Notes

1The “reproducibility crisis”, also known as replication or replicability crisis, refers to the observation that a large proportion of scientific studies published across disciplines do not replicate (Open Science Collaboration, 2015). Cf. Framework for Open and Reproducible Research Training (FORRT) Glossary: Reproducibility crisis, https://forrt.org/glossary/reproducibility-crisis-aka-replicab/; Parsons et al., 2022.

2Knowledge Exchange: Open Access, https://www.knowledge-exchange.info/projects/project/open-access

3National Institutes of Health (NIH), https://www.nih.gov/research-training/rigor-reproducibility

4Project TIER Protocol 4.0, https://www.projecttier.org/tier-protocol/protocol-4-0

5The Turing Way community and handbook, https://www.turing.ac.uk/research/research-projects/turing-way

6Research Compendium, https://research-compendium.science/

7Knowledge Exchange: Open Access, https://www.knowledge-exchange.info/projects/project/open-access

8New York University: Research Data Management, https://guides.nyu.edu/data_management; Oregon Health & Science University: Research Data and Reproducibility, https://libguides.ohsu.edu/research-data-services/OHSU/Library

9ReproHack Hub, https://www.reprohack.org/

10ReproducibiliTea, https://reproducibilitea.org/

11The Carpentries, https://carpentries.org/

12UKRN: International Reproducibility Networks, https://www.ukrn.org/international-networks/

13E.g. Cascad, https://www.cascad.tech/, Docker, https://www.docker.com/resources/what-container/, GitHub https://github.com/, GitLab, https://about.gitlab.com/, Binder https://mybinder.org/, Whole Tale https://wholetale.org and ReproZip, https://www.reprozip.org

14Project Jupyter community, https://jupyter.org/community; ROpenSci, https://ropensci.org/