We are committed to practicing and teaching experiential ethical open science research practices.
All research presented in this book has an Open Science Foundation project which allows public access to the research pre-registration, materials, data, analysis code, and poster.
"Open Science is a collection of actions designed to make scientific processes more transparent and results more accessible. Its goal is to build a more replicable and robust science; it does so using new technologies, altering incentives, and changing attitudes. The current movement towards open science was spurred, in part, by a recent “series of unfortunate events” within psychology and other sciences. These events include the large number of studies that have failed to replicate and the prevalence of common research and publication procedures that could explain why. Many journals and funding agencies now encourage, require, or reward some open science practices, including pre-registration, providing full materials, posting data, distinguishing between exploratory and confirmatory analyses, and running replication studies." (Open Science: What, Why, and How)
Open science supports ethical science with transparency of research predictions, materials, data, and analyses. This added accountability reduces scientific misconduct and increases the speed of science of knowledge acquisition. It allows equitable access to science to allow replication, further scientific inquiry, and the ability for anyone to access the information for personal or scientific gain.
We teach open science and value the contributions of the community. All research presented in this book was pre-registered and has an Open Science Foundation project which allows public access to the research pre-registration, materials, data, analysis code, and poster.
Please visit the Open Science Foundation for more information!