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* A manuscript on "reproducible research" introducing org-mode
@ 2011-09-05 13:55 Christophe Pouzat
  2011-09-05 17:41 ` Thomas S. Dye
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 12+ messages in thread
From: Christophe Pouzat @ 2011-09-05 13:55 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: emacs-orgmode

Dear all,

M. Delescluse, R. Franconville, S. Joucla, T. Lieury and myself (C.  
Pouzat) have just put a manuscript entitled: "Making  
neurophysiological data analysis reproducible. Why and how?" on a  
pre-print server: http://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00591455/fr/
Although the paper has been written for a neurobiological journal, the  
reader does not have to be a neuroscientist to read and understand it.  
A toy example illustrating the use of org-mode + Babel (with Python  
and Octave) takes a fair part of the manuscript. Other tools like R +  
Sweave are presented and many more are mentioned.

I thank Eric Schulte for comments on the manuscript and Eric (again)  
together with the whole org-mode / Babel community for developing such  
a great tool.

Any comment, remark, suggestion on the manuscript is of course welcome.

Christophe

Most people are not natural-born statisticians. Left to our own  
devices we are not very good at picking out patterns from a sea of  
noisy data. To put it another way, we are all too good at picking out  
non-existent patterns that happen to suit our purposes.
Bradley Efron & Robert Tibshirani (1993) An Introduction to the Bootstrap

--

Christophe Pouzat
Laboratoire de Physiologie Cerebrale
CNRS UMR 8118
UFR biomedicale de l'Universite Paris-Descartes
45, rue des Saints Peres
75006 PARIS
France

tel: +33 (0)1 42 86 38 28
fax: +33 (0)1 42 86 38 30
mobile: +33 (0)6 62 94 10 34
web: http://www.biomedicale.univ-paris5.fr/physcerv/C_Pouzat.html

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread

* Re: A manuscript on "reproducible research" introducing org-mode
  2011-09-05 13:55 A manuscript on "reproducible research" introducing org-mode Christophe Pouzat
@ 2011-09-05 17:41 ` Thomas S. Dye
  2011-09-08 10:06   ` Christophe Pouzat
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 12+ messages in thread
From: Thomas S. Dye @ 2011-09-05 17:41 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christophe Pouzat; +Cc: emacs-orgmode

Christophe Pouzat <christophe.pouzat@parisdescartes.fr> writes:

> Dear all,
>
> M. Delescluse, R. Franconville, S. Joucla, T. Lieury and myself (C.
> Pouzat) have just put a manuscript entitled: "Making
> neurophysiological data analysis reproducible. Why and how?" on a
> pre-print server: http://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00591455/fr/
> Although the paper has been written for a neurobiological journal, the
> reader does not have to be a neuroscientist to read and understand it.
> A toy example illustrating the use of org-mode + Babel (with Python
> and Octave) takes a fair part of the manuscript. Other tools like R +
> Sweave are presented and many more are mentioned.
>
> I thank Eric Schulte for comments on the manuscript and Eric (again)
> together with the whole org-mode / Babel community for developing such
> a great tool.
>
> Any comment, remark, suggestion on the manuscript is of course welcome.
>
> Christophe
>
> Most people are not natural-born statisticians. Left to our own
> devices we are not very good at picking out patterns from a sea of
> noisy data. To put it another way, we are all too good at picking out
> non-existent patterns that happen to suit our purposes.
> Bradley Efron & Robert Tibshirani (1993) An Introduction to the Bootstrap
>
> --
>
> Christophe Pouzat
> Laboratoire de Physiologie Cerebrale
> CNRS UMR 8118
> UFR biomedicale de l'Universite Paris-Descartes
> 45, rue des Saints Peres
> 75006 PARIS
> France
>
> tel: +33 (0)1 42 86 38 28
> fax: +33 (0)1 42 86 38 30
> mobile: +33 (0)6 62 94 10 34
> web: http://www.biomedicale.univ-paris5.fr/physcerv/C_Pouzat.html
>
>
>
Aloha Christophe,

Thank you for an interesting and useful paper.  I was happy with the
distinction you draw between reproducible analysis and reproducible
research, which certainly applies to my field of archaeology where
unique sites are typically destroyed by the data collection effort.  I
also think the emphasis you place on data preprocessing is just the
right approach; inclusion of the raw data in a reproducible analysis
opens up many possibilities, which must be a benefit to a scientific
community's pursuit of knowledge.

