The goal of science is to accumulate knowledge that answers questions such as “How do things work?” and “Why do they work that way?” Scientists use a variety of methodologies to describe, predict, and explain natural phenomena. These methods are so diverse that it is difficult to define a unique scientific method, although all scientific methodologies share the assumption of reproducibility (Hempel and Oppenheim, 1948; Kuhn, 1962; Popper, 1934/1992; Salmon, 1989).
Aarts, A., Alexander, A., Attridge, P., Bahník, Š., Barnett Cowan, M., Bartmess, E., et al. (2014). The reproducibility project: A model of large-scale collaboration for empirical research on reproducibility. In Implementing Reproducible Research (pp. 299-324). CRC Press [10.1201/b16868].
The reproducibility project: A model of large-scale collaboration for empirical research on reproducibility
COSTANTINI, GIULIO;PERUGINI, MARCO;
2014
Abstract
The goal of science is to accumulate knowledge that answers questions such as “How do things work?” and “Why do they work that way?” Scientists use a variety of methodologies to describe, predict, and explain natural phenomena. These methods are so diverse that it is difficult to define a unique scientific method, although all scientific methodologies share the assumption of reproducibility (Hempel and Oppenheim, 1948; Kuhn, 1962; Popper, 1934/1992; Salmon, 1989).File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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