Reproducible Analytical Pipelines

...the code, and ensuring that the code does what we expect it to, but because we have written an R package, it’s also very easy for us to institute tests...
...the code, and ensuring that the code does what we expect it to, but because we have written an R package, it’s also very easy for us to institute tests...
...services to provide live data, good progress has been made understanding in analysing the quality and scope of the data that will be available. Legislation for this service requires that...
...the need for change We reviewed the existing manual processes for how career data on SCS was being collected and used to assess people’s suitability for vacant digital roles, so...
...service. Point 12 - Create a service that is simple and intuitive enough that users succeed first time. The service team has identified the top user need for the service...
...state of digital government review, and will help to deliver the six point plan for digital reform across the UK government laid out in the blueprint for modern digital government....
...data format called JSON. If you’re not comfortable writing your own code to read this data in a programming language such as Python or R, there are tools that can...
...of who the service users are and what that means for the design of the service. The team acknowledged that user research had started at a late point in the...
...practice. Algorithmic tools increasingly support high-impact decisions affecting individuals, for example helping public servants assess eligibility for government programmes or benefits. Open and transparent communication about where, how and why...
...the codebase for reuse. For example, the .NET frontend toolkit could be developed and released to the open source community.” The assessment panel were disappointed that no progress has been...
...that the option the team has chosen represents a significant step forward, replacing legacy technology with a service that can be iterated and improved over time. The team is clearly...