May I offer a suggestion?  Carsten Dominik published the Org Mode 7
Manual last year and it would be nice to see it cited in your paper.

@book{dominik10:_org_mode_refer_manual,
  author =       {Carsten Dominik},
  title =        {The Org Mode 7 Reference Manual: Organize Your Life
  with GNU Emacs},
  publisher =    {Network Theory Ltd.},
  year =         2010
}

All the best,
Tom
-- 
Thomas S. Dye
http://www.tsdye.com

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread

* Re: A manuscript on "reproducible research" introducing org-mode
  2011-09-05 17:41 ` Thomas S. Dye
@ 2011-09-08 10:06   ` Christophe Pouzat
  2012-02-15 19:36     ` Thomas S. Dye
  2012-02-15 19:52     ` Samuel Wales
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 12+ messages in thread
From: Christophe Pouzat @ 2011-09-08 10:06 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Thomas S. Dye; +Cc: emacs-orgmode

"Thomas S. Dye" <tsd@tsdye.com> a écrit&nbsp;:

> Christophe Pouzat <christophe.pouzat@parisdescartes.fr> writes:
>
>> Dear all,
>>
>> M. Delescluse, R. Franconville, S. Joucla, T. Lieury and myself (C.
>> Pouzat) have just put a manuscript entitled: "Making
>> neurophysiological data analysis reproducible. Why and how?" on a
>> pre-print server: http://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00591455/fr/
>> Although the paper has been written for a neurobiological journal, the
>> reader does not have to be a neuroscientist to read and understand it.
>> A toy example illustrating the use of org-mode + Babel (with Python
>> and Octave) takes a fair part of the manuscript. Other tools like R +
>> Sweave are presented and many more are mentioned.
>>
>> I thank Eric Schulte for comments on the manuscript and Eric (again)
>> together with the whole org-mode / Babel community for developing such
>> a great tool.
>>
>> Any comment, remark, suggestion on the manuscript is of course welcome.
>>
>> Christophe
>>

> Aloha Christophe,
>
> Thank you for an interesting and useful paper.  I was happy with the
> distinction you draw between reproducible analysis and reproducible
> research, which certainly applies to my field of archaeology where
> unique sites are typically destroyed by the data collection effort.  I
> also think the emphasis you place on data preprocessing is just the
> right approach; inclusion of the raw data in a reproducible analysis
> opens up many possibilities, which must be a benefit to a scientific
> community's pursuit of knowledge.
>
> May I offer a suggestion?  Carsten Dominik published the Org Mode 7
> Manual last year and it would be nice to see it cited in your paper.
>
> @book{dominik10:_org_mode_refer_manual,
>   author =       {Carsten Dominik},
>   title =        {The Org Mode 7 Reference Manual: Organize Your Life
>   with GNU Emacs},
>   publisher =    {Network Theory Ltd.},
>   year =         2010
> }
>
> All the best,
> Tom
> --
> Thomas S. Dye
> http://www.tsdye.com
>

Dear Tom,

Thanks for these interesting and positive comments. I apologize for  
forgetting the obvious reference to Carsten's reference manual. I will  
definitely include it in the next version.
I hope that people in my field will come to think the way you do about  
sharing their raw data. I'm just afraid that the way is still long…  
but the goal is reachable. Raw data aside, org-mode is surely a tool  
which should help people experimenting with the "reproducible research  
paradigm". As I wrote to Eric (Schulte), M. Delescluse and I wrote a  
first RR manuscript 6 years ago based on R/Sweave. The manuscript  
never got submitted for different reasons, among them, the amount of  
work required to learn R and LaTeX. Learning about org-mode convinced  
me that it would be worth re-activating the project.

