Month May 2019

Month May 2019

Searching for a research software engineer

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We are searching for a research software engineer to work on research related to the Fragile Families Challenge.  The project will be a mix of software engineering, data science, and social science.  Application review begins soon.  Here is a link to the full  position description: https://main-princeton.icims.com/jobs/10347/research-software-engineer/job

computational reproducibility and the Fragile Families Challenge

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We’ve recently posted a working paper about our experiences with computational reproducibility and the Fragile Families Challenge special issue.

Successes and struggles with computational reproducibility: Lessons from the Fragile Families Challenge

David M. Liu and Matthew J. Salganik

Abstract: Reproducibility is fundamental to science, and an important component of reproducibility is computational reproducibility: the ability of a researcher to recreate the results in a published paper using the original author’s raw data and code. Although most people agree that computational reproducibility is important, it is still difficult to achieve in practice. In this paper, we describe our approach to enabling computational reproducibility for the 12 papers in this special issue of Socius about the Fragile Families Challenge. Our approach draws on two tools commonly used by professional software engineers but not widely used by academic researchers: software containers (e.g., Docker) and cloud computing (e.g., Amazon Web Services). These tools enabled us to standardize the computing environment around each submission, which will ease computational reproducibility both today and in the future. Drawing on our successes and struggles, we conclude with recommendations to authors and journals.