rOpenSci | Blog

All posts (Page 37 of 90)

Detecting spatiotemporal groups in relocation data with spatsoc

spatsoc is an R package written by Alec Robitaille, Quinn Webber and Eric Vander Wal of the Wildlife Evolutionary Ecology Lab (WEEL) at Memorial University of Newfoundland. It is the lab’s first R package and was recently accepted through the rOpenSci onboarding process with a big thanks to reviewers Priscilla Minotti and Filipe Teixeira, and editor Lincoln Mullen. spatsoc started as a single function (what would eventually become group_pts) written by Alec in 2017 to help answer some of the questions that Quinn and Eric were asking about how animal social structure is related to spatial processes....

rnoaa: new data sources and NCDC units

We’ve just released a new version of rnoaa with A LOT of changes. Check out the release notes for a complete list of changes. We’ll highlight a few things in this post: New data sources in the package NCDC units added to the output of ncdc() Links: rnoaa source code: https://github.com/ropensci/rnoaa rnoaa on CRAN: https://cran.rstudio.com/web/packages/rnoaa/ 🔗 Installation Install the lastest from CRAN install.packages("rnoaa") Some binaries are not up yet on CRAN - you can also install from GitHub:...

restez: Query GenBank locally

🔗 What is restez? R packages for interacting with the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) have, to-date, depended on API query calls via NCBI’s Entrez. For computational analyses that require the automated look-up of reams of biological sequence data, piecemeal querying via bandwith-limited requests is evidently not ideal. These queries are not only slow, but they depend on network connections and the remote server’s consistent behaviour. Additionally, users who make very large requests over extended periods of time run the risk of being blocked....

Community Call Summary - Code Review in the Lab

Although there are increasing incentives and pressures for researchers to share code (even for projects that are not essentially computational), practices vary widely and standards are mostly non-existent. The practice of reviewing code then falls to researchers and research groups before publication. With that in mind, rOpenSci hosted a discussion thread and a community call to bring together different researchers for a conversation about current practices, and challenges in reviewing code in the lab....

Co-localization analysis of fluorescence microscopy images

A few months ago, I wasn’t sure what to expect when looking at fluorescence microscopy images in published papers. I looked at the accompanying graph to understand the data or the point the authors were trying to make. Often, the graph represents one or more measures of the so-called co-localization, but I couldn’t figure out how to interpret them. It turned out; reading the images is simple. Cells are simultaneously stained by two dyes (say, red and green) for two different proteins....

Working together to push science forward

Happy rOpenSci users can be found at