26 research outputs found
Improving Software Citation and Credit
The past year has seen movement on several fronts for improving software
citation, including the Center for Open Science's Transparency and Openness
Promotion (TOP) Guidelines, the Software Publishing Special Interest Group that
was started at January's AAS meeting in Seattle at the request of that
organization's Working Group on Astronomical Software, a Sloan-sponsored
meeting at GitHub in San Francisco to begin work on a cohesive research
software citation-enabling platform, the work of Force11 to "transform and
improve" research communication, and WSSSPE's ongoing efforts that include
software publication, citation, credit, and sustainability.
Brief reports on these efforts were shared at the BoF, after which
participants discussed ideas for improving software citation, generating a list
of recommendations to the community of software authors, journal publishers,
ADS, and research authors. The discussion, recommendations, and feedback will
help form recommendations for software citation to those publishers represented
in the Software Publishing Special Interest Group and the broader community.Comment: Birds of a Feather session organized by the Astrophysics Source Code
Library (ASCL, http://ascl.net/ ); to be published in Proceedings of ADASS
XXV (Sydney, Australia; October, 2015). 4 page
Practices in source code sharing in astrophysics
While software and algorithms have become increasingly important in
astronomy, the majority of authors who publish computational astronomy research
do not share the source code they develop, making it difficult to replicate and
reuse the work. In this paper we discuss the importance of sharing scientific
source code with the entire astrophysics community, and propose that journals
require authors to make their code publicly available when a paper is
published. That is, we suggest that a paper that involves a computer program
not be accepted for publication unless the source code becomes publicly
available. The adoption of such a policy by editors, editorial boards, and
reviewers will improve the ability to replicate scientific results, and will
also make the computational astronomy methods more available to other
researchers who wish to apply them to their data.Comment: Accepted by Astronomy and Computing. 10 page