Top 10 FAIR Data & Software Things
Creators
- Paula Andrea Martinez1
- Christopher Erdmann2
- Natasha Simons3
- Reid Otsuji4
- Stephanie Labou4
- Ryan Johnson4
- Guilherme Castelao4
- Bia Villas Boas4
- Anna-Lena Lamprecht5
- Carlos Martinez Ortiz6
- Leyla Garcia7
- Mateusz Kuzak8
- Liz Stokes3
- Tom Honeyman3
- Sharyn Wise9
- Josh Quan10
- Scott Peterson10
- Amy Neeser10
- Lena Karvovskaya11
- Otto Lange11
- Iza Witkowska11
- Jacques Flores11
- Fiona Bradley12
- Kristina Hettne13
- Peter Verhaar13
- Ben Companjen13
- Laurents Sesink13
- Fieke Schoots13
- Erik Schultes14
- Rajaram Kaliyaperumal15
- Erzsébet Tóth-Czifra16
- Ricardo de Miranda Azevedo17
- Sanne Muurling18
- John Brown19
- Janice Chan19
- Niamh Quigley19
- Lisa Federer20
- Douglas Joubert21
- Allissa Dillman22
- Kenneth Wilkins23
- Ishwar Chandramouliswaran24
- Vivek Navale25
- Susan Wright26
- Silvia Di Giorgio27
- Mandela Fasemore27
- Konrad Förstner27
- Till Sauerwein27
- Eva Seidlmayer27
- Ilja Zeitlin28
- Susannah Bacon3
- Katie Hannan29
- Richard Ferrers3
- Keith Russell3
- Deidre Whitmore30
- Tim Dennis30
- Daniel Bangert31
- Albert Meroño Peñuela32
- Enrico Daga33
- Gerry Ryder3
- Aswin Narayanan34
- Iryna Kuchma35
- Jose Manzano Patron36
- Andrew Mehnert37
- Matthias Liffers3
- Ronald Siebes38
- Gerard Coen38
- Kathleen Gregory38
- Andrea Scharnhorst38
- Maria Cruz32
- Francoise Genova39
- Matthew Kenworthy40
- Natalie Meyers41
- Evert Rol42
- Juande Santander-Vela43
- Joanne Yeomans44
- Elli Papadopoulou45
- Emma Lazzeri46
- Leonidas Mouchliadis47
- Katerina Lenaki48
- Spyros Zoupanos49
- Danail Hristozov50
- Stella Stoycheva51
- Ellen Leenarts52
- Marjan Grootveld53
- Frans Huigen53
- Eliane Fankhauser53
- 1. National Imaging Facility (NIF) and Characterisation Virtual Laboratory (CVL)
- 2. California Digital Library / Library Carpentry
- 3. Australian Research Data Commons
- 4. UC San Diego
- 5. University of Utrecht
- 6. The Netherlands eScience Center
- 7. EMBL
- 8. Dutch Techcentre for Life Sciences
- 9. University of Technology, Sydney
- 10. UC Berkeley
- 11. Research Data Management (RDM) support at Utrecht University Library
- 12. UNSW Library, and University of Western Australia
- 13. Centre for Digital Scholarship, Leiden University Libraries
- 14. GO FAIR International Support and Coordination Office
- 15. Leiden University Medical Center
- 16. DARIAH
- 17. Maastricht University
- 18. Leiden University Libraries
- 19. Curtin University
- 20. National Library of Medicine
- 21. National Institutes of Health Library
- 22. National Center for Biotechnology Information
- 23. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases
- 24. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
- 25. NIH Center for Information Technology
- 26. National Institute on Drug Abuse
- 27. ZB MED - Information Center for Life Science, Cologne, Germany
- 28. Joint Science Conference
- 29. CSIRO
- 30. UCLA
- 31. Göttingen State and University Library
- 32. Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
- 33. The Open University
- 34. National Imaging Facility and Centre for Advanced Imaging
- 35. EIFL / FOSTER / OpenAIRE
- 36. University of Nottingham
- 37. Centre for Microscopy Characterisation and Analysis and The University of Western Australia
- 38. Data Archiving & Networked Services
- 39. Centre de Données astronomiques de Strasbourg
- 40. Leiden Observatory
- 41. University of Notre Dame
- 42. Netherlands eScience Center
- 43. SKA Organisation: Jodrell Bank Observatory
- 44. Leiden University
- 45. Athena Research Center / OpenAIRE
- 46. National Research Council of Italy / OpenAIRE
- 47. FORTH-IESL, Laser and Applications Division
- 48. Greek Ministry of Education, open science enthusiast
- 49. EPFL
- 50. Greendecision / GRACIOUS
- 51. Yordas Group / GRACIOUS
- 52. Data Archiving and Networked Services / OpenAIRE
- 53. Data Archiving and Networked Services
Description
The Top 10 FAIR Data & Software Global Sprint was held online over the course of two-days (29-30 November 2018), where participants from around the world were invited to develop brief guides (stand alone, self-paced training materials), called “Things”, that can be used by the research community to understand FAIR in different contexts but also as starting points for conversations around FAIR. The idea for “Top 10 Data Things” stems from initial work done at the Australian Research Data Commons or ARDC (formerly known as the Australian National Data Service).
The Global Sprint was organised by Library Carpentry, Australian Research Data Commons and the Research Data Alliance Libraries for Research Data Interest Group in collaboration with FOSTER Open Science, OpenAire, RDA Europe, Data Management Training Clearinghouse, California Digital Library, Dryad, AARNet, Center for Digital Scholarship at the Leiden University, and DANS. Anyone could join the Sprint and roughly 25 groups/individuals participated from The Netherlands, Germany, Australia, United States, Hungary, Norway, Italy, and Belgium. See the full list of registered Sprinters.
Sprinters worked off of a primer that was provided in advance together with an online ARDC webinar introducing FAIR and the Sprint titled, “Ready, Set, Go! Join the Top 10 FAIR Data Things Global Sprint.” Groups/individuals developed their Things in Google docs which could be accessed and edited by all participants. The Sprinters also used a Zoom channel provided by ARDC, for online calls and coordination, and a Gitter channel, provided by Library Carpentry, to chat with each other throughout the two-days. In addition, participants used the Twitter hashtag #Top10FAIR to communicate with the broader community, sometimes including images of the day.
Participants greeted each other throughout the Sprint and created an overall welcoming environment. As the Sprint shifted to different timezones, it was a chance for participants to catch up. The Zoom and Gitter channels were a way for many to connect over FAIR but also discuss other topics. A number of participants did not know what to expect from a Library Carpentry/Carpentries-like event but found a welcoming environment where everyone could participate.
The Top 10 FAIR Data & Software Things repository and website hosts the work of the Sprinters and is meant to be an evolving resource. In May 2019, additional sprinters from the 2019 Library Carpentry-Mozilla Global Sprint contributed six new Top 10 FAIR Data & Software Things: Nanotechnology, Astronomy, Linked Open Data, Imaging, Music, and The European Open Science Cloud (EOSC). While sprints are one way to contribute, members of the wider community can submit issues and/or pull requests to the Things to help improve them or add new ones. Published versions of the Things are available via Zenodo and the DOI http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.2555498.
Files
2019-02-01-Top-10-FAIR-Data-and-Software-Things.pdf
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