POPL 2024
Sun 14 - Sat 20 January 2024 London, United Kingdom
Sat 20 Jan 2024 14:00 - 14:20 at Flowers Room - Software engineering and ecosystems Chair(s): Michael Dales

Different communities use different processes to assess the availability, reproducibility and reusability of research software and other research artifacts such as datasets. The Programming Languages (PL) community (together with other Computer Science communities) uses the artifact evalution process. Outside of the computer science, the FAIR (Findable Accessible Interoperable Reusable) principles for research data have been developed in the open science community and are now applied to research software. Within climate science, there has been a particular focus on climate modelling. The goal of this presentation is to describe some of these different assessment processes with the aim of promoting discussion and potential collaboration.

Sat 20 Jan

Displayed time zone: London change

14:00 - 15:30
Software engineering and ecosystemsPROPL at Flowers Room
Chair(s): Michael Dales University of Cambridge, UK
14:00
20m
Talk
Assessing the availability, reproducibility and reuseability of research software
PROPL
Vashti Galpin University of Edinburgh
14:20
20m
Talk
Fluid: towards transparent, self-explanatory research outputs
PROPL
Joe Bond University of Bristol, UK, Cristina David University of Bristol, Minh Nguyen University of Bristol, Roly Perera University of Cambridge/University of Bristol
Pre-print
14:40
20m
Talk
Toward a Live, Rich, Composable, and Collaborative Planetary Compute Engine
PROPL
Alexander Bandukwala Unaffiliated, Andrew Blinn University of Michigan, Cyrus Omar University of Michigan
15:00
30m
Other
Discussion on multidisciplinary PROPL-work
PROPL
Patrick Ferris University of Cambridge, UK, Michael Dales University of Cambridge, UK