Explore our older blog posts using the Internet Archive.
- 2024/10/28: Curating Evidence for Interventions to Improve Reproducibility | 11th October 2024 | Sean Smith
- 2024/10/04: Welcome Back and What’s On 2024 – 2025 | 27th September 2024 | Emma Wilson
- 2024/04/11: Big team science | 5th April 2024 | Dr Drew Altschul
- 2024/02/19: Biomedical doctoral students’ research practices when facing dilemmas | 9th February 2024 | Dr Crispin Jordan
- 2024/01/09: Questionable conduct in images and figures in scholarly publishing | 8th December 2023 | Kaveh Bazargan
- 2024/01/08: Data management advice and experiences | 10/11/23 | Simon Smith, Dr. Kaitlyn Hair, and Clara Sánchez-Izquierdo Lozano
- 2023/10/10: “The Buffet Approach to Open Science”
- 2023/05/19: Octopus | 19/05/23 | Dr Alexandra Freeman and Tim Fellows
- 2023/04/21: Replication in autism research | 21/04/23 | Michelle Dodd
- 2023/04/13: Citizen Science and Participatory Research | 31/03/23 | Nel Coleman
- 2023/02/27: 10 simple rules for failing successfully in academia | 24/02/23 | Emma Wilson
- 2023/01/20: The replication crisis in psychology: Pre-registration and Registered Reports as crusaders for a brighter future | 20/01/23 | Dr Roman Briker
- 2022/12/16: Open Research Across Disciplines | 16/12/22 | Emma Wilson
- 2022/11/23: Introducing FAIRPoints and FAIR + Open Research for Beginners | 18/11/22 | Dr Sara El-Gebali
- 2022/02/02: Errors in Research
- 2022/01/10: Bayesian data analysis and preregistration 17/12/2021 with Dr Zachary Horne
- 2021/11/24: Edinburgh University Research Optimisation Course (EUROC) 19/11/2021 with Dr Gillian Currie
- 2021/11/04: Building an Open Research Culture 29/10/2021 with Dr Will Cawthorn
- 2021/09/17: Easing Into Open Science 17/09/2021 with Dr Priya Silverstein
- 2021/04/19: A selfish guide to RSpace: Why and How?
- 2021/03/22: How (some) scientists talk about openness
- 2021/02/21: Skills training for Open Science: impact and rewards of working with Edinburgh Carpentries
- 2021/02/12: Selfish Reasons to Work Reproducibly