iRISE: improving Reproducibility In SciencE

Principal Investigator: Sarah McCann (BIH, Charité, Berlin)
Emily Sena (University of Edinburgh)
Project Team:

15 partner institutions, incl. University of Bern:
Hanno Würbel (Professor)
Bernhard Völkl (Senior Scientist)

Funded by: EU Horizon Europe (WIDERA-2022-ERA-01)
Project period: 2023-2026

Structured understanding of the drivers of irreproducibility and presenting concrete solutions of tools and interventions will help to increase the quality, reliability, and re-usability of scientific evidence. To this end, iRISE proposes to provide theoretical and empirical evidence of the effectiveness of specific interventions, and a framework for a robust, evidence-based roadmap for the development, assessment, and implementation of interventions intended to improve reproducibility. iRISE brings together qualitative and quantitative expertise, from academia and SMEs, including meta-science, statistics, economics, artificial intelligence, research ethics and integrity, quality assurance, and project management.

iRISE proposes the development of a general framework for diagnosing and addressing reproducibility problems using analytical and computational modeling, simulations, and meta-studies. Data on existing interventions will be systematically curated and evaluated, and stakeholders will be consulted to collaboratively identify practices and tools that should be prioritized for implementation.

iRISE proposes to conduct empirical studies of both technical and practice-based solutions to increase reproducibility. Across all iRISE activities, the influences of research culture will be investigated, with a focus on mainstreaming systematic integration of equity, diversity, and inclusion practices. A comprehensive Stakeholder Forum will be engaged to provide advice, and iRISE will commit to open and reproducible practices. The different types of evidence generated will be integrated into an open knowledge base to support the community in decision-making to identify, test, and implement effective and feasible solutions for reproducibility. The members of iRISE have made pivotal scientific and policy contributions relating to robustness, rigor, and reproducibility in the past and have the skills and tools to succeed in this ambitious project that has potential scientific, economic, and societal gains both in Europe and beyond.