I'm super happy to receive the very first Open Science Award of Oddisei for the work on CPF Open Harmonization www.cpfdata.com!
I'm super happy to receive the very first Open Science Award of Oddisei for the work on CPF Open Harmonization www.cpfdata.com!
Happy to share the CPF Open Harmonization 2.0 - including LISS panel Netherlands!
Weβre excited to announce the release of CPF Open Harmonization version 2.0! >> www.cpfdata.com <<
β
Addition of the Netherlands (LISS)
β
New waves & extended code
β
A brand-new website
β Exclusion of Russia (RLMS)
π More in the Newsletter: cpfdata.com/assets/newsl...
#OpenScience #OpenSource
Open-source science is reshaping how we collaborate and innovateβmaking research faster, more flexible, and better equipped to tackle complex societal challenges.
In this video, I discuss:
πΉ The "production" side of open science
πΉ How open-source models are shaping social science research
πΉ The goals and progress of the CPF harmonization initiative
πΉ Key advantagesβand challengesβof collaborative, transparent data work
But for more information, you can also check this open article that discusses these things in detail: lnkd.in/emyZN_HV
π₯ I had the pleasure of speaking with Sage Research Methods about open science, open-source knowledge production and the @cpfdata.bsky.social Comparative Panel File Open Harmonization Project.
Unfortunately (and surprisingly), the full interview is behind a paywall for now: lnkd.in/e4McXwa2
π‘ Have a look at the full paper for a deeper dive into the topic. Any comments are welcome!
One example is the CPF Open Harmonization (www.cpfdata.com). These kinds of initiatives donβt replace traditional research infrastructures, but they can be powerful complementary solutions. In computational social science, especially where heavy coding is involved, they have great potential.
In this article, I explore what it means to βopenβ knowledge production in social science β especially through open-source and crowd-based collaboration π€ . This is where researchers work together in dynamic, open networks, even if theyβre not formally connected.
Natural sciences are leading the way in these developments. But in social science? The shift to open is happening much more slowly.
πOpen source tools, code sharing, collaborative workflows, crowd-based cooperations β these can be powerful ways to work faster, smarter, cheaper, and across disciplines. They help us tackle big questions and innovate in ways that traditional structures sometimes canβt.
Open science is changing how we produce, verify, and share knowledge. And itβs not just about open-access publications, preregistration, or replication studies. Itβs also about rethinking how we collaborate and build scientific infrastructure.
π Happy to share a new paper: Accelerating Social Science Knowledge Production with the Coordinated Open-Source Model. link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Job alert π Still a couple of days to apply!
The Call for Papers for our #Conference for Social Sciences 2024 is now open!
Submit your abstract by June 28, 18:00 CEST!
We are pleased to announce that the confirmed keynote speaker is The #NobelPrize winning Economist Guido Imbens.
π edu.nl/e3779
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ccsky #StatsEd
Friendly team, vibrant environment and good networking! Profile: sociology, demography, epidemiology/health, organizational psychology, HRM, etc.
Great opportunity for working with comparative and longitudinal designs, high-quality data sources (e.g., Comparative Panel File cpfdata.com, SHARE), new data collection (LISS lissdata.nl), and advanced statistical modelling.
More info here: lnkd.in/et_RxUYT. This project examines the shifting retirement trajectories for women and their impact on physical and mental health.
PhD vacancy at Tilburg University! Together with @minekuhn.bsky.social and Jeroen Vermunt, we are looking for a talented PhD candidate for the project βThe Changing Landscape of Womenβs Retirement: Physical and Mental Health Consequences of Working Longerβ. Apply bf 26.06: tiu.nu/22309
Despite believing in self-determined success, success and failure are largely influenced by uncontrollable randomness.
Today at 16.30, Prof @thijsbol.bsky.social gives his inaugural lecture 'The workings of randomness: On the role of chance in inequality' π¨π»βπ
π₯ Watch live: www.uva.nl/shared-conte...