Monday 3 November 2014

Cognitive Psychology Colloquium Thursday 6th November

I STRONGLY RECOMMEND THIS COLLOQUIUM. It discusses an easy way (i.e., point and click like SPSS) of doing what will soon become the required analysis technique for anyone who needs to make uncertain inference, Bayesian statistics (it also does frequentist statistics).  

GET IN ON THE GROUND FLOOR and recommend to the speaker (one of our graduates) new features you want (it already outputs tables and figures in APA format, but I am sure you can think of more). 

Andrew

When: Thursday 6th November, 12-1pm
Where: Keats Reading Room, Psychology Building

Title: JASP ̶ A free and open alternative to SPSS, a rich and user friendly alternative to R.

Authors: Jonathon Love(a), Ravi Selker(a), Josine Verhagen(a), Martin Smira(b), Anneliese Wild(c), Maarten Marsman(a), Quentin Gronau(a), Richard D. Morey(d), Jeff Rouder(e), Eric-Jan Wagenmakers(a)
a University of Amsterdam
b University of Brno
c University of Newcastle, Australia
d University of Groningen
e University of Missouri

Abstract
The two dominant software platforms for performing statistical analyses in psychology are SPSS
and the R programming language. SPSS is expensive, closed source, and does not implement the
newest analyses (such as recent developments in bayesian statistics). In contrast, the R
programming environment is open source and implements the newest analyses, however it requires
users to write software in a programming language, and is a challenging platform for people without
programming experience to use.

This talk introduces JASP, an alternative to both SPSS and R which combines the best of both
worlds. JASP implements the latest Bayesian analyses, is free and open source, and provides a rich
user interface such that individuals without programming experience can use.

JASP is available from http://jasp-stats.org
JASP is funded by a grant from the European Research Council.

Bio
Jonathon Love is a Software Developer and Researcher at the University of Amsterdam. He
completed his studies with Andrew Heathcote at the University Newcastle, Australia, and has over
15 years experience in Software development. Jonathon's interests are promoting the use of
liberated (free and open source) software in science and developing software which bridges the gap
between methodologists and applied researchers. He is the lead developer of the JASP project.