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An introduction to FAIR data and persistent identifiers. FAIR data is data which meets the FAIR principles of findability, accessibility, interoperability, and reusability (FAIR). [1] [2] The acronym and principles were defined in a March 2016 paper in the journal Scientific Data by a consortium of scientists and organizations. [1]
The FAIR Guiding Principles for scientific data management and stewardship [14] ArrayExpress--a public database of microarray experiments and gene expression profiles [20] The OBO Foundry: coordinated evolution of ontologies to support biomedical data integration [21] The minimum information about a genome sequence (MIGS) specification [22]
The principles have been originally designed two years earlier during a policy ad research workshop at Lorentz, Jointly Designing a Data FAIRport. [42] During the deliberations of the workshop, "the notion emerged that, through the definition of, and widespread support for, a minimal set of community-agreed guiding principles and practice" [43]
Currently the FTC version of the Fair Information Principles are only recommendations for maintaining privacy-friendly, consumer-oriented data collection practices, and are not enforceable by law. The enforcement of and adherence to these principles is principally performed through self-regulation.
"Justice as Fairness: Political not Metaphysical" is an essay by John Rawls, published in 1985. [1] In it he describes his conception of justice. It comprises two main principles of liberty and equality; the second is subdivided into fair equality of opportunity and the difference principle.
The original authors and database curators then become responsible for metadata creation, with the assistance of automated processes. Comprehensive metadata for all experimental data is the foundation of the FAIR Guiding Principles, or the standards for ensuring research data are findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable. [61]
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The International Neuroinformatics Coordinating Facility is an international non-profit organization with the mission [3] to develop, evaluate, and endorse standards and best practices that embrace the principles of Open, FAIR, [4] and Citable neuroscience. INCF also provides training on how standards and best practices facilitate ...