05 

Data Quality

Reproducibility and Preservation

Thursday May 25, 2023

2:00-3:30 PM EST | 1:00-2:30 PM CST | 12:00-1:30 PM MST | 11:00-12:30 PM PST

Description

Will data produced today be available in the future? Can the data be replicated?  Kathleen Weldon will explain the steps the Roper Center for Public Opinion Research takes to normalize and preserve data that measures the pulse of the public and the challenges with nontraditional public opinion data.  Lars Vilhuber will discuss what many view as the gold standard for replicability – the American Economic Association.  Kira Lillard (Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City) will share her findings on the state of preservation in top journals.

Registration is closed.

Session Speakers

Kira  Lillard

Technical Services Librarian, Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City

Kira Lillard is a librarian in the Research Division at the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City where she is responsible for researchers’ code and data releases, website administration, and is a member of the Data Governance Committee. She holds a BA from The Colorado College, an MA in Asian Studies from the University of Hawai’I, and an MLS from Emporia State University. Her research interests include web usability, research access and replicability, and universal design. 

Lars Vilhuber

Executive Director, Labor Dynamics Institute, Cornell University School of Industrial and Labor Relations (ILR)

Lars Vilhuber holds a Ph.D. in Economics from Université de Montréal, Canada, and is currently on the faculty of the Cornell University Economics Department. He has interests in labor economics, statistical disclosure limitation and data dissemination, and reproducibility and replicability in the social sciences. He is the Data Editor of the American Economic Association, and Managing Editor of the Journal of Privacy and Confidentiality.

Kathleen Weldon

Director of Data Operations and Communications, Roper Center for Public Opinion Research, Cornell University

Kathleen has managed data collection and management efforts for the non-profit Roper Center for Public Opinion Research since 2016. During that time, she has led the implementation of a new acquisition policy based on a combination of methodological and transparency criteria, enactment of a Transparency Project for all data providers, and development of a bifurcated collection based on methodological evaluations, as well as enhanced presentation of methodological information to aid in the evaluation of historical data files. Most recently, she has directed the development of inclusion policies for building Roper Center-curated trends of polling questions.

Presentation Slide 

2023.05.25_Session05_SlidesFullDeck (website).pptx

Webinar Recording

Audio and Transcription

GMT20230525-175902_Recording.m4a
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Session 5_Cleaned Transcription.pdf

Transcription (Word)

Transcription (PDF)