Christophe

Most people are not natural-born statisticians. Left to our own  
devices we are not very good at picking out patterns from a sea of  
noisy data. To put it another way, we are all too good at picking out  
non-existent patterns that happen to suit our purposes.
Bradley Efron & Robert Tibshirani (1993) An Introduction to the Bootstrap

--

Christophe Pouzat
Laboratoire de Physiologie Cerebrale
CNRS UMR 8118
UFR biomedicale de l'Universite Paris-Descartes
45, rue des Saints Peres
75006 PARIS
France

tel: +33 (0)1 42 86 38 28
fax: +33 (0)1 42 86 38 30
mobile: +33 (0)6 62 94 10 34
web: http://www.biomedicale.univ-paris5.fr/physcerv/C_Pouzat.html

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread

* Re: A manuscript on "reproducible research" introducing org-mode
  2011-09-08 10:06   ` Christophe Pouzat
@ 2012-02-15 19:36     ` Thomas S. Dye
  2012-02-15 20:40       ` Christophe Pouzat
  2012-02-15 19:52     ` Samuel Wales
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 12+ messages in thread
From: Thomas S. Dye @ 2012-02-15 19:36 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christophe Pouzat; +Cc: emacs-orgmode

Aloha Christophe,

Has this article appeared in print?  If so, can you forward publication
details? 

All the best,
Tom

Christophe Pouzat <christophe.pouzat@parisdescartes.fr> writes:

> "Thomas S. Dye" <tsd@tsdye.com> a écrit&nbsp;:
>
>> Christophe Pouzat <christophe.pouzat@parisdescartes.fr> writes:
>>
>>> Dear all,
>>>
>>> M. Delescluse, R. Franconville, S. Joucla, T. Lieury and myself (C.
>>> Pouzat) have just put a manuscript entitled: "Making
>>> neurophysiological data analysis reproducible. Why and how?" on a
>>> pre-print server: http://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00591455/fr/
>>> Although the paper has been written for a neurobiological journal, the
>>> reader does not have to be a neuroscientist to read and understand it.
>>> A toy example illustrating the use of org-mode + Babel (with Python
>>> and Octave) takes a fair part of the manuscript. Other tools like R +
>>> Sweave are presented and many more are mentioned.
>>>
>>> I thank Eric Schulte for comments on the manuscript and Eric (again)
>>> together with the whole org-mode / Babel community for developing such
>>> a great tool.
>>>
>>> Any comment, remark, suggestion on the manuscript is of course welcome.
>>>
>>> Christophe
>>>
>
>> Aloha Christophe,
>>
>> Thank you for an interesting and useful paper.  I was happy with the
>> distinction you draw between reproducible analysis and reproducible
>> research, which certainly applies to my field of archaeology where
>> unique sites are typically destroyed by the data collection effort.  I
>> also think the emphasis you place on data preprocessing is just the
>> right approach; inclusion of the raw data in a reproducible analysis
>> opens up many possibilities, which must be a benefit to a scientific
>> community's pursuit of knowledge.
>>
>> May I offer a suggestion?  Carsten Dominik published the Org Mode 7
>> Manual last year and it would be nice to see it cited in your paper.
>>
>> @book{dominik10:_org_mode_refer_manual,
>>   author =       {Carsten Dominik},
>>   title =        {The Org Mode 7 Reference Manual: Organize Your Life
>>   with GNU Emacs},
>>   publisher =    {Network Theory Ltd.},
>>   year =         2010
>> }
>>
>> All the best,
>> Tom
>> --
>> Thomas S. Dye
>> http://www.tsdye.com
>>
>
> Dear Tom,
>
> Thanks for these interesting and positive comments. I apologize for
> forgetting the obvious reference to Carsten's reference manual. I will
> definitely include it in the next version.
> I hope that people in my field will come to think the way you do about
> sharing their raw data. I'm just afraid that the way is still long…
> but the goal is reachable. Raw data aside, org-mode is surely a tool
> which should help people experimenting with the "reproducible research
> paradigm". As I wrote to Eric (Schulte), M. Delescluse and I wrote a
> first RR manuscript 6 years ago based on R/Sweave. The manuscript
> never got submitted for different reasons, among them, the amount of
> work required to learn R and LaTeX. Learning about org-mode convinced
> me that it would be worth re-activating the project.
>
> Christophe
>
> Most people are not natural-born statisticians. Left to our own
> devices we are not very good at picking out patterns from a sea of
> noisy data. To put it another way, we are all too good at picking out
> non-existent patterns that happen to suit our purposes.
> Bradley Efron & Robert Tibshirani (1993) An Introduction to the Bootstrap
>
> --
>
> Christophe Pouzat
> Laboratoire de Physiologie Cerebrale
> CNRS UMR 8118
> UFR biomedicale de l'Universite Paris-Descartes
> 45, rue des Saints Peres
> 75006 PARIS
> France
>
> tel: +33 (0)1 42 86 38 28
> fax: +33 (0)1 42 86 38 30
> mobile: +33 (0)6 62 94 10 34
> web: http://www.biomedicale.univ-paris5.fr/physcerv/C_Pouzat.html
>

