Metadata
Title
Dagstuhl Seminar on Transparent Quantitative Research as a User Interface Problem
Category
general
UUID
0f66a1f183904e6898a463d5921c88aa
Source URL
https://wp.unil.ch/persuasivelab/2022/11/dagstuhl-seminar-on-transparent-quantit...
Parent URL
https://wp.unil.ch/persuasivelab/news/
Crawl Time
2026-03-23T21:51:40+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown
# Dagstuhl Seminar on Transparent Quantitative Research as a User Interface Problem

**Source**: https://wp.unil.ch/persuasivelab/2022/11/dagstuhl-seminar-on-transparent-quantitative-research-as-a-user-interface-problem/
**Parent**: https://wp.unil.ch/persuasivelab/news/

In September 2022, members of the PET Lab [Lahari Goswami](https://wp.unil.ch/persuasivelab/2020/07/lahari-goswami/) and [Kavous S. Niksirat](https://wp.unil.ch/persuasivelab/2020/07/kavous-salehzadeh-niksirat/) attended a one-week seminar about [Transparent Quantitative Research](https://www.dagstuhl.de/en/programm/kalender/semhp/?semnr=22392). The seminar gathered HCI researchers from all over the world to [Dagstuhl School](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dagstuhl) in Germany – a well-known venue for conducting computer science workshops and seminars.

The focus of the seminar was on how HCI researchers can help to promote and facilitate transparent research practices (i.e., sharing research materials and data to allow other researchers to replicate the studies or reproduce the findings).

All attendees were grouped into five groups based on their research interests and actively involved in hackathons to provide solutions for transparent research. Some of the groups focused on low-level design tweaks on how to improve the publication pipelines to facilitate transparency, some were rather focused on mid-level by providing knowledge and definitions for transparency and cheat sheets for transparent HCI research, and some worked on high-level areas on how to incentivize the adoption of transparency through the channel of funding agencies. The outcome of these activities was two-fold: First, we identified research gaps (research agenda) and established future collaborations on transparency research. Second, we composed a manifesto to be shared with journal editors and conference chairs.

The other highlights of the workshop were a [keynote](https://osf.io/4ruzb) given by Tim Errington, CEO of the Center for Open Science (OSF platform), and a panel discussion between Neha Kumar (SIGCHI President), Jean-Daniel Fekete (TVCG Associate Editor in Chief), Kristina Höök (TOCHI editor-in-chief), and Petra Isenberg (the vice-chair of the IEEE VIS Steering Committee).

To read a complete report of the event, please refer to: <https://doi.org/10.4230/DagRep.12.9.220>

#### Related Posts

### [Report on the Digital Transformation of the Democratic Discourse intensive week](https://wp.unil.ch/persuasivelab/2026/01/report-on-the-digital-transformation-of-the-democratic-discourse-intensive-week/ "Report on the Digital Transformation of the Democratic Discourse intensive week")

30 January 202617 March 2026

### [SwissRN News](https://wp.unil.ch/persuasivelab/2025/05/swissrn-news/ "SwissRN News")

29 May 202529 May 2025

### [SwissRN Events Newsletter](https://wp.unil.ch/persuasivelab/2025/05/swissrn-events-newsletter-2/ "SwissRN Events Newsletter")

29 May 202529 May 2025

#### About Kavous Salehzadeh Niksirat

[View all posts by Kavous Salehzadeh Niksirat →](https://wp.unil.ch/persuasivelab/author/ksalehza/ "Kavous Salehzadeh Niksirat")