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Workshop on "Open Science and Preregistration in Psychology"

  • 12 d’abril de 2022
Liza Spitzer

On May 16th (2022), we will run an online workshop on "Open Science and Preregistration in Psychology" in the framework of the "Acciones de Internacionalización en Casa" of the School of Psychology. Attendance will be recognised as a "Specific Activity" by the Doctoral Programme in "Reading and Comprehension".

The workshop is in charge of Lisa Spitzer from the Leibniz Institute for Psychology (ZPID) (Germany).

Timetable: 
9:00-11:00: Part I
12:00-14:00: Part II

Registration:
https://encuestas.uv.es/index.php/846518?lang=en

Questions: inmaculada.fajardo@uv.es

Content: 
This workshop is aimed at psychological researchers that are relatively new to preregistration or who would like to learn more about different options for creating preregistrations. Specifically, this workshop will be divided into two parts: In the first part, I will illustrate what a preregistration is and why it is important that researchers preregister their studies. In the second part, I will guide the participants through the preregistration process and give practical advice. I will present various possible routes for creating preregistrations before narrowing down on a practical example. In this example, I will use the R package “prereg” and the PRP-QUANT template that has recently been published by a collaboration of psychological societies (APA, BPS, DGPs). I will walk you through the process of creating the preregistration by using the template until submitting it to the preregistration platform “PreReg in Psychology” (prereg-psych.org).

Requirements:

Enrolled in a Doctoral Program.

Service PsychNotebook will be used for the R demonstration. As it allows using R in the browser, participants do not need
to install R on their computers.


Bio
After obtaining her Master degree in Psychology at the University of Cologne, Lisa is now a third-year PhD student at the Leibniz Institute for Psychology (ZPID), a supra-regional research support facility for psychology in German-speaking countries. The ZPID supports the entire scientific work process. It is committed to the idea of open science and sees itself as a public open science institute for psychology. In her PhD, Lisa especially focuses on preregistration as well as the reproducibility of eye-tracking results.