-- 
Thomas S. Dye
http://www.tsdye.com

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread

* Re: A manuscript on "reproducible research" introducing org-mode
  2011-09-08 10:06   ` Christophe Pouzat
  2012-02-15 19:36     ` Thomas S. Dye
@ 2012-02-15 19:52     ` Samuel Wales
  2012-02-16 20:24       ` Stephen Eglen
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 12+ messages in thread
From: Samuel Wales @ 2012-02-15 19:52 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christophe Pouzat; +Cc: emacs-orgmode

I applaud all of this.  Raw data need to be made available by default
(with only a few exceptions).  Org can help people reproduce all of
the succeeding steps also.

Another aspect is fraud, which is rampant.  A psychologist in Europe
recently accused of fraud was said to have been able to guard his raw
data from all colleagues for *ten years*.

His method?  Get angry at the requester.

Samuel

-- 
The Kafka Pandemic: http://thekafkapandemic.blogspot.com

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread

* Re: A manuscript on "reproducible research" introducing org-mode
  2012-02-15 19:36     ` Thomas S. Dye
@ 2012-02-15 20:40       ` Christophe Pouzat
  2012-02-16  8:58         ` Jambunathan K
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 12+ messages in thread
From: Christophe Pouzat @ 2012-02-15 20:40 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Thomas S. Dye; +Cc: Christophe Pouzat, emacs-orgmode

[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 478 bytes --]

Aloha Tom,

Not yet in print, still on the accepted papers list
(http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/aip/09284257), sorry. It
seems that I chose the "slowest" neuroscience journal!

Your JSS paper of last month (with Eric, Dan and Carsten) is great by
the way. It seems that I missed the announcements on the list when the
pre-print was posted, otherwise I would have managed to cite it in mine.

The bibtex entry for my paper (just downloaded from Elsevier site) is:


[-- Attachment #2: Delescluse+:2012.bib --]
[-- Type: text/x-bibtex, Size: 1999 bytes --]

@article{Delescluse2011,
title = "Making neurophysiological data analysis reproducible: Why and how?",
journal = "Journal of Physiology-Paris",
volume = "",
number = "0",
pages = " - ",
year = "2011",
note = "",
issn = "0928-4257",
doi = "10.1016/j.jphysparis.2011.09.011",
url = "http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0928425711000374",
author = "Matthieu Delescluse and Romain Franconville and Sébastien Joucla and Tiffany Lieury and Christophe Pouzat",
keywords = "Software",
keywords = "R",
keywords = "Emacs",
keywords = "Matlab",
keywords = "Octave",
keywords = "LATEX",
keywords = "Org-mode",
keywords = "Python",
abstract = "Reproducible data analysis is an approach aiming at complementing classical printed scientific articles with everything required to independently reproduce the results they present. “Everything” covers here: the data, the computer codes and a precise description of how the code was applied to the data. A brief history of this approach is presented first, starting with what economists have been calling replication since the early eighties to end with what is now called reproducible research in computational data analysis oriented fields like statistics and signal processing. Since efficient tools are instrumental for a routine implementation of these approaches, a description of some of the available ones is presented next. A toy example demonstrates then the use of two open source software programs for reproducible data analysis: the “Sweave family” and the org-mode of emacs. The former is bound to R while the latter can be used with R, Matlab, Python and many more “generalist” data processing software. Both solutions can be used with Unix-like, Windows and Mac families of operating systems. It is argued that neuroscientists could communicate much more efficiently their results by adopting the reproducible research paradigm from their lab books all the way to their articles, thesis and books."
}


[-- Attachment #3: Type: text/plain, Size: 4768 bytes --]


I will post on the list the "official" bibliographic reference as soon
as the paper is in print.

