Open Data

I am committed to open and reproducible science. I advocate resource sharing in HCI research and make most resources that contributed to my first-author publications openly available. This page contains references to available open data.

Feger, Sebastian S., Paweł W. Wozniak, Lars Lischke, and Albrecht Schmidt. 'Yes, I comply!': Motivations and Practices around Research Data Management and Reuse across Scientific Fields (Open Data) In Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction 4, no. CSCW2 (2020): 1-26.
https://doi.org/10.1145/3415212

The open data include:

  • Interview questionnaire: The questionnaire that was used for the semi-structured interviews.
  • Analysis report - Atlas.ti report on code groups: The interview transcriptions were organized and coded with the Atlas.ti data analysis software. Our extensive and highly collaborative analysis effort finally resulted in the generation of 28 code groups. We decided to publish the Atlas.ti report that entails those code groups, as well as the corresponding codes.
  • Triangulation questionnaire: The first version of a questionnaire designed to further validate and explore the wider applicability of our model.
  • Various mockups and a paper exercise used in the study.

Feger, Sebastian S., Sünje Dallmeier-Tiessen, Albrecht Schmidt, and Paweł W. Woźniak. Designing for Reproducibility: A Qualitative Study of Challenges and Opportunities in High Energy Physics. (Open Data) In Proceedings of the 2019 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, pp. 1-14. 2019.
Paper: https://doi.org/10.1145/3290605.3300685

The open data include:

  • Interview questionnaire: The questionnaire that was used for the 12 semi-structured interviews.
  • Paper exercise #1 - Analysis connections and dependencies: The paper exercise proved to be very valuable in building an understanding of the connections and dependencies that exist between analyses. Based on their drawings, interviewees were able to describe how they could profit from a preservation service being aware of those relations.
  • Paper exercises #2 - Faceting exercise: This exercise was designed to generate an understanding of the underlying structure of analyses, as perceived by data analysts. It allowed us to better understand the value of information that a preservation service holds.
  • Analysis report - Atlas.ti report on code groups: The interview transcriptions were organized and coded with the Atlas.ti data analysis software. Our extensive and highly collaborative analysis effort finally resulted in the generation of 22 code groups. We decided to publish the Atlas.ti report that entails those code groups, a short description of them and the corresponding codes.

Feger, Sebastian S., Sünje Dallmeier-Tiessen, Paweł W. Woźniak, and Albrecht Schmidt. Gamification in Science: A Study of Requirements in the Context of Reproducible Research. (Open Data) In Proceedings of the 2019 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, pp. 1-14. 2019.
Paper: https://doi.org/10.1145/3290605.3300690

The open data include:

  • Interview guide: The protocol that was used for the semi-structured, prototype-centered interviews.
  • Analysis report - Atlas.ti report on code groups: The interview transcriptions were organized and coded with the Atlas.ti data analysis software. Our extensive and highly collaborative analysis effort finally resulted in the generation of nine code groups. We decided to publish the Atlas.ti report that entails those code groups, a short description of them and the corresponding codes.
  • Questionnaires: The complete set of questionnaires that we used to assess the value, enjoyment, suitability and persuasiveness of our designs, as well as our underlying design assumptions. Questionnaires were created for ATLAS, CMS and LHCb. Besides the reference to the collaboration, they are identical. Thus, we only provide one.
  • Questionnaire responses: An Excel sheet that lists all responses to the administered questionnaires in a structured manner.
  • Balsamiq archives: We prepared interactive Balsamiq prototypes for several LHC collaborations. Except for the collaboration name label (e.g. CMS), they are identical. Thus, we added only archives for one collaboration. We provided both the Simple Game Elements Design (SGED) and Rational-Informative Design (RID) mockups.