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==Sandbox begins below==
==Sandbox begins below==
<div class="nonumtoc">__TOC__</div>
<div class="nonumtoc">__TOC__</div>
[[File:Tieu-chuan-haccp.png|right|400px]]
[[File:FAIRResourcesGraphic AustralianResearchDataCommons 2018.png|right|520px]]
'''Title''': ''How does a LIMS help a food and beverage business improve HACCP compliance?''
'''Title''': ''What are the potential implications of the FAIR data principles to laboratory informatics applications?''


'''Author for citation''': Shawn E. Douglas
'''Author for citation''': Shawn E. Douglas
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'''License for content''': [https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/ Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International]
'''License for content''': [https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/ Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International]


'''Publication date''': March 2024
'''Publication date''': May 2024


==Introduction==
==Introduction==
As national and international demand for safer, [[Quality (business)|higher-quality]] foods and beverages increases, modern food and beverage businesses are finding themselves more inclined to adopt (or pressured to adopt, due to regulations) good industry practices and strong cultures of food safety. Part of that equation involves the [[hazard analysis and critical control points]] (HACCP) principles, which when researched and adopted properly stand to help the business limit risks and hazards to its product-specific operations. [[Laboratory|Laboratories]] are also part of that equation, with their means of verifying the effectiveness of a given HACCP-based food safety plan and improving the speed with which corrective action is performed. A [[laboratory information management system]] (LIMS) is also in the mix, and its functionality can assist the lab (and greater food and beverage business) address the seven core principles of HACCP.
https://www.limswiki.org/index.php/Journal:Infrastructure_tools_to_support_an_effective_radiation_oncology_learning_health_system


This brief topical article will look at HACCP in the scope of the food and beverage industry, and it will examine a few of the ways a laboratory and its LIMS can benefit HACCP implementations for businesses in the industry.
This brief topical article will examine  


==HACCP and the food and beverage industry==
==The "FAIR-ification" of research objects and software==
The [[hazard analysis and critical control points]] (HACCP) principles, as applied to a food safety management system, help the implementing business identify and procedurally better control a wide variety of identified risks or hazards to food, beverage, and ingredient safety. The HACCP principles essentially say "if the hazards are well understood and measures are put in place to control them," then your HACCP-driven food safety management system has a better chance of being successful in its goals towards safer, higher-quality foods and beverages.<ref name="FerrisHazard22">{{cite book |last=Ferris |first=Iain M. |date=2022-11-01 |editor-last=Wernaart |editor-first=Bart |editor2-last=van der Meulen |editor2-first=Bernd |chapter=10. Hazard analysis and critical control points (HACCP) |url=https://brill.com/view/book/9789086869336/BP000011.xml |title=Applied Food Science |publisher=Wageningen Academic Publishers |pages=187–213 |doi=10.3920/978-90-8686-933-6_10 |isbn=978-90-8686-933-6}}</ref>
First discussed during a 2014 FORCE-11 workshop dedicated to "overcoming data discovery and reuse obstacles," the [[Journal:The FAIR Guiding Principles for scientific data management and stewardship|FAIR data principles]] were published by Wilkinson ''et al.'' in 2016 as a stakeholder collaboration driven to see research "objects" (i.e., research data and [[information]] of all shapes and formats) become more universally findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (FAIR) by both machines and people.<ref name="WilkinsonTheFAIR16">{{Cite journal |last=Wilkinson |first=Mark D. |last2=Dumontier |first2=Michel |last3=Aalbersberg |first3=IJsbrand Jan |last4=Appleton |first4=Gabrielle |last5=Axton |first5=Myles |last6=Baak |first6=Arie |last7=Blomberg |first7=Niklas |last8=Boiten |first8=Jan-Willem |last9=da Silva Santos |first9=Luiz Bonino |last10=Bourne |first10=Philip E. |last11=Bouwman |first11=Jildau |date=2016-03-15 |title=The FAIR Guiding Principles for scientific data management and stewardship |url=https://www.nature.com/articles/sdata201618 |journal=Scientific Data |language=en |volume=3 |issue=1 |pages=160018 |doi=10.1038/sdata.2016.18 |issn=2052-4463 |pmc=PMC4792175 |pmid=26978244}}</ref> The authors released the FAIR principles while recognizing that "one of the grand challenges of data-intensive science ... is to improve knowledge discovery through assisting both humans and their computational agents in the discovery of, access to, and integration and analysis of task-appropriate scientific data and other scholarly digital objects."<ref name="WilkinsonTheFAIR16" />


