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Dive into the research topics where Karthik Ram is active.

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Featured researches published by Karthik Ram.


eLife | 2016

How open science helps researchers succeed

Erin C McKiernan; Philip E. Bourne; C. Titus Brown; Stuart Buck; Amye Kenall; Jennifer Lin; Damon McDougall; Brian A. Nosek; Karthik Ram; Courtney K. Soderberg; Jeffrey R. Spies; Kaitlin Thaney; Andrew Updegrove; Kara H. Woo; Tal Yarkoni

Open access, open data, open source and other open scholarship practices are growing in popularity and necessity. However, widespread adoption of these practices has not yet been achieved. One reason is that researchers are uncertain about how sharing their work will affect their careers. We review literature demonstrating that open research is associated with increases in citations, media attention, potential collaborators, job opportunities and funding opportunities. These findings are evidence that open research practices bring significant benefits to researchers relative to more traditional closed practices. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.16800.001


PLOS Biology | 2013

The Case for Open Preprints in Biology

Philippe Desjardins-Proulx; Ethan P. White; Joel James Adamson; Karthik Ram; Timothée Poisot; Dominique Gravel

Biologists should submit their preprints to open servers, a practice common in mathematics and physics, to open and accelerate the scientific process.


PeerJ | 2017

Sustainable computational science: the ReScience initiative

Nicolas P. Rougier; Konrad Hinsen; Frédéric Alexandre; Thomas Arildsen; Lorena A. Barba; Fabien Benureau; C. Titus Brown; Pierre de Buyl; Ozan Caglayan; Andrew P. Davison; Marc-André Delsuc; Georgios Detorakis; Alexandra K. Diem; Damien Drix; Pierre Enel; Benoît Girard; Olivia Guest; Matt G. Hall; Rafael Neto Henriques; Xavier Hinaut; Kamil S. Jaron; Mehdi Khamassi; Almar Klein; Tiina Manninen; Pietro Marchesi; Daniel J. McGlinn; Christoph Metzner; Owen L. Petchey; Hans E. Plesser; Timothée Poisot

Computer science offers a large set of tools for prototyping, writing, running, testing, validating, sharing and reproducing results, however computational science lags behind. In the best case, authors may provide their source code as a compressed archive and they may feel confident their research is reproducible. But this is not exactly true. James Buckheit and David Donoho proposed more than two decades ago that an article about computational results is advertising, not scholarship. The actual scholarship is the full software environment, code, and data that produced the result. This implies new workflows, in particular in peer-reviews. Existing journals have been slow to adapt: source codes are rarely requested, hardly ever actually executed to check that they produce the results advertised in the article. ReScience is a peer-reviewed journal that targets computational research and encourages the explicit replication of already published research, promoting new and open-source implementations in order to ensure that the original research can be replicated from its description. To achieve this goal, the whole publishing chain is radically different from other traditional scientific journals. ReScience resides on GitHub where each new implementation of a computational study is made available together with comments, explanations, and software tests.


Ecology Letters | 2014

The importance of individual developmental variation in stage‐structured population models

Perry de Valpine; Katherine Scranton; Jonas Knape; Karthik Ram; Nicholas J. Mills

Population stage structure is fundamental to ecology, and models of this structure have proven useful in many different systems. Many ecological variables other than stage, such as habitat type, site occupancy and metapopulation status are also modelled using transitions among discrete states. Transitions among life stages can be characterised by the distribution of time spent in each stage, including the mean and variance of each stage duration and within-individual correlations among multiple stage durations. Three modelling traditions represent stage durations differently. Matrix models can be derived as a long-run approximation from any distribution of stage durations, but they are often interpreted directly as a Markov model for stage transitions. Statistical stage-duration distribution models accommodate the variation typical of cohort development data, but such realism has rarely been incorporated in population theory or statistical population models. Delay-differential equation models include lags but no variation, except in limited cases. We synthesise these models in one framework and illustrate how individual variation and correlations in development can impact population growth. Furthermore, different development models can yield the same long-term matrix transition rates but different sensitivities and elasticities. Finally, we discuss future directions for estimating realistic stage duration models from data.


PeerJ | 2018

Journal of Open Source Software (JOSS): design and first-year review

Arfon M. Smith; Kyle E. Niemeyer; Daniel S. Katz; Lorena A. Barba; George Githinji; Melissa Gymrek; Kathryn D. Huff; Christopher R. Madan; Abigail Cabunoc Mayes; Kevin M. Moerman; Pjotr Prins; Karthik Ram; Ariel Rokem; Tracy K. Teal; Roman Valls Guimera; Jacob T VanderPlas

This article describes the motivation, design, and progress of the Journal of Open Source Software (JOSS). JOSS is a free and open-access journal that publishes articles describing research software. It has the dual goals of improving the quality of the software submitted and providing a mechanism for research software developers to receive credit. While designed to work within the current merit system of science, JOSS addresses the dearth of rewards for key contributions to science made in the form of software. JOSS publishes articles that encapsulate scholarship contained in the software itself, and its rigorous peer review targets the software components: functionality, documentation, tests, continuous integration, and the license. A JOSS article contains an abstract describing the purpose and functionality of the software, references, and a link to the software archive. The article is the entry point of a JOSS submission, which encompasses the full set of software artifacts. Submission and review proceed in the open, on GitHub. Editors, reviewers, and authors work collaboratively and openly. Unlike other journals, JOSS does not reject articles requiring major revision; while not yet accepted, articles remain visible and under review until the authors make adequate changes (or withdraw, if unable to meet requirements). Once an article is accepted, JOSS gives it a digital object identifier (DOI), deposits its metadata in Crossref, and the article can begin collecting citations on indexers like Google Scholar and other services. Authors retain copyright of their JOSS article, releasing it under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. In its first year, starting in May 2016, JOSS published 111 articles, with more than 40 additional articles under review. JOSS is a sponsored project of the nonprofit organization NumFOCUS and is an affiliate of the Open Source Initiative (OSI).


International Journal of Digital Curation | 2015

Data Carpentry: Workshops to Increase Data Literacy for Researchers

Tracy K. Teal; Karen Cranston; Hilmar Lapp; Ethan P. White; Greg Wilson; Karthik Ram; Aleksandra Pawlik


International Journal of Digital Curation | 2012

Trends in Use of Scientific Workflows: Insights from a Public Repository and Recommendations for Best Practice

Richard Littauer; Karthik Ram; Bertram Ludäscher; William K. Michener; Rebecca Koskela


Open Quaternary | 2015

neotoma: A Programmatic Interface to the Neotoma Paleoecological Database

Simon Goring; Andria Dawson; Gavin Simpson; Karthik Ram; Russ W. Graham; Eric C. Grimm; John W. Williams


Journal of open research software | 2015

Building Software, Building Community: Lessons from the rOpenSci Project

Carl Boettiger; Scott Chamberlain; Edmund Hart; Karthik Ram


Journal of Insect Conservation | 2014

The utility of repeated presence data as a surrogate for counts: a case study using butterflies

Kayce L. Casner; Matthew L. Forister; Karthik Ram; Arthur M. Shapiro

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Carl Boettiger

University of California

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Edmund Hart

National Ecological Observatory Network

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Ariel Rokem

University of Washington

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Kevin M. Moerman

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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