Take care,

Christophe  


tsd@tsdye.com (Thomas S. Dye) writes:

> Aloha Christophe,
>
> Has this article appeared in print?  If so, can you forward publication
> details? 
>
> All the best,
> Tom
>
> Christophe Pouzat <christophe.pouzat@parisdescartes.fr> writes:
>
>> "Thomas S. Dye" <tsd@tsdye.com> a écrit&nbsp;:
>>
>>> Christophe Pouzat <christophe.pouzat@parisdescartes.fr> writes:
>>>
>>>> Dear all,
>>>>
>>>> M. Delescluse, R. Franconville, S. Joucla, T. Lieury and myself (C.
>>>> Pouzat) have just put a manuscript entitled: "Making
>>>> neurophysiological data analysis reproducible. Why and how?" on a
>>>> pre-print server: http://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00591455/fr/
>>>> Although the paper has been written for a neurobiological journal, the
>>>> reader does not have to be a neuroscientist to read and understand it.
>>>> A toy example illustrating the use of org-mode + Babel (with Python
>>>> and Octave) takes a fair part of the manuscript. Other tools like R +
>>>> Sweave are presented and many more are mentioned.
>>>>
>>>> I thank Eric Schulte for comments on the manuscript and Eric (again)
>>>> together with the whole org-mode / Babel community for developing such
>>>> a great tool.
>>>>
>>>> Any comment, remark, suggestion on the manuscript is of course welcome.
>>>>
>>>> Christophe
>>>>
>>
>>> Aloha Christophe,
>>>
>>> Thank you for an interesting and useful paper.  I was happy with the
>>> distinction you draw between reproducible analysis and reproducible
>>> research, which certainly applies to my field of archaeology where
>>> unique sites are typically destroyed by the data collection effort.  I
>>> also think the emphasis you place on data preprocessing is just the
>>> right approach; inclusion of the raw data in a reproducible analysis
>>> opens up many possibilities, which must be a benefit to a scientific
>>> community's pursuit of knowledge.
>>>
>>> May I offer a suggestion?  Carsten Dominik published the Org Mode 7
>>> Manual last year and it would be nice to see it cited in your paper.
>>>
>>> @book{dominik10:_org_mode_refer_manual,
>>>   author =       {Carsten Dominik},
>>>   title =        {The Org Mode 7 Reference Manual: Organize Your Life
>>>   with GNU Emacs},
>>>   publisher =    {Network Theory Ltd.},
>>>   year =         2010
>>> }
>>>
>>> All the best,
>>> Tom
>>> --
>>> Thomas S. Dye
>>> http://www.tsdye.com
>>>
>>
>> Dear Tom,
>>
>> Thanks for these interesting and positive comments. I apologize for
>> forgetting the obvious reference to Carsten's reference manual. I will
>> definitely include it in the next version.
>> I hope that people in my field will come to think the way you do about
>> sharing their raw data. I'm just afraid that the way is still long…
>> but the goal is reachable. Raw data aside, org-mode is surely a tool
>> which should help people experimenting with the "reproducible research
>> paradigm". As I wrote to Eric (Schulte), M. Delescluse and I wrote a
>> first RR manuscript 6 years ago based on R/Sweave. The manuscript
>> never got submitted for different reasons, among them, the amount of
>> work required to learn R and LaTeX. Learning about org-mode convinced
>> me that it would be worth re-activating the project.
>>
>> Christophe
>>
>> Most people are not natural-born statisticians. Left to our own
>> devices we are not very good at picking out patterns from a sea of
>> noisy data. To put it another way, we are all too good at picking out
>> non-existent patterns that happen to suit our purposes.
>> Bradley Efron & Robert Tibshirani (1993) An Introduction to the Bootstrap
>>
>> --
>>
>> Christophe Pouzat
>> Laboratoire de Physiologie Cerebrale
>> CNRS UMR 8118
>> UFR biomedicale de l'Universite Paris-Descartes
>> 45, rue des Saints Peres
>> 75006 PARIS
>> France
>>
>> tel: +33 (0)1 42 86 38 28
>> fax: +33 (0)1 42 86 38 30
>> mobile: +33 (0)6 62 94 10 34
>> web: http://www.biomedicale.univ-paris5.fr/physcerv/C_Pouzat.html
>>

