Christophe I see an ODT file in there - LFPdetection_in.odt http://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00591455/
May I ask how the document was produced. Do you have any insights on how the Org's ODT exporter performs wrt your input Org file. Just curious. > @article{Delescluse2011, > title = "Making neurophysiological data analysis reproducible: Why and how?", > journal = "Journal of Physiology-Paris", > volume = "", > number = "0", > pages = " - ", > year = "2011", > note = "", > issn = "0928-4257", > doi = "10.1016/j.jphysparis.2011.09.011", > url = "http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0928425711000374", > author = "Matthieu Delescluse and Romain Franconville and Sébastien Joucla > and Tiffany Lieury and Christophe Pouzat", > keywords = "Software", > keywords = "R", > keywords = "Emacs", > keywords = "Matlab", > keywords = "Octave", > keywords = "LATEX", > keywords = "Org-mode", > keywords = "Python", > abstract = "Reproducible data analysis is an approach aiming at complementing > classical printed scientific articles with everything required to > independently reproduce the results they present. “Everything” covers here: > the data, the computer codes and a precise description of how the code was > applied to the data. A brief history of this approach is presented first, > starting with what economists have been calling replication since the early > eighties to end with what is now called reproducible research in > computational data analysis oriented fields like statistics and signal > processing. Since efficient tools are instrumental for a routine > implementation of these approaches, a description of some of the available > ones is presented next. A toy example demonstrates then the use of two open > source software programs for reproducible data analysis: the “Sweave family” > and the org-mode of emacs. The former is bound to R while the latter can be > used with R, Matlab, Python and many more “generalist” data processing > software. Both solutions can be used with Unix-like, Windows and Mac families > of operating systems. It is argued that neuroscientists could communicate > much more efficiently their results by adopting the reproducible research > paradigm from their lab books all the way to their articles, thesis and > books." > } --