π©βπ graduate research assistant to Manfred Laubichler
π PhD student in Computational History and Philosophy of Science at Arizona State University
π» former research software engineer
My current formulation of my research question for my dissertation is...
What scientific values (such as reproducibility, openness, and reusability) should we embody in our standards of practice and infrastructure for the betterment of computationally enabled science?
My will start out my dissertation by exploring the limits of reproducibility in the computational sciences. I also plan to use dynamic network analysis and natural language processing to analyse large corpuses of scientific literature to study evolving standards of practice. Finally, I'm interested in using qualitative methods to survey and observe groups that are currently attempting to reconsile competing values in proposing standards of practice. I will also report out on my own experience setting standards of practice by developing a ruberic for the peer-review of notebook submissions to the inaugural US-RSE Conference.
π©βπ« running an internship program for my amazing full-time summer interns, Namita Shah and David Costello, who are helping me develop data dashboards and scientific web applications*
π wrapping up peer-review for Jupyter notebook submissions at the inaugural US-RSE Conference
π§ββοΈ back into rock climbing, because that's what all the grad students are up to
πΉ taking jazz piano lessons
*This work was supported by the Better Scientific Software Fellowship, funded by the Exascale Computing Project (NSF/DOE)