukkonen, Brian Nosek, Gianni Ribeiro, Rachel Searston)
  • Helping researchers find existing data (Cameron Brick)
  • The fake news effect in science research: Do overstated seminal findings misdirect research and practice (Robert Thibault)
  • Still more working with editors to correct the literature(Joseph Hilgard, Nick Brown, Harris Friedman)
  • Dealing with publication bias in a meta-analysis (Robbie C.M. van Aert)
  • Developing your personal workflow for transparent & reproducible research (Frederik Aust & Johannes Breuer)
  • Statistics are useless without suitable data: How to implement and assess for data quality (Erin M. Buchanan & Flavio Azevedo)
  • Metadata, ontologies, and standards (Simon Columbus, Lisa DeBruine, Daniel Lakens, Gjalt-Jorn Peters, Melissa Kline)
  • Open Science Challenges for Industrial-Work-Organizational Psychology (Brenton Wiernik)
  • The power of open science communities (Stephan Heunis, Loek Brinkman, Antonio Schettino, Eirini Zompra, Alexandra Sarafogulou, Olmo van den Akker)
  • Increasing Transparency in Exploratory Model Building (Marieke Woensdregt, Elise Gould)
  • Questionable Measurement Practices and How to Avoid Them (Jessica Kay Flake & Eiko Fried)
  • What are we doing to make open science normative in our own institutions? (Jennifer Beaudry)
  • Promoting diversity at SIPS and in Open Science (Clare Conry-Murray, Melissa Kline, Priya Silverstein)
  • Looking for an Editor and Editorial Board Members for the Journal of Open Psychology Data (Jelte Wicherts)
  • ((( OPEN )))

11:30

  • Free the data! Developing strategies for the quick release of file-drawered data (James Green)
  • Artistic and Scientific Guidelines for Designing Effective Research Posters (Purav Patel)
  • Creating and mapping the history of science reform (Vasco Brazão, Ivan Flis, Anna van ’t Veer, Sophia Crüwell, Fiona Fidler, Bobbie Spellman)
  • Creating an Archive of Meta-Science Projects (Charlie Ebersole & Anne Scheel)
  • Poster Cohort 3 on display
  • Developing a Lab Manual Template to facilitate more efficient, transparent, and reproducible research (Balazs Aczel, Tom Hardwicke, Marton Kovacs)
  • Beyond the videogame~aggression ‘metawars’: coding validity of methodologies (Liam Satchell, Randy McCarthy)
  • Project Free Our Knowledge: Developing a collective action platform and designing a campaign video (Cooper Smout & Erik Anderson)
  • Still more working with editors to correct the literature(Joseph Hilgard, Nick Brown, Harris Friedman)
  • Active participation in multi-site collaborative projects to build reputation and research credibility (Sau-Chin Chen, Anna Szabelska; Jordan Wagge; Patrick S. Forscher; Balazs Aczel)
  • Developing your personal workflow for transparent & reproducible research (Frederik Aust & Johannes Breuer)
  • Statistics are useless without suitable data: How to implement and assess for data quality (Erin M. Buchanan & Flavio Azevedo)
  • The academic conference of the future (Olmo van den Akker)
  • Psych-DS Hackathon (Melissa Kline)
  • Continuing the RMarkdown and Git Workshop (Raine Vickers-Jones, Mark Andrews)
  • SIPS Idols: They Also Have Clay Feet(Alex Uzdavines)
  • Questionable Measurement Practices and How to Avoid Them (Jessica Kay Flake & Eiko Fried)
  • Conducting a Meta-analysis in the Age of Open Science (David Moreau & Kristina Wiebels)
  • Bringing the credibility revolution to other disciplines (Tim Parker & Hannah Fraser)
  • QRP the Game: Playtest Round 2 (Roger Giner-Sorolla)
  • ((( OPEN )))

13:30

  • Free the data! Developing strategies for the quick release of file-drawered data (James Green)
  • Artistic and Scientific Guidelines for Designing Effective Research Posters (Purav Patel)
  • Creating and mapping the history of science reform (Vasco Brazão, Ivan Flis, Anna van ’t Veer, Sophia Crüwell, Fiona Fidler, Bobbie Spellman)
  • Creating an Archive of Meta-Science Projects (Charlie Ebersole & Anne Scheel)
  • Poster Cohort 3 on display
  • Developing a Lab Manual Template to facilitate more efficient, transparent, and reproducible research (Balazs Aczel, Tom Hardwicke, Marton Kovacs)
  • Beyond the videogame~aggression ‘metawars’: coding validity of methodologies (Liam Satchell, Randy McCarthy)
  • Project Free Our Knowledge: Developing a collective action platform and designing a campaign video (Cooper Smout & Erik Anderson)
  • Still more working with editors to correct the literature(Joseph Hilgard, Nick Brown, Harris Friedman)
  • Active participation in multi-site collaborative projects to build reputation and research credibility (Sau-Chin Chen, Anna Szabelska; Jordan Wagge; Patrick S. Forscher; Balazs Aczel)
  • Developing your personal workflow for transparent & reproducible research (Frederik Aust & Johannes Breuer)
  • Statistics are useless without suitable data: How to implement and assess for data quality (Erin M. Buchanan & Flavio Azevedo)
  • The academic conference of the future (Olmo van den Akker)
  • Psych-DS Hackathon (Melissa Kline)
  • Continuing the RMarkdown and Git Workshop (Raine Vickers-Jones, Mark Andrews)
  • SIPS Idols: They Also Have Clay Feet(Alex Uzdavines)
  • Questionable Measurement Practices and How to Avoid Them (Jessica Kay Flake & Eiko Fried)
  • Conducting a Meta-analysis in the Age of Open Science (David Moreau & Kristina Wiebels)
  • Bringing the credibility revolution to other disciplines (Tim Parker & Hannah Fraser)
  • QRP the Game: Playtest Round 2 (Roger Giner-Sorolla)
  • ((( OPEN )))