-- 

Most people are not natural-born statisticians. Left to our own
devices we are not very good at picking out patterns from a sea of
noisy data. To put it another way, we are all too good at picking out
non-existent patterns that happen to suit our purposes.
Bradley Efron & Robert Tibshirani (1993) An Introduction to the Bootstrap

--

Christophe Pouzat
MAP5 - Mathématiques Appliquées à Paris 5
CNRS UMR 8145
45, rue des Saints-Pères
75006 PARIS
France

tel: +33142863828
mobile: +33662941034
web: http://www.biomedicale.univ-paris5.fr/physcerv/C_Pouzat.html

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread

* Re: A manuscript on "reproducible research" introducing org-mode
  2012-02-15 20:40       ` Christophe Pouzat
@ 2012-02-16  8:58         ` Jambunathan K
  2012-02-16  9:21           ` Christophe Pouzat
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 12+ messages in thread
From: Jambunathan K @ 2012-02-16  8:58 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Christophe Pouzat; +Cc: Christophe Pouzat, emacs-orgmode

Christophe

I see an ODT file in there - LFPdetection_in.odt
http://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00591455/

May I ask how the document was produced. 

Do you have any insights on how the Org's ODT exporter performs wrt your
input Org file. Just curious.

> @article{Delescluse2011,
> title = "Making neurophysiological data analysis reproducible: Why and how?",
> journal = "Journal of Physiology-Paris",
> volume = "",
> number = "0",
> pages = " - ",
> year = "2011",
> note = "",
> issn = "0928-4257",
> doi = "10.1016/j.jphysparis.2011.09.011",
> url = "http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0928425711000374",
> author = "Matthieu Delescluse and Romain Franconville and Sébastien Joucla and Tiffany Lieury and Christophe Pouzat",
> keywords = "Software",
> keywords = "R",
> keywords = "Emacs",
> keywords = "Matlab",
> keywords = "Octave",
> keywords = "LATEX",
> keywords = "Org-mode",
> keywords = "Python",
> abstract = "Reproducible data analysis is an approach aiming at complementing classical printed scientific articles with everything required to independently reproduce the results they present. “Everything” covers here: the data, the computer codes and a precise description of how the code was applied to the data. A brief history of this approach is presented first, starting with what economists have been calling replication since the early eighties to end with what is now called reproducible research in computational data analysis oriented fields like statistics and signal processing. Since efficient tools are instrumental for a routine implementation of these approaches, a description of some of the available ones is presented next. A toy example demonstrates then the use of two open source software programs for reproducible data analysis: the “Sweave family” and the org-mode of emacs. The former is bound to R while the latter can be used with R, Matlab, Python and many more “generalist” data processing software. Both solutions can be used with Unix-like, Windows and Mac families of operating systems. It is argued that neuroscientists could communicate much more efficiently their results by adopting the reproducible research paradigm from their lab books all the way to their articles, thesis and books."
> }
-- 

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread

* Re: A manuscript on "reproducible research" introducing org-mode
  2012-02-16  8:58         ` Jambunathan K
@ 2012-02-16  9:21           ` Christophe Pouzat
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 12+ messages in thread
From: Christophe Pouzat @ 2012-02-16  9:21 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Jambunathan K; +Cc: Christophe Pouzat, emacs-orgmode

Hello Jambunathan,

The ODT version was prepared "by hand" using LibreOffice. This was
written (last May) before your org-odt functions became part of org-mode
(if I'm right). I would now also do it with org-mode.

