Alice Allen is an American information technology specialist and astronomer, the editor of the Astrophysics Source Code Library[1] and a faculty specialist in the Astronomy Department of the University of Maryland, College Park.[2]
Education and career
editAllen is a graduate of Hunter College, in the School of Health Sciences,[3] where she studied medical laboratory science.[4] She worked in information technology as a consultant, in private industry, and for 22 years in the Division of Information Technology of the Federal Reserve Board, before retiring in 2017.[3]
She became editor of the Astrophysics Source Code Library in 2010,[3] on a volunteer basis, after previously volunteering for the Astronomy Picture of the Day web site.[1] Her work on making available the codes for processing astronomical data has been cited as an important component in the reproducibility of scientific research.[5]
Recognition
editIn 2023 the American Astronomical Society (AAS) named Allen as a Fellow of the AAS, "for her great insight, deep knowledge, leading advocacy, and inspiring achievements involving open-source astronomy software; for making astronomy more efficient by creating avenues to release and cite research software; and for building, editing, and promoting the Astrophysics Source Code Library".[6]
References
edit- ^ a b Perkel, Jeffrey (January 2016), "The code librarian", Nature, 530 (7588): 118, doi:10.1038/nature.2016.19220, PMID 26854298
- ^ "Alice Allen", People, University of Maryland Astronomy Department, retrieved 2023-09-17
- ^ a b c "Alice Allen", Astrophysics Source Code Library, retrieved 2023-09-17
- ^ Ms Alice Allen, Research Data Alliance, retrieved 2023-09-17
- ^ Wild, Sarah (April 2018), "Irreproducible astronomy", Physics Today (4), doi:10.1063/pt.6.1.20180404a
- ^ AAS Names 22 New Fellows for 2023, American Astronomical Society, February 8, 2023, retrieved 2023-09-17
External links
edit- Alice Allen publications indexed by Google Scholar