14:45

  • We need an open analyses badge (Julia Haaf, Frederik Aust)
  • A checklist approach to report methods and results: an example from EEG / fMRI (Remi Gau)
  • How open are open materials? (Tobias Heycke)
  • Collaborative ontology development (Simon Columbus, Giuliana Spadaro, Emma Norris)
  • Poster Cohort 3 on display
  • Developing a Lab Manual Template to facilitate more efficient, transparent, and reproducible research (Balazs Aczel, Tom Hardwicke, Marton Kovacs)
  • Gaming the system? Stories & prevalence (Anna van ’t Veer, Vasco Brazao, Sophia Crüwell )
  • Using Open Data in Teaching(Helena Paterson, Manon van Scheppingen)
  • What’s Missing From repliCATS? (Alex Uzdavines, Crystal Steltenpohl, Rima-Marie Rahal)
  • Document Your Data (Ruben Arslan & Laura Botzet)
  • One to rule them all: A beginner’s guide to fitting Bayesian mixed-effects models in Stan using brms (Johannes Algermissen & Julian Quandt)
  • Twitter content analysis in R (Arnout Boot)
  • The Future of SIPS (Tom Hardwicke, Michèle Nuijten, Randy McCarthy, Anita Eerland, Katie Corker)
  • Find and Fix the Psychological Health Hazards of Working in Psychology (Nick Stauner)
  • What is (should be) next for OSF? (Brian Nosek)
  • Barriers to ‘Many-Analysts’ projects (Katie Drax, Hannah Fraser)
  • Voicing values about statistical decisions (Franca Agnoli & Fiona Fidler)
  • Many Simulations - Replicating vintage simulation studies (Anna Lohmann)
  • Incentives for open science for non-intrinsically motivated researchers (Hilmar Brohmer)
  • Guide Me: A Proposal to Encourage Micro-Collaboration on the Web (Purav Patel & Erik Anderson)
  • ((( OPEN )))

15:30

  • We need an open analyses badge (Julia Haaf, Frederik Aust)
  • A checklist approach to report methods and results: an example from EEG / fMRI (Remi Gau)
  • How open are open materials? (Tobias Heycke)
  • Collaborative ontology development (Simon Columbus, Giuliana Spadaro, Emma Norris)
  • Poster Cohort 3 on display
  • Developing a Lab Manual Template to facilitate more efficient, transparent, and reproducible research (Balazs Aczel, Tom Hardwicke, Marton Kovacs)
  • Gaming the system? Stories & prevalence (Anna van ’t Veer, Vasco Brazao, Sophia Crüwell )
  • Using Open Data in Teaching(Helena Paterson, Manon van Scheppingen)
  • What’s Missing From repliCATS? (Alex Uzdavines, Crystal Steltenpohl, Rima-Marie Rahal)
  • Document Your Data (Ruben Arslan & Laura Botzet)
  • One to rule them all: A beginner’s guide to fitting Bayesian mixed-effects models in Stan using brms (Johannes Algermissen & Julian Quandt)
  • Twitter content analysis in R (Arnout Boot)
  • The Future of SIPS (Tom Hardwicke, Michèle Nuijten, Randy McCarthy, Anita Eerland, Katie Corker)
  • Find and Fix the Psychological Health Hazards of Working in Psychology (Nick Stauner)
  • What is (should be) next for OSF? (Brian Nosek)
  • Barriers to ‘Many-Analysts’ projects (Katie Drax, Hannah Fraser)
  • Voicing values about statistical decisions (Franca Agnoli & Fiona Fidler)
  • Many Simulations - Replicating vintage simulation studies (Anna Lohmann)
  • Incentives for open science for non-intrinsically motivated researchers (Hilmar Brohmer)
  • Guide Me: A Proposal to Encourage Micro-Collaboration on the Web (Purav Patel & Erik Anderson)
  • ((( OPEN )))