Friends don't let friends copy and paste: Reproducible, APA-compliant manuscripts with the R package papaja
Author(s) / Creator(s)
Aust, Frederik
Abstract / Description
When psychologists report quantitative results, they routinely engage in copy-paste reporting: statistical results are copied from analysis software and pasted into a word processing program. Copy-paste reporting is tedious: if the analysis approach changes while the manuscript is being written or revised, the copying and pasting begins anew. In addition, copy-paste reporting is error-prone: a significant number of published research articles have inconsistent statistics (Brown & Heathers, 2016; Nuijten et al, 2016; Petrocelli, Clarkson, Whitmire, & Moon, 2013); even when the original data are available, the reported results are often difficult or impossible to reproduce (Artner et al, 2020; Eubank, 2016; Hardwicke et al, 2018; Stodden, Seiler, & Ma, 2018).
Dynamic documents are a time-saving and error-avoiding alternative to copy-paste reporting. By merging manuscript and analysis scripts, dynamic documents automate the reporting of results and ensure that statistics are consistent and up-to-date. At the same time, this makes documenting and reproducing analyses a secondary task. This workshop provides an introduction to the R package papaja, which can be used to create dynamic, submission-ready, APA-compliant manuscripts. Participants will learn how to automate reporting of quantitative results (including tables and graphs) and document formatting.
Persistent Identifier
Date of first publication
2023-01-18
Is part of
PTOS, 2022, online
Publisher
PsychArchives
Citation
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ptos-papaja.pdfAdobe PDF - 4.09MBMD5: b45242a7473305bb7a044d63c5f0d32a
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There are no other versions of this object.
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Aust, Frederik
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PsychArchives acquisition timestamp2023-01-18T10:31:10Z
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Made available on2023-01-18T10:31:10Z
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Date of first publication2023-01-18
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Abstract / DescriptionWhen psychologists report quantitative results, they routinely engage in copy-paste reporting: statistical results are copied from analysis software and pasted into a word processing program. Copy-paste reporting is tedious: if the analysis approach changes while the manuscript is being written or revised, the copying and pasting begins anew. In addition, copy-paste reporting is error-prone: a significant number of published research articles have inconsistent statistics (Brown & Heathers, 2016; Nuijten et al, 2016; Petrocelli, Clarkson, Whitmire, & Moon, 2013); even when the original data are available, the reported results are often difficult or impossible to reproduce (Artner et al, 2020; Eubank, 2016; Hardwicke et al, 2018; Stodden, Seiler, & Ma, 2018). Dynamic documents are a time-saving and error-avoiding alternative to copy-paste reporting. By merging manuscript and analysis scripts, dynamic documents automate the reporting of results and ensure that statistics are consistent and up-to-date. At the same time, this makes documenting and reproducing analyses a secondary task. This workshop provides an introduction to the R package papaja, which can be used to create dynamic, submission-ready, APA-compliant manuscripts. Participants will learn how to automate reporting of quantitative results (including tables and graphs) and document formatting.en
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Persistent Identifierhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/7897
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Persistent Identifierhttps://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.12356
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Language of contenteng
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PublisherPsychArchivesen
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Is part ofPTOS, 2022, onlineen
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Is related tohttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/8155
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Dewey Decimal Classification number(s)150
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TitleFriends don't let friends copy and paste: Reproducible, APA-compliant manuscripts with the R package papajaen
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DRO typeconferenceObjecten
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Visible tag(s)ZPID Conferences and Workshops