About ABRIR

In response to the global need of increasing representation in how we conduct open science, a small working group came together to form a solution. At PSACON21, we first discussed the idea that researchers from developing nations face unique challenges when fulfilling participatory or leadership roles in big team open science networks. Notably, many Big Team networks like the PSA & ManyLabs struggle to recruit populations and display researcher leadership beyond WEIRD (Western, Educated, Industrialist, Rich & Democratic) populations. A key solution is to Advancing Big-team Reproducible Science through Increased Representation, thus the acronym ABRIR

Supported by the SIPS Grants-in-Aid to Reduce Barriers to Improving Psychological Science 2021, we are developing a workshop series to openly generate knowledge & training resources to bring more researchers from low-to-middle-income countries (LMIC) to the global stage. Check more details about the upcoming workshop series on our Events page.

Our long-term mission is to continue the work of identifying challenges uniquely faced by researchers from the Global South and devising best practices that can be shared within the academic community. We hope to build a collaborative network of psychological science researchers from LMICs to explore and answer questions of deep relevance to their local regions.


Founding Members

Nadia Saraí Corral-Frías, PhD

Universidad de Sonora, Mexico

Natalia Dutra, PhD

Federal University de Para, Brazil

Alma Jeftić, PhD

University of Copenhagen, Denmark
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International Christian University, Japan

Aishwarya Iyer

Christ University, Bangalore, India

Neha Parashar

Maastricht University, Netherlands


Our Executive Committee

ABRIR is a collaborative effort of researchers from a diverse set of communities. Here is our Executive Committee:

Nadia Saraí Corral-Frías, PhD

Universidad de Sonora, Mexico

Natalia Dutra, PhD

Federal University de Para, Brazil

Alma Jeftić, PhD

University of Copenhagen, Denmark
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International Christian University, Japan

Aishwarya Iyer

Christ University, Bangalore, India

Nikita Ghodke

Project USPAS and NIMHANS (India)

Aleksandra Lazić

University of Belgrade, Serbia

Brendan Ch’ng, PhD

Independent Scholar, Malaysia

Rulinda Kwizera

National University of Rwanda, Rwanda

Sandesh Dhakal, PhD

Tribhuvan University, Nepal

Karolina
Koszałkowska, PhD

University of Lodz, Poland