Recently I've been following some data analysis sites and noticed this topic. As a psychologist I'm interested in the advances in my discipline related to reproducible research.
Can anyone suggest any readings or online materials?
You might be interested in the Open Science Framework: https://openscienceframework.org/
They aim at a large-scale replication of works published in three prominent psychology journals - Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, Psychological Science, and Journal of Experimental Psychology:
Dear Mr. Juan San Martin, Reproducible research in psychology and social sciences, for me I think first you need a 'bench mark' or 'gold standard' or call it 'gold copy' to replicate the research. Then question comes for reproducing that need 'authentication' or 'verification' or 'error free certification' independently, by more than one researcher or group or agency.
You might be interested in the Open Science Framework: https://openscienceframework.org/
They aim at a large-scale replication of works published in three prominent psychology journals - Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, Psychological Science, and Journal of Experimental Psychology:
What comes to mind is the principles of psychology reproduced/applied in the now burgeoning field of behavioral economics. And the attempt of those in the computational/experimental economics program to "reproduce" in silico or in role-play what perhaps have already been observed in reality. Thereby to discover and unravel the algorithms that the (economic) psychology is founded upon?
While some would stick with the old adage of "necessity being the mother of invention" conjuring images of originality. To adopt the motto: "imitation is the best compliment" may very well be the most practical advice even though some may sneer at its lack of originality.
Biomimicry is very fashionable with those thinking about business systems and human interactions