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book.bib
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https://bookdown.org/yihui/bookdown/citations.html
https://rmarkdown.rstudio.com/authoring_bibliographies_and_citations.html
-References in alphabetical order of the key ----------------------------------
@BOOK{Bryan2016-yy,
title = "Happy Git and {GitHub} for the useR",
author = "Bryan, Jenny",
abstract = "Using Git and GitHub with R, Rstudio, and R Markdown",
month = jun,
year = 2016
}
@BOOK{Daniel2013-qq,
title = "Biostatistics: A foundation for analysis in the health sciences",
author = "Daniel, Wayne W and Cross, Chad L",
publisher = "Wiley",
edition = "Tenth",
month = jan,
year = 2013,
address = "Hoboken, NJ"
}
@BOOK{Field2013-zo,
title = "Discovering statistics using {R}",
author = "Field, Andy and Miles, Jeremy and Field, Zoe",
publisher = "Sage",
month = dec,
year = 2013
}
@MISC{GitHub2022-iw,
title = "Licensing a repository",
booktitle = "{GitHub} Docs",
author = "{GitHub}",
abstract = "Public repositories on GitHub are often used to share open
source software. For your repository to truly be open source,
you'll need to license it so that others are free to use,
change, and distribute the software.",
month = may,
year = 2022,
howpublished = "\url{https://ghdocs-prod.azurewebsites.net/en/repositories/managing-your-repositorys-settings-and-features/customizing-your-repository/licensing-a-repository}",
note = "Accessed: 2022-5-15",
language = "en"
}
@BOOK{Grolemund2017-qp,
title = "{R} for Data Science",
author = "Grolemund, Garrett and Wickham, Hadley",
abstract = "This book will teach you how to do data science with R: You'll
learn how to get your data into R, get it into the most useful
structure, transform it, visualise it and model it. In this book,
you will find a practicum of skills for data science. Just as a
chemist learns how to clean test tubes and stock a lab, you'll
learn how to clean data and draw plots---and many other things
besides. These are the skills that allow data science to happen,
and here you will find the best practices for doing each of these
things with R. You'll learn how to use the grammar of graphics,
literate programming, and reproducible research to save time.
You'll also learn how to manage cognitive resources to facilitate
discoveries when wrangling, visualising, and exploring data.",
month = jan,
year = 2017
}
@BOOK{Hernan2020-uu,
title = "Causal Inference: What If",
author = "Hern{\'a}n, Miguel A and Robins, James M",
publisher = "CRC Press",
month = jul,
year = 2020
}
@MISC{Ismay2019-iw,
title = "Chapter 1 Getting Started with Data in {R}",
booktitle = "Statistical Inference via Data Science",
author = "Ismay, Chester and Kim, Albert Y",
abstract = "An open-source and fully-reproducible electronic textbook for
teaching statistical inference using tidyverse data science
tools.",
month = nov,
year = 2019,
howpublished = "\url{https://moderndive.com/}",
note = "Accessed: 2020-5-12"
}
@BOOK{Lash2021-mb,
title = "Modern Epidemiology",
author = "Lash, Timothy L and VanderWeel, Tyler J and Haneuse, Sebastien
and Rothman, Kenneth J",
publisher = "Wolters Kluwer",
edition = "fourth",
year = 2021
}
@BOOK{Matthews2014-ah,
title = "Successful Scientific Writing: A {Step-by-Step} Guide for the
Biological and Medical Sciences",
author = "Matthews, Janice R and Matthews, Robert W",
abstract = "Thoroughly revised and updated, the new edition of this
acclaimed and best-selling guide offers a rich blend of
practical advice and real-life examples. The authors draw on
fifty years of experience, providing detailed step-by-step
guidance designed to help students and researchers write and
present scientific manuscripts more successfully through
knowledge, practice, and an efficient approach. Retaining the
user-friendly style of the previous editions, this fourth
edition has been broadened to include detailed information
relevant to today's digital world. It covers all aspects of the
writing process, from first drafts, literature retrieval, and
authorship to final drafts and electronic publication. A new
section provides extensive coverage of ethical issues, from
plagiarism and dual publication to honesty in reporting
statistics. Both the text and 30 hands-on exercises include
abundant examples applicable to a variety of writing contexts,
making this a powerful tool for researchers and students across
a range of disciplines.",
publisher = "Cambridge University Press",
month = nov,
year = 2014,
language = "en"
}
@INBOOK{noauthor_2023-pr,
title = "Epistemology",
booktitle = "{Merriam-Webster} Dictionary",
abstract = "The meaning of EPISTEMOLOGY is the study or a theory of the
nature and grounds of knowledge especially with reference to its
limits and validity.",
publisher = "Merriam-Webster",
month = oct,
year = 2023,
language = "en"
}
@MISC{Oregon_State_University2017-jv,
title = "What are good file naming conventions?",
