Context
Software plays a crucial role in academic research, not only as a tool for data analysis but also as a research outcome or result, or even the object of research itself (EOSC Executive Board & EOSC Secretariat, 2020). Therefore, in an Open Science ecosystem, software should receive the same level of attention and recognition as publications and datasets. However, the lack of standardised guidelines and best practices for software development and curation has resulted in challenges for researchers, developers, and other stakeholders in finding, reusing, and reproducing research results.
It is important for producers of research software to make sure that their software is usable by others. This can be achieved by being well described with metadata and made FAIR.
The ultimate goal of the FAIR principles (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, Reusable) are to increase the transparency, reproducibility, and reusability of research. For this to happen, software needs to be well-described (by metadata), inspectable, documented and appropriately structured so that it can be executed, replicated, built-upon, combined, reinterpreted, reimplemented, and/or used in different settings. The FAIR4RS Principles aim to guide software creators and owners on how to make their software FAIR.
As with the original FAIR Guiding Principles, the FAIR4RS Principles are intended to be aspirational. The application of the FAIR4RS Principles is the responsibility of the owners (who are often the creators) of the research software, not the users. Responsibility can be shared in the long-term with other stewards and the applicability of the principles is the responsibility of the providers of the infrastructure they use to fulfil them, e.g., appropriate repositories and registries. This must be emphasised, as those producing the software are best placed to ensure they provide the necessary information to make their work as FAIR as possible, and get credit for doing so in return.
We offer two support actions that are designed to enhance the FAIRness and impact of research software:
- Assessing and improving existing research software using a new extension of F-UJI which implements some of the metrics for automated FAIR software assessment. Successful applicants to this support action will receive 4000 € to support their participation between May-September 2024.
- Implementing the Research Software MetaData (RSMD) guidelines for better archiving, referencing, describing, and citing research software artefacts. Successful applicants to this support action will receive 6000 € to support their participation between May-September 2024.
Applicants could apply to join one or both of the support actions below.
Successful applicants to the Implementing the Assessing and improving existing research software using a new extension of F-UJI support action:
- Leyla Jael Castros MED Information Centre for Life Sciences
- Joenio Marques da Costa, Universite Gustave Eiffel (UGE)
- Ryan Field, University of Glasgow
- Anne Fouilloux, Simula Research Laboratory
- Bojana Koteska, Ss Cyril and Methodius University
- Matthias Löbe, Institute for Medical Informatics (IMISE), University of Leipzig representing NFDI4Health
- Carlos Martinez-Ortiz, Netherlands eScience Center (observer)
- Ferran Brosa Planella, Mathematics Institute - University of Warwick
- Steven Piel, Ifremer
- Karel Sedlar, Brno University of Technology
- Terézia Slanináková, CERIT-SC, Institute of Computer Science, Masaryk University
- Gemma Turon Rodrigo, Fundació Ersilia Open Source Initiative
Successful applicants to the Implementing the Research Software MetaData (RSMD) guidelines support action:
- Piero Campalani, Eurac Research
- Leyla Jael Castro, ZB MED Information Centre for Life Sciences
- Joenio Marques da Costa, Universite Gustave Eiffel (UGE)
- Nicky Daniels, Hasselt University
- Herminio García González, Kazerne Dossin
- Dragan Ivanovic, University of Novi Sad
- Slinger Jansen, Utrecht University; Leiden Institute for Advanced Computer Science (LIACS); eScience Center
- Detoc Jérôme, IFREMER
- Hélène Jonin, Independent, self employed/freelance software developer
- Ferran Brosa Planella, Mathematics Institute - University of Warwick
- Richard Reeve, University of Glasgow
Assessing and improving existing research software using a new extension of F-UJIThis support action enables participants to pilot an extension of F-UJI that is being developed by EPCC to include the software metrics published in FAIR-IMPACT. The aim of this action is to improve the FAIRness of existing software and to work closely with research software developers from various disciplines who will provide valuable feedback to improve future iterations of the tool and support wider uptake. |
|
Who should apply? |
The main aim of this support action is to improve the FAIRness of existing research software. Therefore, this action is suitable for research groups that develop software that is to be shared and used by other research groups. Applicants should be aware that FAIRness should not be confused with software quality assessment. |
Skills needed to participate |
|
Virtual workshops |
This support action will consist of three virtual workshops.
|
Support providers and mentors |
|
How much time will this support action require from participants? |
In addition to participation in the three virtual workshops, successful applicants are expected to:
We anticipate that this will require about 9 days of effort between May and September 2024. |
What FAIR-IMPACT will provide to enable participation? |
|
What do we expect from participants? |
|
How many applicants will be supported? | Up to 10 individuals/teams will be supported to participate in this support action. |
Implementing the RSMD guidelines for better archiving, referencing, description and citation of research softwareApplicants to this support action will propose ways to implement the Research Software MetaData (RSMD) guidelines in a practical sense to ensure the creation of FAIR research software. Applicants are free to propose any approach they wish as long as it leads to better archiving, referencing, description and/or citation research software artefacts. Successful applicants will be mentored by software metadata experts through a month-long challenge to implement their proposed approach and will complete it by writing a detailed implementation story to showcase the adoption of the RSMD guidelines. |
|
Who should apply? |
Applicants should be involved in creating and/or supporting the creation of research software. |
Skills needed to participate |
Applicants should be knowledgeable about software development and/or software metadata mapping creation. Ideally, applicants will have experience of working as part of an Open Science community such as CodeMeta, SciCodes, or the Research Data Alliance. |
Virtual workshops |
This support action will consist of four virtual workshops.
|
Support providers and mentors |
|
How much time will this support action require from participants? |
In addition to participation in the four virtual workshops, successful applicants are expected to:
We anticipate that this will require about 12 days of effort between May and September 2024. |
What FAIR-IMPACT will provide to enable participation? |
|
What do we expect from participants? |
|
How many applicants will be supported? | Up to 10 individuals/teams will be supported to participate in this support action. |
Supporting materials
|
Timeline for this support action |
|
Introductory webinar | 31 January 2024 |
Call open for applications |
9 February 2024 |
Deadline for applications |
5 April 2024 |
Selection of applicants |
End of April 2024 |
Applicants informed of decision |
mid May 2024 |
Start date for support actions |
21 May 2024 |
Who can apply?
This call is open to individuals, groups or organisations from public and private research-performing organisations, including:
- Research-performing organisations and research infrastructures;
- Repositories, data and metadata service providers;
- Representatives of national and international level initiatives.
Applicants must reside and/or work in an EU or Associated Country for the duration of the grant. A key aim for FAIR-IMPACT is to prioritise support for organisations, groups, and/or individuals based in countries or representing domains that are currently less advanced in terms of their FAIR enabling capacity2.
The call is not open to individuals or groups based at any of the FAIR-IMPACT project partner organisations nor to individuals who hold the status of FAIR Champions under FAIR-IMPACT.