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R versus Matlab in Mathematical Psychology

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I recently attended the 2011 Australasian Mathematical Psychology Conference.This post summarises a few thoughts I had on the use of R, Matlab and othertools in mathematical psychology flowing from discussions with researchers atthe conference.

I wanted to get a sense of the software used by researchers in mathematicalpsychology.What was popular?Why was it popular?From the small-n, non-random sample of conference attendees that I spoke to overcoffee and cake, I concluded:

From my discussions, I saw no need for me to personally switch from R to Matlab.Sweave, graphics, and all the R packages are fantastic.The community around R is also one of its great strengths.

Finally, open source just aligns better with science.

It all combines to support scientific disciplines in sharing and building knowledge through accountability and trust.This applies both to sharing between researchers as well as communicating withthe broader community.

I get a bad feeling when I think of researchers and interested community memberswho can’t afford Matlab being excluded from research.

However, it was interesting to consider how issues like user-friendlydocumentation, development environments, and consistency could be facilitated ina massive and distributed open source project such as R.

...END RANT...

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