Fiona Fidler
Fiona Fidler is an Australian professor and lecturer with interests in meta-research, reproducibility, open science, reasoning and decision making and statistical practice. She has held research positions at several universities and across disciplines in conjunction with Australian Research Council Centres of Excellence.
Education
Fidler completed a Bachelor of Psychology with majors in Psychology and Sociology at James Cook University of North Queensland in 1994. In 2005 she completed a PhD in the Department of History and Philosophy of Science at the University of Melbourne. Her thesis topic was ''From Statistical Significance to Effect Estimation: Statistical Reform in Psychology, Medicine and Ecology.''Career
Fidler states her main interest is in "how scientists and other experts reason, make and justify decisions, and change their minds."She has a continuing focus on "statistical controversies, for example, the ongoing debate over Null Hypothesis Significance Testing versus Estimation and arguments about Frequentists versus Bayesian statistics."
Fidler has been active in promoting the credibility of research and discussion around the "reproducibility crisis". She has written or co-written a number of articles concerning scientific uncertainty.
From 2007 to 2010 Fidler was an Australian Research Council Postdoctoral Fellow in the School of Psychological Science at La Trobe University. Then from 2011 to 2014 she was senior research fellow in the Centre of Excellence for Biosecurity Risk Assessment and the ARC Centre of Excellence in Environmental Decisions at The University of Melbourne where she worked on various expert judgement projects.
in 2015 Fidler received an ARC Future Fellowship to explore reproducibility and open science in conservation science. She took up a position at the University of Melbourne jointly in the School of BioSciences. Fidler has continuing collaborations with the at RMIT University.
With Professor Simine Vazire, she co-leads the interdisciplinary
Fidler was the founding president of the Association for Interdisciplinary Metaresearch and Open Science, which was established to improve the quality of scientific research.