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Episode 17 – Lisa Spitzer And Tobias Heycke


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Podcast: ReproducibiliTea Podcast
Episode: Episode 17 – Lisa Spitzer And Tobias Heycke
Episode pub date: 2019-04-16


Episode 17 – Lisa Spitzer And Tobias Heycke

This week we have two special guests, two more awesome ECRs we want you to meet! Lisa Spitzer (@Lisa__Spitzer) and Tobias Heycke (@TobiasHeycke) discuss their project with us – using screen recordings of computerised experimental procedures to assist with reproducibility.

Check out Lisa and Tobias’ preprint: https://psyarxiv.com/rbn8c/
In the interests of being doubly awesome, Lisa and Tobias have a separate tutorial on using Open Broadcaster Software (OBS) for the screen recording of your tasks: osf.io/3twe9

Music Credit: Be Jammin – Alexander Nakarada
freepd.com/world.php

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Scott Robertson on missing tenure, persevering, and connecting to mission & community


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Podcast: Changing Academic Life
Episode: Scott Robertson on missing tenure, persevering, and connecting to mission & community
Episode pub date: 2017-07-27


Scott Robertson comes from a psychology and cognitive science background and is now a Professor in the Information and Computer Sciences Department at the University of Hawaii at Manoa. Scott shares the experiences of being rejected for tenure twice and how he dealt with that. His story is one of perseverance and courage, doing what you care about, and the importance of mentors and being part of a community. He is now in a tenured position and enjoying the freedom to follow his mission around civic engagement and to get back to acting.

UPDATE: Scott has just been made Chair of his department! So not getting tenure is definitely not the end of a story!

“You have to do what you care about”

“So [failure/rejection] is survivable, not just survivable but also then you can go on to the next thing and make the best of whatever situation you are in.”

 “[Don’t] define yourself by your position or your affiliation [but] by your mission in life.”

Related Links

Scott Robertson – https://www2.hawaii.edu/~scottpr/

Art Graesser – https://art.graesser.us

Gary Olson – https://garymolson.com

Jack Carroll – https://ist.psu.edu/directory/faculty/jmc56

Mary-Beth Rossen – https://mrosson.ist.psu.edu

CHI2017 Career Development Symposium – https://chi2017.acm.org/careerdev.html

CHI Stories – https://chi2017.acm.org/stories.html

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24 – How to Create High Quality Human Interaction in Your Research Group


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Podcast: Helium
Episode: 24 – How to Create High Quality Human Interaction in Your Research Group
Episode pub date: 2019-04-23

Is it possible that graduate school transformed you into a less human version of yourself? Are you prepared to handle all humans that will be in your care as an advisor to your students? Are you prepared to take care of yourself properly so you can help others maximize their potential? If you said maybe to any of these questions this episode is for you. Dr. Antes joined us to help us rehumanize ourselves and our relationships to our lab groups. It is not complicated but she lays out some key steps we all need to build into our weeks to be better at creating connections with others.

The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Christine Ogilvie Hendren and Matt Hotze, which is the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Listen Notes, Inc.

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UnDisciplined: The Tropical Biologist And The Quantitative Ecologist


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Podcast: UnDisciplined
Episode: UnDisciplined: The Tropical Biologist And The Quantitative Ecologist
Episode pub date: 2019-04-05


This week on UnDisciplined, we’re talking about some pretty scary things. First, we’re going to chat about the way global warming is impacting the world’s fisheries and — spoiler alert — it isn’t good. Then, we’re going to talk about what happens when small vertebrates go to war with really big invertebrates and — another spolier alert — it’s the stuff of nightmares. Joining us from the University of California at Santa Barbara is Chris Free , who was part of a team of researchers whose recent

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Trusting Our Machines — Neera Jain


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Podcast: Parsing Science: The unpublished stories behind the world’s most compelling science, as told by the researchers themselves.
Episode: Trusting Our Machines — Neera Jain
Episode pub date: 2019-04-02


Might enabling computational aids to “self-correct” when they’re out of sync with people be a path toward their exhibition of recognizably intelligent behavior? In episode 46, Neera Jain from Purdue University discusses in her experiments into monitoring our trust in AI’s abilities so as to drive us more safely, care for our grandparents, and do work that’s just too dangerous for humans. Her article “Computational Modeling of the Dynamics of Human Trust During Human–Machine Interactions” was published on October 23, 2018 in IEEE Transactions on Human-Machine Systems and was co-authored with Wan-Lin Hu, Kumar Akash, and Tahira Reid.


 

Websites and other resources

“The robot trust tightrope”
The Jain Lab
REID Lab
“A Classification Model for Sensing Human Trust in Machines Using EEG and GSR”

Bonus Clips
Patrons of Parsing Science gain exclusive access to bonus clips from all our episodes and can also download mp3s of every individual episode.
Support us for as little as $1 per month at Patreon. Cancel anytime.

 

Patrons can access bonus content here.

Please note that we aren’t a tax-exempt organization, so unfortunately gifts aren’t tax deductible.
Hosts / Producers
Ryan Watkins & Doug Leigh
How to Cite
Coming soon.
Music
What’s The Angle? by Shane Ivers
Transcript
Coming soon!

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Episode 57: Experimenting with Crowdfunding


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Podcast: Science: Disrupt
Episode: Episode 57: Experimenting with Crowdfunding
Episode pub date: 2018-07-17

This week we chat to Cindy Wu and Denny Luan, co-founders of Experiment, the science crowdfunding platform. 

We talk about the underappreciated power of small chunks of funding in science, different methods of sharing science, and bonding over super-smash bros.

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Beyond the Clicks: Getting the Most out of Big Data


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Podcast: Knowledge@Wharton
Episode: Beyond the Clicks: Getting the Most out of Big Data
Episode pub date: 2019-04-19


Recent Wharton research aims to help companies navigate the complicated waters of Big Data by offering a better way to use predictive analytics.

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74: Seeing double (with Elisabeth Bik)


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Podcast: Everything Hertz
Episode: 74: Seeing double (with Elisabeth Bik)
Episode pub date: 2018-12-19


In this episode, Dan and James chat with microbiologist Elisabeth Bik about about the detection of problematic images in scientific papers, the state of microbiome research, and making the jump from academia to industry.

More info on what they cover:

– How Elisabeth get into error detection of scientific images
– The process of detecting errors in images
– How groups of authors tend to publish multiple papers with problematic images
– The association between journal prestige and problematic images
– Providing monetary incentives for publications
– Making the jump from academia to industry
– The current state of microbiome research

Links
– Patreon: www.patreon.com/hertzpodcast
– Elisabeth on Twitter:  www.twitter.com/microbiomdigest
– Elisabeth online: https://microbiomedigest.com
– The problematic image paper: https://mbio.asm.org/content/7/3/e00809-16.short
– Pubpeer: https://pubpeer.com
– Dan on twitter: www.twitter.com/dsquintana
– James on twitter: www.twitter.com/jamesheathers
– Everything Hertz on twitter: www.twitter.com/hertzpodcast
– Everything Hertz on Facebook: www.facebook.com/everythinghertzpodcast/

Music credits: Lee Rosevere freemusicarchive.org/music/Lee_Rosevere/
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