2011
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1001122
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Minimum Information About a Simulation Experiment (MIASE)

Abstract: International audienceReproducibility of experiments is a basic requirement for science. Minimum Information (MI) guidelines have proved a helpful means of enabling reuse of existing work in modern biology. The Minimum Information Required in the Annotation of Models (MIRIAM) guidelines promote the exchange and reuse of biochemical computational models. However, information about a model alone is not sufficient to enable its efficient reuse in a computational setting. Advanced numerical algorithms and complex … Show more

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Cited by 138 publications
(104 citation statements)
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References 12 publications
(12 reference statements)
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“…Scientific knowledge must be independently verifiable, even in computational sciences (Morin et al, 2012), and a growing number of scientists are gathering under the banner of reproducible research (LeVeque et al, 2012;Peng, 2011;Waltemath et al, 2011aWaltemath et al, , 2011b. The spectrum of reproducibility (Peng, 2011) ranges from strict "replication" as in re-running a simulation in exact detail, for instance using a virtual machine (Howe, 2012), through "reproduction" in the sense of independent re-implementation of the essential aspects of a carefully described experiment (Drummond, 2009;Ince et al, 2012), to "constructive replication" (Lykken, 1968) based only on a clear statement of the hypothesis, leaving the next researcher free to choose their own experiment and analysis methods.…”
Section: Reproducible Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Scientific knowledge must be independently verifiable, even in computational sciences (Morin et al, 2012), and a growing number of scientists are gathering under the banner of reproducible research (LeVeque et al, 2012;Peng, 2011;Waltemath et al, 2011aWaltemath et al, , 2011b. The spectrum of reproducibility (Peng, 2011) ranges from strict "replication" as in re-running a simulation in exact detail, for instance using a virtual machine (Howe, 2012), through "reproduction" in the sense of independent re-implementation of the essential aspects of a carefully described experiment (Drummond, 2009;Ince et al, 2012), to "constructive replication" (Lykken, 1968) based only on a clear statement of the hypothesis, leaving the next researcher free to choose their own experiment and analysis methods.…”
Section: Reproducible Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…More usefully than a script, a protocol description can be given at a higher level of abstraction, providing the details requested by reporting guidelines such as the Minimum Information About a Simulation Experiment (MIASE) (Waltemath et al, 2011a). Different tools that understand the protocol description can reproduce the experiments using their own implementations of algorithms etc., and using their own set of models.…”
Section: Reproducible Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…We will use this model to demonstrate how a simulation experiment can be described simply and effectively. The simulation example is taken from Waltemath et al [2011a].…”
Section: Motivation: a Sample Experimentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the description of the structure of models is not sufficient to enable the reproduction of simulation results. One also needs to describe the procedures the models are subjected to, as described by the Minimum Information About a Simulation Experiment (MIASE) [Waltemath et al, 2011a].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%