STARS framework

Please note: This is a template page and has not yet been completed

This page evaluates the extent to which the original study meets the recommendations from the STARS framework for the sharing of code and associated materials from discrete-event simulation models (Monks, Harper, and Mustafee (2024)).

Of the 8 essential STARS components:

Of the 5 optional STARS components:

Component Description Met by study? Evidence/location
Essential components
Open license Free and open-source software (FOSS) license (e.g. MIT, GNU Public License (GPL))
Dependency management Specify software libraries, version numbers and sources (e.g. dependency management tools like virtualenv, conda, poetry)
FOSS model Coded in FOSS language (e.g. R, Julia, Python)
Minimum documentation Minimal instructions (e.g. in README) that overview (a) what model does, (b) how to install and run model to obtain results, and (c) how to vary parameters to run new experiments
ORCID ORCID for each study author
Citation information Instructions on how to cite the research artefact (e.g. CITATION.cff file)
Remote code repository Code available in a remote code repository (e.g. GitHub, GitLab, BitBucket)
Open science archive Code stored in an open science archive with FORCE11 compliant citation and guaranteed persistance of digital artefacts (e.g. Figshare, Zenodo, the Open Science Framework (OSF), and the Computational Modeling in the Social and Ecological Sciences Network (CoMSES Net))
Optional components
Enhanced documentation Open and high quality documentation on how the model is implemented and works (e.g. via notebooks and markdown files, brought together using software like Quarto and Jupyter Book). Suggested content includes:
β€’ Plain english summary of project and model
β€’ Clarifying license
β€’ Citation instructions
β€’ Contribution instructions
β€’ Model installation instructions
β€’ Structured code walk through of model
β€’ Documentation of modelling cycle using TRACE
β€’ Annotated simulation reporting guidelines
β€’ Clear description of model validation including its intended purpose
Documentation hosting Host documentation (e.g. with GitHub pages, GitLab pages, BitBucket Cloud, Quarto Pub)
Online coding environment Provide an online environment where users can run and change code (e.g. BinderHub, Google Colaboratory, Deepnote)
Model interface Provide web application interface to the model so it is accessible to less technical simulation users
Web app hosting Host web app online (e.g. Streamlit Community Cloud, ShinyApps hosting)

References

Monks, Thomas, Alison Harper, and Navonil Mustafee. 2024. β€œTowards Sharing Tools and Artefacts for Reusable Simulations in Healthcare.” Journal of Simulation 0 (0): 1–20. https://doi.org/10.1080/17477778.2024.2347882.