booktitle = "Web Technology Training",
author = "{Oregon State University}",
abstract = "Spaces in File Names Generally, in the computer science and
IT worlds, it is typically frowned on when files, web
addresses - or really any kind of programming at all - are
named with spaces inside of the title. The reasoning behind
this is very simple. Empty space signifies the ``end'' of a
character string. Spaces inside of a URL or a linked file
basically generate a faulty syntax that the server reads as
the end of a character string. The server sees ``the end''
and stops processing. When the full string is not processed,
it can not be properly represented on your computer screen.",
month = jul,
year = 2017,
howpublished = "\url{https://webtech.training.oregonstate.edu/faq/what-are-good-file-naming-conventions}",
note = "Accessed: 2020-5-14"
}
@BOOK{Pearl2016-lu,
title = "Causal Inference in Statistics: A Primer",
author = "Pearl, Judea and Glymour, Madelyn and Jewell, Nicholas P",
publisher = "John Wiley \& Sons Ltd",
year = 2016
}
@BOOK{Pearl2018-im,
title = "The Book of Why: The New Science of Cause and Effect",
author = "Pearl, Judea and Mackenzie, Dana",
abstract = "A Turing Award-winning computer scientist and statistician shows
how understanding causality has revolutionized science and will
revolutionize artificial intelligence``Correlation is not
causation.'' This mantra, chanted by scientists for more than a
century, has led to a virtual prohibition on causal talk. Today,
that taboo is dead. The causal revolution, instigated by Judea
Pearl and his colleagues, has cut through a century of confusion
and established causality--the study of cause and effect--on a
firm scientific basis. His work explains how we can know easy
things, like whether it was rain or a sprinkler that made a
sidewalk wet; and how to answer hard questions, like whether a
drug cured an illness. Pearl's work enables us to know not just
whether one thing causes another: it lets us explore the world
that is and the worlds that could have been. It shows us the
essence of human thought and key to artificial intelligence.
Anyone who wants to understand either needs The Book of Why.",
publisher = "Basic Books",
month = may,
year = 2018,
language = "en"
}
@ARTICLE{Peng2011-bg,
title = "Reproducible research in computational science",
author = "Peng, Roger D",
abstract = "Computational science has led to exciting new developments, but
the nature of the work has exposed limitations in our ability to
evaluate published findings. Reproducibility has the potential to
serve as a minimum standard for judging scientific claims when
full independent replication of a study is not possible.",
journal = "Science",
volume = 334,
number = 6060,
pages = "1226--1227",
month = dec,
year = 2011,
language = "en"
}
@ARTICLE{Peng2021-xk,
title = "Reproducible Research: A Retrospective",
author = "Peng, Roger D and Hicks, Stephanie C",
abstract = "Advances in computing technology have spurred two extraordinary
phenomena in science: large-scale and high-throughput data
collection coupled with the creation and implementation of
complex statistical algorithms for data analysis. These two
phenomena have brought about tremendous advances in scientific
discovery but have raised two serious concerns. The complexity of
modern data analyses raises questions about the reproducibility
of the analyses, meaning the ability of independent analysts to
recreate the results claimed by the original authors using the
original data and analysis techniques. Reproducibility is
typically thwarted by a lack of availability of the original data
and computer code. A more general concern is the replicability of
scientific findings, which concerns the frequency with which
scientific claims are confirmed by completely independent
investigations. Although reproducibility and replicability are
related, they focus on different aspects of scientific progress.
In this review, we discuss the origins of reproducible research,
characterize the current status of reproducibility in public
health research, and connect reproducibility to current concerns
about the replicability of scientific findings. Finally, we
describe a path forward for improving both the reproducibility
and replicability of public health research in the future.",
journal = "Annu. Rev. Public Health",
volume = 42,
pages = "79--93",
month = apr,
year = 2021,
keywords = "data analysis; replicability; reproducibility",
language = "en"
}
@BOOK{Porta2008-ij,
title = "A Dictionary of Epidemiology",
editor = "Porta, Miquel",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",
year = 2008
}
@MANUAL{R_Development_Core_Team2020-sj,
title = "An Introduction to {R}",
author = "{R Development Core Team}",
abstract = "An Introduction to R",
month = apr,
year = 2020
}
% The entry below contains non-ASCII chars that could not be converted
% to a LaTeX equivalent.
