Talk announcement: How software development shaped the way I write science (National eScience Symposium)
Posted on Sun 17 November 2019 in Blog
A few months ago, I informally presented an earlier version of this talk at the Netherlands eScience Center (NLeSC). Two remarkable things happened after that:
- Now I am an eScience Engineer at NLeSC.
- They invited me to give the talk again. This time in a less informal setting: the National eScience Symposium, and in a less informal venue: the Ajax stadium
Title
How software development shaped the way I write science
Abstract
When we say that scientific papers are complex, we tend to think that their contents are complex. While this is true, there is much more: a paper itself is a complex form of communication. In this short talk I'll explain how my years in the industry of software development dramatically changed the way I write scientific publications.
Spacetime coordinates
- 21 November. Johan Cruijff Arena, Amsterdam. FAIR software session. Registration required
Links
- Slides temporarily available here
Key references
- My research workflow, based on GitHub. Carl Boettiger. Available here
- Wilson G, Aruliah DA, Brown CT, Chue Hong NP, Davis M, Guy RT, et al. Best Practices for Scientific Computing. Eisen JA, editor. PLoS Biol [Internet]. 2014 Jan 7. Available here
- Galileo's instruments of credit. Telescopes, images, secrecy. Mario Biagioli.
- Rodríguez-Sánchez P. PabRod/rolldown. 2019. Available from: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.2591550
- Rodríguez-Sánchez P, van Nes EH, Scheffer M. Climbing Escher’s stairs: a simple quasi-potential algorithm for weakly non-gradient systems. 2019 Mar 13. Available from: http://arxiv.org/abs/1903.05615