This conference is a forum for practicing and discussing credibility, transparency and replicability in the social sciences.
About a decade ago, John Ioannidis claimed that “most published research findings are false”. While seeming outrageous at the time, a growing body of meta-scientific research in the behavioral and social sciences substantiated this claim, causing uncertainty
about the trustworthiness of published scientific findings. We believe that threats to the validity of published findings in the social sciences are widespread and systemic. Therefore, this conference promotes introspection about the current state of social
science research and exchange on the opportunities for institutional and methodological improvement in the future.
The conference is supported by the Berkeley Initiative for Transparency in the Social Sciences (BITSS)
and will take place from 25-27 January 2019 in Mannheim, Germany.
Conference Website - twitter
Keynote speakers:
Jeremy Freese (Stanford University)
Thomas König (APSR, University of Mannheim)
Arthur Lupia (OSF, University of Michigan)
Julia Rohrer (100% CI, Leipzig University)
Participate in the conference:
Organizing Committee
Nate Breznau (MZES, University of Mannheim)
Eike Mark Rinke (MZES, University of Mannheim)
Alexander Wuttke (MZES, University of Mannheim)
Conference website: http://www.open-socsci.org/
Twitter: @opensocsci
#ossc19
On behalf of the organizers:
Nate Breznau
Eike Rinke
Alex Wuttke
Open Social Science Conference 2019
Mannheim Centre for European Social Research (MZES)
University of Mannheim, Germany
https://www.mzes.uni-mannheim.de/openscience/
Twitter: @opensocsci