@ARTICLE{Rothman1976-vw,
title = "Causes",
author = "Rothman, K J",
abstract = "The conceptual framework for causes presented here is intended
neither as a review nor an expansion of knowledge, but rather as
a viewpoint which bridges the gap between metaphysical notions
of cause and basic epidemiologic parameters. The focus, then, is
…",
journal = "Am. J. Epidemiol.",
publisher = "academic.oup.com",
volume = 104,
number = 6,
pages = "587--592",
month = dec,
year = 1976,
language = "en"
}
@MISC{RStudio2020-fe,
title = "{RStudio}",
booktitle = "{RStudio}",
author = "{RStudio}",
abstract = "Take control of your R code",
year = 2020,
howpublished = "\url{https://rstudio.com/products/rstudio/}",
note = "Accessed: 2020-5-15"
}
@MISC{RStudio2020-yx,
title = "{R} Markdown",
booktitle = "{RStudio}",
author = "{RStudio}",
abstract = "Turn your analyses into high quality documents, reports,
presentations and dashboards with R Markdown. Use a
productive notebook interface to weave together narrative
text and code to produce elegantly formatted output. Use
multiple languages including R, Python, and SQL. R Markdown
supports a reproducible workflow for dozens of static and
dynamic output formats including HTML, PDF, MS Word, Beamer,
HTML5 slides, Tufte-style handouts, books, dashboards, shiny
applications, scientific articles, websites, and more.",
year = 2020,
howpublished = "\url{https://rmarkdown.rstudio.com/}",
note = "Accessed: 2020-5-17"
}
@MISC{RStudio2021-zl,
title = "{FAQ}: Tips for writing R-related questions",
booktitle = "{RStudio} Community",
author = "{RStudio}",
abstract = "First and foremost, please ask! A core goal of community is
to be a friendly place to chat about topics related to data
science, R, and RStudio. We know that posting to technical
forums can be intimidating. But know that many here would
love to see you overcome your inhibition and engage with us.
Here are a few tips some folks here think might be helpful.
Before you post Check Out R Documentation - R has built in
documentation on packages and functions. For example typing
?lm into your R...",
month = sep,
year = 2021,
howpublished = "\url{https://community.rstudio.com/t/faq-tips-for-writing-r-related-questions/6824}",
note = "Accessed: 2022-1-14",
language = "en"
}
@MISC{Stack_Overflow2022-ga,
title = "What are tags, and how should {I} use them?",
author = "{Stack Overflow}",
month = jan,
year = 2022,
howpublished = "\url{https://stackoverflow.com/help/tagging}",
note = "Accessed: 2022-1-10"
}
@MISC{Stack_Overflow2022-uc,
title = "How do {I} ask a good question?",
booktitle = "Stack Overflow",
author = "{Stack Overflow}",
month = jan,
year = 2022,
howpublished = "\url{https://stackoverflow.com/help/how-to-ask}",
note = "Accessed: 2022-1-14"
}
@BOOK{Westreich2019-lg,
title = "Epidemiology by Design",
author = "Westreich, Daniel",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",
month = nov,
year = 2019,
address = "New York"
}
@ARTICLE{Wickham2014-gy,
title = "Tidy Data",
author = "Wickham, Hadley",
abstract = "A huge amount of effort is spent cleaning data to get it ready
for analysis, but there has been little research on how to make
data cleaning as easy and effective as possible. This paper
tackles a small, but important, component of data cleaning: data
tidying. Tidy datasets are easy to manipulate, model and
visualize, and have a specific structure: each variable is a
column, each observation is a row, and each type of observational
unit is a table. This framework makes it easy to tidy messy
datasets because only a small set of tools are needed to deal
with a wide range of un-tidy datasets. This structure also makes
it easier to develop tidy tools for data analysis, tools that
both input and output tidy datasets. The advantages of a
consistent data structure and matching tools are demonstrated
with a case study free from mundane data manipulation chores.",
journal = "Journal of Statistical Software, Articles",
volume = 59,
number = 10,
pages = "1--23",
year = 2014
}
@INCOLLECTION{Wickham2019-yt,
title = "Style guide",
booktitle = "Advanced {R}",
author = "Wickham, Hadley",
month = apr,
year = 2019
}
@MANUAL{Wickham2020-dx,
title = "Programming with dplyr",
author = "Wickham, Hadley and Fran{\c c}ois, Romain and Henry, Lionel and
M{\"u}ller, Kirill and {RStudio}",
abstract = "Most dplyr verbs use ``tidy evaluation'', a special type of
non-standard evaluation. In this vignette, you'll learn the two
basic forms, data masking and tidy selection, and how you can
program with them using either functions or for loops.",
year = 2020
}
@INCOLLECTION{Wickham2023-ta,
title = "Workflow: code style",
booktitle = "{R} for Data Science",
author = "Wickham, Hadley and {\c C}etinkaya-Rundel, Mine and Grolemund,
Garrett",
edition = "second",
month = jul,
year = 2023
}
@BOOK{Xie2020-st,
title = "{R} Markdown: The Definitive Guide",
author = "Xie, Yihui and Allaire, J J and Grolemund, Garrett",
abstract = "The first official book authored by the core R Markdown
developers that provides a comprehensive and accurate reference
to the R Markdown ecosystem. With R Markdown, you can easily
create reproducible data analysis reports, presentations,
dashboards, interactive applications, books, dissertations,
websites, and journal articles, while enjoying the simplicity of
Markdown and the great power of R and other languages.",
month = apr,
year = 2020
}