Christophe 

Jambunathan K <kjambunathan@gmail.com> writes:

> Christophe
>
> I see an ODT file in there - LFPdetection_in.odt
> http://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00591455/
>
> May I ask how the document was produced. 
>
> Do you have any insights on how the Org's ODT exporter performs wrt your
> input Org file. Just curious.
>
>> @article{Delescluse2011,
>> title = "Making neurophysiological data analysis reproducible: Why and how?",
>> journal = "Journal of Physiology-Paris",
>> volume = "",
>> number = "0",
>> pages = " - ",
>> year = "2011",
>> note = "",
>> issn = "0928-4257",
>> doi = "10.1016/j.jphysparis.2011.09.011",
>> url = "http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0928425711000374",
>> author = "Matthieu Delescluse and Romain Franconville and Sébastien Joucla and Tiffany Lieury and Christophe Pouzat",
>> keywords = "Software",
>> keywords = "R",
>> keywords = "Emacs",
>> keywords = "Matlab",
>> keywords = "Octave",
>> keywords = "LATEX",
>> keywords = "Org-mode",
>> keywords = "Python",
>> abstract = "Reproducible data analysis is an approach aiming at complementing classical printed scientific articles with everything required to independently reproduce the results they present. “Everything” covers here: the data, the computer codes and a precise description of how the code was applied to the data. A brief history of this approach is presented first, starting with what economists have been calling replication since the early eighties to end with what is now called reproducible research in computational data analysis oriented fields like statistics and signal processing. Since efficient tools are instrumental for a routine implementation of these approaches, a description of some of the available ones is presented next. A toy example demonstrates then the use of two open source software programs for reproducible data analysis: the “Sweave family” and the org-mode of emacs. The former is bound to R while the latter can be used with R, Matlab, Python and many more “generalist” data processing software. Both solutions can be used with Unix-like, Windows and Mac families of operating systems. It is argued that neuroscientists could communicate much more efficiently their results by adopting the reproducible research paradigm from their lab books all the way to their articles, thesis and books."
>> }

-- 

Most people are not natural-born statisticians. Left to our own
devices we are not very good at picking out patterns from a sea of
noisy data. To put it another way, we are all too good at picking out
non-existent patterns that happen to suit our purposes.
Bradley Efron & Robert Tibshirani (1993) An Introduction to the Bootstrap

--

Christophe Pouzat
MAP5 - Mathématiques Appliquées à Paris 5
CNRS UMR 8145
45, rue des Saints-Pères
75006 PARIS
France

tel: +33142863828
mobile: +33662941034
web: http://www.biomedicale.univ-paris5.fr/physcerv/C_Pouzat.html

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread

* Re: A manuscript on "reproducible research" introducing org-mode
  2012-02-15 19:52     ` Samuel Wales
@ 2012-02-16 20:24       ` Stephen Eglen
  2012-02-16 20:59         ` Samuel Wales
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 12+ messages in thread
From: Stephen Eglen @ 2012-02-16 20:24 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: emacs-orgmode

Samuel Wales <samologist@gmail.com> writes:

> I applaud all of this.  Raw data need to be made available by default
> (with only a few exceptions).  Org can help people reproduce all of
> the succeeding steps also.

Some people on the list might like to see the short (13 min) segment on
Duke University's recent problems with reproducible research

http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=7398476n&tag=contentMain;contentAux


and the heroic efforts to uncover what had been done (37 min):

http://videolectures.net/cancerbioinformatics2010_baggerly_irrh/

Stephen

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread

* Re: A manuscript on "reproducible research" introducing org-mode
  2012-02-16 20:24       ` Stephen Eglen
@ 2012-02-16 20:59         ` Samuel Wales
  2012-02-18 18:13           ` Thomas S. Dye
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 12+ messages in thread
From: Samuel Wales @ 2012-02-16 20:59 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Stephen Eglen; +Cc: emacs-orgmode

As a followup to my last comment, this explains how Stapel
fooled almost everybody and kept raw data hidden:

  http://chronicle.com/blogs/percolator/the-fraud-who-fooled-almost-everyone/27917

And NYT "Fraud Case Seen as a Red Flag for Psychology
Research" which has a raw data take:

  http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/03/health/research/noted-dutch-psychologist-stapel-accused-of-research-fraud.html

Thanks for the videos, Stephen, I will check them out.

