How quick is lightning?
Lightning is pretty quick: two minutes. You are also allowed only one slide. You'll be presenting alongside a countdown timer, so you'll have to keep to time. However, it's amazing how much you can present in two minutes.
If you want more time to investigate your subject, let us know and we will try and add it to our series of discussion sessions.
If you are preparing a lightning talk for CW15 please take a read of our handy tips. Remember CW15 is going to attract people who are interested in both software and research, so tailor your talk to meet their needs.
Topics for lightning talks
Interdisciplinarity, reproducible research, software, training, research software methods and software management - just some of the themes that will be covered by the lightning talks.
Get the slides
The lightning talks are listed below, with links through to each slide. Alternatively, you also download a complete set of all of the slides.
Order of talks
- 'Using molecular simulations to predict antibiotic resistance from whole genome sequencing; marrying computational chemistry, eInfrastructure and clinical genomics' by Philip Fowler
- 'Creating and reporting reproducible benchmarks' by Sarah Mount
- 'Talk to me' by Boris Adryan
- 'Continuous computation: building and sorting a pile of DNA' by Joe Parker
- 'Understand your users as if you were a start-up company' by Neil Chue Hong
- 'The British Library: A place for a data. A community not ready. A team on the case.' by James Baker
- 'Automated training materials generation with Dexy, Pandoc and Jenkins — write once, get slides, website, pdf handout and an IPython notebook' by James Hetherington
- 'A Software Management Plan Service' by Mike Jackson
- 'NSCCS - EPSRC's National service for compuational chemistry software' by Alexandra Simperler
- 'How to publish and use scientific software in the near future' by Martin Hammitzsch
- 'Crowd-sourcing Materials for Teaching Software Engineering' by Robert Haines
- 'Science in a Container' by Susheel Varma
- 'Scientific Software Citations' by Olexandr Konovalov
- 'Stan: A Platform for Efficient Bayesian Inference' by Michael Betancourt
- 'A perfect reproducible research system?' by Robin Wilson
- 'From question to data: software for psychology research' by Mihaela Duta
- 'FLOSS Manuals and distributed publishing' by Larisa Blazic
- 'From raw data to evaluation: managing experiment workflow with build systems' by Dimitrijs Milajevs
- 'Computational evolutionary simulation' by Russell Garwood
- 'Bioinformatics for emerging organisms' by Yannick Wurm
- 'Bionode - Scalable bioinformatics with Node.js Streams' by Bruno Vieira
- 'Using MATLAB File Exchange and GitHub as a multi-disciplinary collaboration tool' by Bet Herrera Sucarrat
- 'Translating Academic Research Into Production Code' by Andrew Rimmer
- 'DMPonline for Data Management Planning: join our community!' by Marta Ribeiro
- 'Paper Hackathons' by Derek Groen
- 'Reproducible Research in The Cloud' by Mark Stillwell
- 'A journey from data to money' by Nanlin Jin
- 'The fight for survival: programming language evolution and endangered software' by Dominic Orchard
- 'Python Community of Practice (PyCoP)' by Mark Basham
- 'Data mining for lab based biologists: Open source tools to enable large scale biological network analysis through a web browser' by Peter Clarke
- 'Annalist linked data notebook' by Graham Klyne
- 'Using Multi-Label Text Classification to Mine Embodied Emotions in Historical Text' by Janneke van der Zwaan
- 'Building cross-domain codebase at Netherlands eScience Center' by Mateusz Kuzak
- 'Bias correction in large climatic data' by Ioannis Bistinas
- 'Sharing is broken! Let's fix it by connecting researchers!' by David Perez-Suarez
- 'Python, Pandas and HDF5: Data analysis techniques' by James Morrison
- 'Finding Interdisciplinary Research and Software Connections' by Jim Hensman
- 'Agent-based computational economics (ACE) using Scala and Akka' by David Pugh
- 'ELIXIR UK' by Rita Hendricusdottir
- 'How do you Build, Install and Deploy?' by Ben Morgan
- 'Enabling reproducible, transparent research' by Norman Morrison
- 'Organic Chemistry Science Gateway' by Mikhail Kabeshov
- 'GUI or code? Don't make me choose' by Alys Brett