The Turing Way is a lightly opinionated guide to reproducible data science.
Our goal is to provide all the information that researchers need at the start of their projects to ensure that they are easy to reproduce at the end.
This also means making sure PhD students, postdocs, PIs and funding teams know which parts of the "responsibility of reproducibility" they can affect, and what they should do to nudge data science to being more efficient, effective and understandable.
Table of contents:
Reproducible research is necessary to ensure that scientific work can be trusted. Funders and publishers are beginning to require that publications include access to the underlying data and the analysis code. The goal is to ensure that all results can be independently verified and built upon in future work. This is sometimes easier said than done. Sharing these research outputs means understanding data management, library sciences, sofware development, and continuous integration techniques: skills that are not widely taught or expected of academic researchers and data scientists. The Turing Way is a handbook to support students, their supervisors, funders and journal editors in ensuring that reproducible data science is "too easy not to do". It will include training material on version control, analysis testing, and open and transparent communication with future users, and build on Turing Institute case studies and workshops. This project is openly developed and any and all questions, comments and recommendations are welcome at our github repository: https://github.com/alan-turing-institute/the-turing-way.
To manage this repository better, we moved the book content to a separate repository: https://github.com/alan-turing-institute/the-turing-way-book
This is the (part of) the project team planning work at the Turing Institute. For more on how to contact us, see the ways of working document.
🚧 This repository is always a work in progress and everyone is encouraged to help us build something that is useful to the many. 🚧
Everyone is asked to follow our code of conduct and to checkout our contributing guidelines for more information on how to get started.
If you are not familiar or confident contributing on GitHub, you can also contribute a case study and your tips and tricks via our Google submission form.
We have a gitter chat room and we'd love for you to swing by to say hello at https://gitter.im/alan-turing-institute/the-turing-way.
We also have a tiny letter mailing list to which we send monthly project updates. Subscribe at https://tinyletter.com/TuringWay.
You can contact the PI of the Turing Way project - Kirstie Whitaker - by email at kwhitaker@turing.ac.uk.
Thanks goes to these wonderful people (emoji key):
This project follows the all-contributors specification. Contributions of any kind welcome!