On Sat, Mar 4, 2017 at 6:13 AM, Dwivedi, Bhakti <bhakti.dwiv...@emory.edu> wrote:
> Hi, > > > > I have a few general questions. With such a rigorous peer-review process > in place for new package submissions in Bioconductor, I was wondering if > there is a way to assess the package acceptance rate? > > > > The reason I asked, I want to include the Bioconductor package citation in > my NIH bio-sketch; however, given the format requirements, I cannot provide > a URL and the unfortunately the release citation is not recognized similar > to a citation for a typical journal article. Have anyone thought of a > Bioconductor software journal? Is there a better way to cite a package that > I am unware of? Would appreciate your help and suggestions. > > > In terms of impact, things like the number of downloads and number of reverse dependencies are probably good metrics. > > Also, I am really interested in becoming a Bioconductor member/participant > and volunteering as a code/documentation reviewer or contributor to a part > of a project. Is there someone I can contact to achieve this or get an idea > of what may be required to get there? > > > My opinion on ways to contribute to Bioconductor include: 1) Using Bioconductor, popularizing it and contributing feedback 2) Contributing packages (that integrate with and extend the platform, not just to distribute a package) 3) Reviewing packages (great practice for getting better at developing your own) 4) Providing training, workshops, etc, including at the Bioc conference 5) Contributing workflow tutorials/articles, including through the F1000 channel 6) Answering questions on the support site I'm sure I'm missing some. Another avenue, not yet established, would be formal, public working groups / projects towards specific aims. For example, the MultiAssayExperiment was close to that. We could also identify gaps or decaying areas in the infrastructure and ask for help instead of spending core group resources. That would require some trust, and the avenues above would be ways of gaining it. The move to git(hub) would give us an issue tracker, pull requests, review mechanisms, etc for managing the process. > Thank you. > > > > Regards, > > Bhakti > > > > > > > ________________________________ > > This e-mail message (including any attachments) is for...{{dropped:10}} _______________________________________________ Bioc-devel@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/bioc-devel