Webcast: Findable, accessible, interoperable, reusable Why open or FAIR data is crucial to support scientific research in academia and industry Watch for free on catch-up now!
Presenters
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Marta Teperek, Head of research data services at TU Delft, Netherlands
Liz Bal, Director of open research services, Jisc
In the last five years – since a coalition of stakeholders set out and endorsed the application of FAIR principles to research – the principles of findability, accessibility, interoperability, and reusability have become widely recognised.
Ian Harrow, FAIR implementation project manager, Pistoia Alliance
Webcast hosted by Tim Gillett, editor, Research Information; and Robert Roe, editor, Scientific Computing World
Since they were first published, the FAIR Principles have achieved widespread acceptance – and have been adopted as standards for the management of data, the development of infrastructure, and the delivery of services.
The advent of Covid-19 has further illustrated how critical the implications of open and FAIR data are, with organisations worldwide recognising the importance of open science in fighting the pandemic – and scientific discovery evolving at previously-unseen rates.
In this one-hour panel webcast, three experts representing academia and industry explain why open and FAIR data is crucial to supporting research – both now and in a post-Covid world.
Our panel represents many decades of experience in academia, librarianship and industry. They explore the progress of the FAIR movement since its inception in 2016, its importance going forward as science looks forward to an increasingly open future, and the ongoing importance of encouraging good data practice.
www.researchinformation.info/webcasts
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