Confirmed workshops, hackathons, unconferences and posters
The call for workshops, unconferences and hackathons is currently closed. However, additional spaces have been allocated for on-the-fly programming on Day 2. AIMOS2019 attendees will be able to pitch proposals for these spaces between 9am - 5pm on Thursday November 7th.
Workshops:
Franca Agnoli (University of Padova, Italy) - Voicing Values about Statistical Decisions
Kristian Camilleri (University of Melbourne, Australia) - An Introduction to Philosophy of Science in Practice
Vanessa Crosby (University of NSW, Australia) - Mapping a Collective Pathway to Collaborative, Open Research
Geoff Cumming (La Trobe University, Australia) - Estimation: Why and How, now with R
Thomas Shaffee (La Trobe University, Australia) - Getting your Work Read by 1M People: Open Science via Wikipedia and its Sister Projects
Nicholas Tierney (Monash University, Australia) - Rmarkdown for Scientists
Saras Windecker (University of Melbourne, Australia) - Taking your R skills to the next level: four great strategies for reproducible research
Hackathons:
Hannah Fraser (University of Melbourne, Australia) - Maximising the diversity and inclusivity of AIMOS
David Howells (University of Tasmania, Australia) - Quality in preclinical science
Eden Smith (University of Melbourne, Australia) - Developing Resources in Contemporary Philosophy of Scientific Practices for Scientists
Unconferences:
Jason Chin (University of Sydney, Australia) - Adapting metascientific research and reform to improve the legal system
Ian Gordon (University of Melbourne, Australia) - Challenges in Open Science - Statisticians’ Perspectives
Mathew Ling (Deakin University, Australia) - Supporting the modernisation of research practices: Efficiency, Scalability, Openness
Matthew Page (Monash University, Australia) - Making evidence synthesis more rigorous and reproducible: what can we learn from other disciplines?
Tim Parker (Whitman College, Australia) - Systematic replication to evaluate bias in ecology and/or evolutionary biology
Tim Parker (Whitman College, Australia) - Practical considerations when conducting replication
Bob Reed (University of Canterbury, New Zealand) - Why Aren’t There More Replications?
Andrew Vonasch (University of Canterbury, New Zealand) - Science Wiki: A viable alternative to journal publishing?