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Re: A guide to reproducible research papers
From: |
Ludovic Courtès |
Subject: |
Re: A guide to reproducible research papers |
Date: |
Thu, 29 Jun 2023 12:54:15 +0200 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/28.2 (gnu/linux) |
Ciao Giovanni,
Giovanni Biscuolo <giovanni@biscuolo.net> skribis:
> You mentioned this citation from Jon Claerbout:
>
> Published documents are merely the advertisement of scholarship whereas
> the computer programs, input data, parameter values, etc. embody the
> scholarship itself.
>
> and I was very curious about the source: I found that's a citation from
> the abstract of «Making scientc computations reproducible» (Matthias
> Schwab , Martin Karrenbach, Jon Claerbout, Published 2000) [1]
Right, I found this one but couldn’t find precisely the original source
(I spent quite a while looking for it and eventually gave up).
> Nevertheless, the first occurrence of a similar statement by Jon
> Claerbout is in a talk named «Seventeen years of super computing and
> other problems in seismology» dated Oct 2 1994, precisely in the section
> about "Technology transfer and research reproducibility" [2]
>
>
> In engineering, a published paper is an advertisement of scholarship but
> the electronic document can be the scholarship itself. Forty years ago
> data were "pencil marks on paper" and theory was some Greek
> symbols. Then paper documents were adequate. No more. Now we need
> electronic documents.
>
> Just to add a little bit of history of computational reproducibility of
> research.
[...]
> [2]
> https://sepwww.stanford.edu/sep/jon/nrc.html#Technology%20transfer%20and%20research%20reproducibility
Excellent, thank you for sharing!
The takeaway here is that there’s nothing new: we’re probably going
further in implementing these ideas and adapting them to current
practices, but the core issue was already well documented 25+ years ago.
Ludo’.