Interoperability
Interoperability is the ability of a system to work seamlessly with other systems. In interoperable systems, data can be automatically combined and exchanged with other datasets, making data machine-readable, interpretable, and comparable in a simplified and accelerated manner. Interoperability is one of the main criteria of the FAIR PrinciplesThe FAIR Principles were first developed in 2016 by the FORCE11 community (The Future of Research Communication and e-Scholarship). FORCE11 is a community of researchers, librarians, archivists, publishers, and research funders aiming to bring about change in modern scientific communication through the effective use of information technology, thereby supporting enhanced knowledge creation and dissemination. The primary goal is the transparent and open presentation of scientific processes. Accordingly, data should be made findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (FAIR) online. The objective is to preserve data long-term and make it available for reuse by third parties in line with Open Science and Data Sharing principles. Precise definitions by FORCE11 can be found on their website see: https://force11.org/info/the-fair-data-principles/. Read More (Forschungsdaten.info, 2023).
Literatur und Quellenangaben
Forschungsdaten.info. (2023). Glossar. forschungsdaten.info. https://forschungsdaten.info/praxis-kompakt/glossar/