Arbeidsområder
Undervisning
Forskningsdatahåndtering
Åpen og reproduserbar forskning
SV9104: Forskningsetikk (Samfunnsvitenskap)
Bakgrunn
- Postdok forsker i psykologi, New York University, USA
- PhD i språkvitenskap, Norges teknisk-naturvitenskapelige universitet, NTNU Trondheim, Norge
- MPhil i psykologi, Universitetet i Oslo, Norge
- MA i filosofi og BA (ekvivalent) i psykologi, Universitetet i Warszawa, Polen
Emneord:
Bibliotek,
Åpen forskning,
Forskningsdata,
Åpne data,
Forskningsmetoder,
Digitale forskningsmetoder,
Reproduserbarhet
Publikasjoner
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Larson, Caroline; Bochynska, Agata & Vulchanova, Mila Dimitrova
(2024).
Mental rotation and language in autism spectrum disorder.
Autism Research.
ISSN 1939-3792.
17(4),
s. 785–798.
doi:
10.1002/aur.3128.
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Bochynska, Agata Elzbieta; Vulchanova, Mila Dimitrova; Vulchanov, Valentin & Landau, Barbara
(2020).
Spatial language difficulties reflect the structure of intact spatial representation: Evidence from high-functioning autism.
Cognitive Psychology.
ISSN 0010-0285.
116,
s. 1–27.
doi:
10.1016/j.cogpsych.2019.101249.
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Neff, Mary Beth & Bochynska, Agata
(2023).
Unconference on (Transparent) Piloting: current practices and ways forward
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Bochynska, Agata & Dillon, Moira
(2022).
Opening science to families so families can open their homes to science.
BPS Developmental Psychology Forum.
ISSN 2396-8699.
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Bochynska, Agata & Kalandadze, Tamara
(2022).
Preregistration: Benefits, challenges, and practical tips by Dr Agata Bochynska.
Vis sammendrag
More and more researchers across disciplines are preregistering their hypotheses, methods, and analysis plans before they collect or analyze the data. Preregistration motivates us to think more carefully about research designs, helps prevent manipulating the study outcomes, and increases research transparency and visibility. But how and where do we preregister research studies? In this talk, Agata Bochynska will lay out the benefits and challenges of preregistration and provide practical tips for preregistering studies on Open Science Framework (OSF) – a well-developed platform for research registration and sharing.
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Bochynska, Agata; Quintana, Daniel; Mayor, Julien; Leknes, Siri; Roettger, Timo & Mayiwar, Lewend
(2022).
Fram for troverdig forskning: Forskningen må være gjennomsiktig og etterprøvbar.
Forskerforum.
ISSN 0800-1715.
54(4),
s. 38–39.
Vis sammendrag
Forskere ved Universitetet i Oslo, Handelshøyskolen BI og Høgskolen i Østfold har etablert det nasjonale nettverket Norwegian Reproducibility Network (NORRN). NORRN skal bidra til god forskningspraksis i Norge gjennom å fremme og legge til rette for åpenhet og etterprøvbarhet av forskningsresultater.
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Hart, Sara A.; Kalandadze, Tamara & Bochynska, Agata
(2022).
RIOT Science Club: Data sharing in developmental science.
Vis sammendrag
In this talk, Dr Sara Hart talked about her experiences in creating a data repository and otherwise supporting open science, as well as working with her research community to understand hesitations around data sharing and support those towards open data goals.
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Pennington, Charlotte; Nordahl-Hansen, Anders ; Bochynska, Agata & Kalandadze, Tamara
(2022).
A new way of publishing: Registered Reports 2.0 by Dr Charlotte Pennington.
Vis sammendrag
Growing concerns of replicability and reproducibility have ushered in fast-paced changes to scientific reform under the umbrella term of ‘open science’. We now understand that such concerns stem from academic incentives that reward novel surprising results and quantity over quality which fuel a range of questionable research practices. Study preregistration and Registered Reports (RRs) represent two open science initiatives that aim to improve research quality and rigour, and emerging empirical research demonstrates their effectiveness. However, neither are perfect. This talk will outline study preregistration and the standard Registered Report model before introducing a new form of Registered Reports that reshape academic publishing – Peer Community In Registered Reports (PCI RR). PCI RR is a community-driven initiative that reviews and recommends RRs across the full spectrum of STEM, medicine, social sciences, and humanities. Upon receiving In Principle Acceptance (IPA) of a Stage 1 manuscript, authors are then free to choose from a range of ‘PCI friendly journals’ who agree to publish the Stage 2 manuscript without the need for additional peer review. PCI RRs, therefore, represent an exciting new way of publishing that puts the authors back in control.
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Quintana, Daniel; Kalandadze, Tamara; Bochynska, Agata & Nordahl-Hansen, Anders Johan
(2022).
RIOT Science Club: Five things about open science that every researcher should know | Dr Dan Quintana.
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Publisert
4. feb. 2021 14:07
- Sist endret
11. mars 2024 11:04