diff --git a/paper.md b/paper.md index 9705daf..266ec20 100644 --- a/paper.md +++ b/paper.md @@ -84,7 +84,7 @@ Accordingly, the components share their interface – every component loads data The `autora` framework presumes that each component is distributed as a separate package but in a shared namespace, and that `autora-core` – which provides the state – has very few dependencies of its own. For users, separate packages minimize the time and storage required for an install of an `autora` project. For contributors, they reduce incidence of dependency conflicts (a common problem for projects with many dependencies) by reducing the likelihood that the library they need has an existing conflict in `autora`. It also allows contributors to independently develop and maintain modules, fostering ownership of and responsibility for their contributions. External contributors can request to have packages vetted and included as an optional dependency in the `autora` package. # Acknowledgements -The AutoRA framework is developed and maintained by members of the Autonomous Empirical Research Group. S. M., B. A., C. C. W., J. T. S. H., and Y. S. were supported by the Carney BRAINSTORM program at Brown University. S. M. also received support from Schmidt Science Fellows, in partnership with the Rhodes Trust. The development of auxiliary packages for AutoRA, such as `autodoc`, is supported by the Virtual Institute for Scientific Software. The AutoRA package was developed using computational resources and services at the Center for Computation and Visualization, Brown University. +The AutoRA framework is developed and maintained by members of the Autonomous Empirical Research Group. S. M., B. A., C. C. W., J. T. S. H., and Y. S. were supported by the Carney BRAINSTORM program at Brown University. S. M. also received support from Schmidt Science Fellows, in partnership with the Rhodes Trust. The development of auxiliary packages for AutoRA, such as `autodoc`, is supported by Schmidt Sciences, LLC. as part of the Virtual Institute for Scientific Software (VISS). The AutoRA package was developed using computational resources and services at the Center for Computation and Visualization, Brown University. # References