I have been running across scads of fraud stories and interesting
studies on conflict of interest, reliability of research results, etc.
 It's all over the place, just scattered and nobody pays much
attention, perhaps not wanting to believe it.

Reproducible research aims directly at this stuff.  Chapeau!

Samuel

-- 
The Kafka Pandemic: http://thekafkapandemic.blogspot.com

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread

* Re: A manuscript on "reproducible research" introducing org-mode
  2012-02-16 20:59         ` Samuel Wales
@ 2012-02-18 18:13           ` Thomas S. Dye
  2012-02-19  1:59             ` Rasmus
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 12+ messages in thread
From: Thomas S. Dye @ 2012-02-18 18:13 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Samuel Wales; +Cc: emacs-orgmode, Stephen Eglen

Samuel Wales <samologist@gmail.com> writes:

> As a followup to my last comment, this explains how Stapel
> fooled almost everybody and kept raw data hidden:
>
>   http://chronicle.com/blogs/percolator/the-fraud-who-fooled-almost-everyone/27917
>
> And NYT "Fraud Case Seen as a Red Flag for Psychology
> Research" which has a raw data take:
>
>   http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/03/health/research/noted-dutch-psychologist-stapel-accused-of-research-fraud.html
>
> Thanks for the videos, Stephen, I will check them out.
>
> I have been running across scads of fraud stories and interesting
> studies on conflict of interest, reliability of research results, etc.
>  It's all over the place, just scattered and nobody pays much
> attention, perhaps not wanting to believe it.
>
> Reproducible research aims directly at this stuff.  Chapeau!
>
> Samuel
I just ran across this article on reproducible research that some of you
might find interesting.

http://journal.r-project.org/archive/2011-2/RJournal_2011-2_Lundholm.pdf

All the best,
Tom
-- 
Thomas S. Dye
http://www.tsdye.com

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread

* Re: A manuscript on "reproducible research" introducing org-mode
  2012-02-18 18:13           ` Thomas S. Dye
@ 2012-02-19  1:59             ` Rasmus
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 12+ messages in thread
From: Rasmus @ 2012-02-19  1:59 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: emacs-orgmode

tsd@tsdye.com (Thomas S. Dye) writes:

> I just ran across this article on reproducible research that some of you
> might find interesting.
>
> http://journal.r-project.org/archive/2011-2/RJournal_2011-2_Lundholm.pdf

On reproducible research, are you guys aware of the relatively recent
project Knitr?  Basically, it is a new Sweave which integrate (i)
Sweave, (ii) TiKZDevice, (iii) cacheSweave, and (iv) code highlight into
one very well-functioning package. 

It kind of works with Org, but not ideally¹.  It might be nice to
integrate it closer with Babel-R, as it just-worksᵀᴹ.

–Rasmus

Footnotes: 
¹  http://yihui.name/knitr/demo/org/

-- 
Enought with the bla bla!

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~2012-02-19  1:56 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 12+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2011-09-05 13:55 A manuscript on "reproducible research" introducing org-mode Christophe Pouzat
2011-09-05 17:41 ` Thomas S. Dye
2011-09-08 10:06   ` Christophe Pouzat
2012-02-15 19:36     ` Thomas S. Dye
2012-02-15 20:40       ` Christophe Pouzat
2012-02-16  8:58         ` Jambunathan K
2012-02-16  9:21           ` Christophe Pouzat
2012-02-15 19:52     ` Samuel Wales
2012-02-16 20:24       ` Stephen Eglen
2012-02-16 20:59         ` Samuel Wales
2012-02-18 18:13           ` Thomas S. Dye
2012-02-19  1:59             ` Rasmus

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