<p>A SURF report. SURF is the collaborative ICT organisation for Dutch education and research. SURF offers students, lecturers and scientists in the Netherlands access to the best possible internet and ICT facilities.</p> <p>The idea that data needs to be <strong>F</strong>indable, <strong>I</strong>nteroperable and <strong>R</strong>eusable is a simple message which appeals to many. The 15 international FAIR principles were published in 2016. They serve as a guideline for preparing research data for reuse under clearly described conditions by both people and machines. They are intentionally principles and not standards. Various organisations and disciplines have since developed standards, tools and training based on their own interpretati...
Findable, accessible, interoperable and reusable (FAIR) data are an increasingly important aspect of...
Arguments for the FAIR (Findable, Accesible, Inter-operable and Reusable) principles of science have...
This document is the second iteration of three reports on the state of FAIR in the European scientif...
<p>****PRE-PRINT**** text only Please find the official publication at the reference section on the...
** PRE-PRINT and NOT PEER-REVIEWED** This practice paper describes an ongoing research project to ...
The FAIR Expertise Hub for the Social Sciences, funded by PDI-SSH, is being established to support d...
In this review, we discuss FAIR Data, why it exists, and who it applies to. We further review the pr...
The process of making data Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable (FAIR - FAIRification) v...
As a service manager how may I assist my organisation to make research data we hold both FAIR and “a...
This report investigates the meaning and (potential) impact of the FAIR data principles in practice....
There is a growing demand for quality criteria for research datasets. We will argue that the Data Se...
<p>There is an urgent need to improve the infrastructure supporting the reuse of scholarly data. A d...
For open science to flourish, data and any related digital outputs should be discoverable and re-usa...
This paper will examine how FAIR principles are integrated in a course for those involved in researc...
The FAIR principles were published in 2016 in a Scientific Data article titled ‘FAIR Guiding Princip...
Findable, accessible, interoperable and reusable (FAIR) data are an increasingly important aspect of...
Arguments for the FAIR (Findable, Accesible, Inter-operable and Reusable) principles of science have...
This document is the second iteration of three reports on the state of FAIR in the European scientif...
<p>****PRE-PRINT**** text only Please find the official publication at the reference section on the...
** PRE-PRINT and NOT PEER-REVIEWED** This practice paper describes an ongoing research project to ...
The FAIR Expertise Hub for the Social Sciences, funded by PDI-SSH, is being established to support d...
In this review, we discuss FAIR Data, why it exists, and who it applies to. We further review the pr...
The process of making data Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable (FAIR - FAIRification) v...
As a service manager how may I assist my organisation to make research data we hold both FAIR and “a...
This report investigates the meaning and (potential) impact of the FAIR data principles in practice....
There is a growing demand for quality criteria for research datasets. We will argue that the Data Se...
<p>There is an urgent need to improve the infrastructure supporting the reuse of scholarly data. A d...
For open science to flourish, data and any related digital outputs should be discoverable and re-usa...
This paper will examine how FAIR principles are integrated in a course for those involved in researc...
The FAIR principles were published in 2016 in a Scientific Data article titled ‘FAIR Guiding Princip...
Findable, accessible, interoperable and reusable (FAIR) data are an increasingly important aspect of...
Arguments for the FAIR (Findable, Accesible, Inter-operable and Reusable) principles of science have...
This document is the second iteration of three reports on the state of FAIR in the European scientif...