The open source software was created by Ruben C. Arslan and is being maintained and developed jointly with Cyril S. Tata.
If you are publishing research conducted using formr, please cite
Arslan, R. C., Walther, M. P., & Tata, C. S. (2020). formr: A study framework allowing for automated feedback generation and complex longitudinal experience-sampling studies using R. Behavior Research Methods, 52, 376–387. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13428-019-01236-y
Cite the version that was active while you ran your study. Zenodo will keep backups of each major release, so that the software used for your study is preserved when we update it and if Github ceases to exist. This ensures reproducibility and allows us to trace papers affected by major bugs, should we discover any in the future.
If you used the accompanying R package, you should cite it too, because it is independent of the rest of the software and independently versioned.
Arslan, R.C. (2017). formr R package (Version 0.4.1).
Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena – DFG project "Kompass", PIs: Julia Zimmermann, Franz J. Neyer
Georg August University Göttingen – Lars Penke, current hosting
Center for Open Science – Open Contributor Grant to Ruben Arslan and Cyril Tata.
formr was made by Ruben C. Arslan and Cyril S. Tata.
The current incarnation of the survey framework draws on prior work by Linus Neumann, prior funding by Jaap J. A. Denissen, ideas, testing, and feedback by Sarah J. Lennartz, Isabelle Habedank, and Tanja M. Gerlach.
Georg August University Göttingen
Friedrich Schiller University Jena
formr is open source software and uses a lot of other free software, see the Github repository for some due credit. Most importantly, formr uses OpenCPU as its R backend.
Your (and your participants') connection to this site is encrypted using state-of-the-art security using HTTPS (also called HTTP over TLS). This protects against eavesdropping on survey responses and tampering with the content of our site.
We have taken several measures to make it very unlikely that sensitive participant's data is divulged. It is not possible for participants to retrieve their answers to past responses, unless those are incorporated in a feedback somewhere by you, the researcher. Therefore, care should be taken not to incorporate sensitive information into the feedback and to alert participants to any possible privacy gray areas in the feedback (e.g. incorporating participant responses about their employer in a feedback mailed to a work email address or incorporating feedback on romantic activity in a study where it's likely that the participant's partner has access to their device).
Participants get an access token for the study, which functions as a strong password. However, an access token is stored on participant's devices/browsers by default and (if you set this up) emails can be sent to their email addresses, so the protection is only as strong as security for access to their device or their email account.
It is very important that you, as the study administator, choose a strong password for the admin account and the email address that it is linked to. Here's some good advice on choosing a strong password. Do not share the password with your collaborators via unencrypted channels (e.g. email) and don't share the password via any medium together with the information for which account and website it is. Keep your password in a safe place (your mind, a good password manager) and make sure your collaborators do the same.
The same precautions, of course, should be respected for the data that you collected.
Should you plan to release the collected data openly, please make sure that the data are not sensitive and not (re-)identifiable.
This instance of the formr.org is hosted on servers at the Georg August University Göttingen. It implements a security model that individually and uniquely protects the various entities of the platform, the application, it's data and the R interface (OpenCPU). These entities communicate only within a local network whose access is restricted to the IT administators of the Georg-Elias-Müller-Institute of Psychology.
Our entire database is backed up nightly. Whenever real data is deleted by you in bulk, formr backs it up as well, right before deletion. No backup is made if you delete single users/single survey entries. We do not specifically back up run units and survey files, but you can redownload the most recently uploaded version of a survey file and download files with the run structure to your computer or to the openscienceframework.
This is pretty much brand new software and is supplied for free, open-source. As such, it doesn't come with a warranty of any kind. Still, if you let us know when formr causes you trouble or headaches, we will try to help you resolve the problem and you will get our heartfelt apologies.
If you're the technical type (or employ one), you might consider hosting a stable release of formr yourself, because this version of formr tracks the most recent pre-release and will thus sometimes have kinks.