Open hardware as research instruments

20 Dec 2021

Dear RDA WG members,
We have been a group of professional enthusiasts working on the recognition of hardware and its engineering inside the research process, and we are starting a novel RDA interest group with the first objective to adapt FAIR principles for (open) hardware. We would be so grateful if you would share your experience and expertise with us, and would be delighted if you would be interested in joining the group: https://www.rd-alliance.org/groups/fair-principles-research-hardware.
From what I read, your group has been mostly interested in instruments one can buy, while we are mostly interested in self-built instruments. It seems to me the two approaches are complementary to allow for a better reproducibility in the research process.
Best regards,
Julien Colomb=

  • Rolf Krahl's picture

    Author: Rolf Krahl

    Date: 20 Dec, 2021

    Dear Julien,
    Dear Julien,
    Am Montag, 20. Dezember 2021, 14:01:00 CET schrieb juliencolomb via Persistent Identification of Instruments WG:
    >
    > We have been a group of professional enthusiasts working on the
    > recognition of hardware and its engineering inside the research
    > process, and we are starting a novel RDA interest group with the
    > first objective to adapt FAIR principles for (open) hardware.
    Interesting! Do you plan to submit a session proposal for the
    upcoming plenary in June?
    That is not entirely correct. Having persistent identifiers is
    equally relevant for commercial off-the-shelf instruments as for
    self-built ones. In fact, the instruments that I assign DOIs for at
    HZB are mostly designed and built by ourselves.
    But I believe, there is another aspect where the two approaches are
    complementary: as far as I understand, your IG is mostly cencerned
    with instrument designs, e.g. instrument types. The PIDINST approach
    considers individual physical instances. Nevertheless, I believe
    there is quite some overlap of interest, in particular when it comes
    to instrument description. So, we should keep in contact.
    Best regards,
    Rolf
    --
    Rolf Krahl <***@***.***-berlin.de>
    Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin für Materialien und Energie (HZB)
    Albert-Einstein-Str. 15, 12489 Berlin
    Tel.: +49 30 8062 12122

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