Open Science Office Hours - – NeuroLibre: Reproducible and Executable Preprints
Please see further below for English version
Atelier "NeuroLibre: Pré-publications reproductibles et exécutables"
Mardi, le 17 septembre 2024
12 h 00 – 13 h 00 HNE
Collations incluses !
Centre de communications de Grandpré – Le Neuro et sur Zoom.
Directions
Inscription gratuite :
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Workshop "NeuroLibre: Reproducible and Executable Preprints"
Tuesday, September 17, 2024
12:00 – 1:00 p.m. EST
Snacks included!
de Grandpré Communications Center – The Neuro or join on Zoom.
Directions
Registration is FREE:
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Agâh Karakuzu
Postdoctoral researcher at NeuroPoly Lab, Polytechnique Montreal
Agâh is a postdoctoral researcher at NeuroPoly Lab, Polytechnique Montreal, where he recently obtained his Ph.D. on end-to-end standardization of quantitative MRI methods through the development of vendor-neutral pulse sequences (VENUS), community data standards (qMRI-BIDS), and open-source post-processing workflows (qMRLab). To extend the scope of transparency from scanner to publication, he is leading the development of NeuroLibre, a preprint server for reproducible neuroscience notebooks.
Abstract
The needs of scientific publishing have evolved with the increasing computational complexity behind research articles. Just as authoring tools advanced from typewriters to text editors, it’s time to integrate computation into publications. NeuroLibre is designed for this purpose, enabling reproducible preprints. In this workshop, we’ll explore how to prepare and submit a NeuroLibre preprint, familiarizing ourselves with next-generation authoring tools.
Visit the event for more information.
Contact:
osoh.neuro [at] mcgill.ca
tosi-traineecouncil.neuro [at] mcgill.ca
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Open Science Office Hours (OSOH) is an initiative of the Tanenbaum Open Science Institute (TOSI), led by Neuro trainees, and supported by the McConnell Foundation and the TOSI Trainee Council. We organize events, provide one-on-one support, and curate resources to make it easy for neuroscience researchers at all levels to integrate Open Science practices in their work.
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