@stencila/schema
Version:
Stencila schema and other specifications
55 lines (54 loc) • 2.01 kB
YAML
type: Article
title: Introducing eLife’s first computationally reproducible article
url: https://elifesciences.org/labs/ad58f08d/introducing-elife-s-first-computationally-reproducible-article
authors:
- type: Person
givenNames:
- Giuliano
familyNames:
- Maciocci
- type: Person
givenNames:
- Michael
familyNames:
- Aufreiter
- type: Person
givenNames:
- Nokome
familyNames:
- Bentley
content:
- type: Paragraph
content:
- >-
In September 2017 eLife announced the start of the Reproducible Document
Stack (RDS) project, a collaboration between Substance, Stencila and
eLife to support the development of an open-source technology stack
aimed at enabling researchers to publish reproducible manuscripts
through online journals. Reproducible manuscripts enrich the traditional
narrative of a research article with code, data and interactive figures
that can be executed in the browser, downloaded and explored, giving
readers a direct insight into the methods, algorithms and key data
behind the published research.
- type: Paragraph
content:
- 'Today eLife, in collaboration with '
- type: Link
target: 'http://substance.io/'
content:
- Substance
- ', '
- type: Link
target: 'https://stenci.la/'
content:
- Stencila
- ' and Tim Errington, Director of Research ar the Center for Open Science, US, published its '
- type: Link
target: 'https://elifesci.org/reproducible-example'
content:
- first reproducible article
- >-
, based on one of Errington’s papers in the Reproducibility Project:
Cancer Biology. This reproducible version of the article showcases some
of what’s possible with the new RDS tools, and we invite researchers to
explore the newly available opportunities to tell their story.