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61 changes: 61 additions & 0 deletions _events/2026/2026-05-testing-talk-series.md
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---
title: "US-RSE Software Testing Talk Series"
subtitle:
expires: 2026-05-20
event_date: "May 20, 2026"
layout: event
duration: 60
repeated: false
category: Software Testing
time:
- - start: 2026-05-20T17:00:00Z
end: 2026-05-20T18:00:00Z
---

The Testing working group is happy to announce a new talk on Software
Testing on Wednesday May 20, 1-2 PM EDT.

Title: **Software testing in the Open Force Field Initiative**

Presenter: **Matt Thompson**

### Abstract
Force fields---physics-based models used in molecular
simulations---are central to computational chemistry, but they are
often difficult to use with other software, lack accuracy on chemical
systems of interest, or are not developed openly. The Open Force Field
Initiative is an open and collaborative approach to addressing these
challenges, built on open-source software, publicly accessible data,
and open science. Our primary products are force fields, but we also
ship software to enable their adoption in users' workflows. These
users from academia and industry work in a range of fields including
drug discovery and materials science. In this talk, I will present the
processes the team uses to develop, maintain, and deploy force fields
and research software, monitor deployment and packaging issues, and
manage user support. Finally, I discuss outstanding challenges our
infrastructure and the broader ecosystem, ideas that did not work as
well as expected, and other actionable lessons learned from years of
experience.

### Biography
Matt is a Senior Research Software Engineer with the [Open Force Field
initiative](https://openforcefield.org/), where he started in March
2020 (and until March 2022 held the title of Software
Scientist). Broadly, he operationalizes research software as part of
developing and maintaining the [OpenFF software
stack](https://github.com/openforcefield) that enables it.

Previously, he was a PhD candidate and research engineer in the Peter
T. Cummings lab in the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular
Engineering at Vanderbilt University, where he received his PhD
in 2019. His research there focused on the use of molecular simulation
to study the fundamental properties of components of next-generation
energy storage devices. Late in his time at Vanderbilt, he also worked
on tools that automate workflows aimed at these and other scientific
questions. His main two projects at Vanderbilt were the FIRST
Center and [MoSDeF](https://mosdef.org/).

#### Registration details

To register follow this link:
[Testing Talk Series Registration](https://tennessee.zoom.us/meeting/register/GU3-6ggxRVi_gvfvHoY6Cg)
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