The international standard [[ISO 22000]] ''Food safety management''—first published in 2005—was originally designed to be aligned with quality management standards like [[ISO 9000|ISO 9001]] and the HACCP principles, as adopted by the ''Codex Alimentarius''.<ref name="HolahPric23">{{Citation |last=Holah |first=John |date=2023 |title=Principles of Hygienic Practice in Food Processing and Manufacturing |url=https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/B9780128200131000292 |work=Food Safety Management |language=en |publisher=Elsevier |pages=587–613 |doi=10.1016/b978-0-12-820013-1.00029-2 |isbn=978-0-12-820013-1}}</ref> However, the concept of HACCP has been around for much longer, dating back to efforts in the late 1960s by Pillsbury Company and U.S. government elements towards safer foods for American astronauts.<ref name="FerrisHazard22" /><ref name="HolahPric23" /> This more comprehensive, standardized approach towards HACCP by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO), in conjunction with tangential efforts by the Global Food Safety Initiative (GFSI) and other entities, has ultimately strengthened food and beverage business' approach to food safety over the years. (It should be noted, however, that with only a few exceptions around the world, federal mandates for ISO 9001 and ISO 22000 certification rarely exist. However, some legal mandates for HACCP compliance—along with meeting customer, industry, or other stakeholder demand—may push such businesses to adopt those standards, along with their HACCP components.)<ref name="HolahPric23" />
Since 2016, other research stakeholders have taken to publishing their thoughts about how the FAIR principles apply to their fields of study and practice<ref name="NIHPubMedSearch">{{cite web |url=https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/?term=fair+data+principles |title=fair data principles |work=PubMed Search |publisher=National Institutes of Health, National Library of Medicine |accessdate=30 April 2024}}</ref>, including in ways beyond what perhaps was originally imagined by Wilkinson ''et al.''. For example, multiple authors have examined whether or not the software used in scientific endeavors itself can be considered a research object worth being developed and managed in tandem with the FAIR data principles.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Hasselbring |first=Wilhelm |last2=Carr |first2=Leslie |last3=Hettrick |first3=Simon |last4=Packer |first4=Heather |last5=Tiropanis |first5=Thanassis |date=2020-02-25 |title=From FAIR research data toward FAIR and open research software |url=https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/itit-2019-0040/html |journal=it - Information Technology |language=en |volume=62 |issue=1 |pages=39–47 |doi=10.1515/itit-2019-0040 |issn=2196-7032}}</ref><ref name="GruenpeterFAIRPlus20">{{Cite web |last=Gruenpeter, M. |date=23 November 2020 |title=FAIR + Software: Decoding the principles |url=https://www.fairsfair.eu/sites/default/files/FAIR%20%2B%20software.pdf |format=PDF |publisher=FAIRsFAIR “Fostering FAIR Data Practices In Europe” |accessdate=30 April 2024}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Barker |first=Michelle |last2=Chue Hong |first2=Neil P. |last3=Katz |first3=Daniel S. |last4=Lamprecht |first4=Anna-Lena |last5=Martinez-Ortiz |first5=Carlos |last6=Psomopoulos |first6=Fotis |last7=Harrow |first7=Jennifer |last8=Castro |first8=Leyla Jael |last9=Gruenpeter |first9=Morane |last10=Martinez |first10=Paula Andrea |last11=Honeyman |first11=Tom |date=2022-10-14 |title=Introducing the FAIR Principles for research software |url=https://www.nature.com/articles/s41597-022-01710-x |journal=Scientific Data |language=en |volume=9 |issue=1 |pages=622 |doi=10.1038/s41597-022-01710-x |issn=2052-4463 |pmc=PMC9562067 |pmid=36241754}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Patel |first=Bhavesh |last2=Soundarajan |first2=Sanjay |last3=Ménager |first3=Hervé |last4=Hu |first4=Zicheng |date=2023-08-23 |title=Making Biomedical Research Software FAIR: Actionable Step-by-step Guidelines with a User-support Tool |url=https://www.nature.com/articles/s41597-023-02463-x |journal=Scientific Data |language=en |volume=10 |issue=1 |pages=557 |doi=10.1038/s41597-023-02463-x |issn=2052-4463 |pmc=PMC10447492 |pmid=37612312}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Du |first=Xinsong |last2=Dastmalchi |first2=Farhad |last3=Ye |first3=Hao |last4=Garrett |first4=Timothy J. |last5=Diller |first5=Matthew A. |last6=Liu |first6=Mei |last7=Hogan |first7=William R. |last8=Brochhausen |first8=Mathias |last9=Lemas |first9=Dominick J. |date=2023-02-06 |title=Evaluating LC-HRMS metabolomics data processing software using FAIR principles for research software |url=https://link.springer.com/10.1007/s11306-023-01974-3 |journal=Metabolomics |language=en |volume=19 |issue=2 |pages=11 |doi=10.1007/s11306-023-01974-3 |issn=1573-3890}}</ref> Researchers quickly recognized that any planning around updating processes and systems to make research objects more FAIR would have to be tailored to specific research contexts, recognize that digital research objects go beyond data and information, and recognize "the specific nature of software" and not consider it "just data."<ref name="GruenpeterFAIRPlus20" /> The end result has been applying the core concepts of FAIR but differently from data, with the added context of research software being more than just data, requiring more nuance and a different type of planning from applying FAIR to digital data and information.


Successfully implementing HACCP principles in the food safety management plan requires intimate knowledge of the product needing to be produced, as well as the risks or hazards associated with the various processes incorporated into that production, including pre- and post-production activities. Without this deep knowledge, any implemented HACCP-based plan can still fail to fully meet its intended purpose (and the lack of this kind of deep knowledge indeed can be problematic for smaller producers with fewer personnel and tighter budgets). These problems can be compounded if the business fails to promote and implement the environmental and operational (i.e., factory) conditions necessary for success, and doesn't already fully subscribe to good hygiene, agricultural, and manufacturing practices.<ref name="FerrisHazard22" />
A 2019 survey by Europe's FAIRsFAIR found that researchers seeking and re-using relevant research software on the internet faced multiple challenges, including understanding and/or maintaining the necessary software environment and its dependencies, finding sufficient documentation, struggling with accessibility and licensing issues, having the time and skills to install and/or use the software, finding quality control of the source code lacking, and having an insufficient (or non-existent) software sustainability and management plan.<ref name="GruenpeterFAIRPlus20" /> These challenges highlight the importance of software to researchers and other stakeholders, and the roll FAIR has in better ensuring such software is findable, interoperable, and reusable, which in turn better ensures researchers' software-driven research is repeatable (by the same research team, with the same experimental setup), reproducible (by a different research team, with the same experimental setup), and replicable (by a different research team, with a different experimental setup).<ref name="GruenpeterFAIRPlus20" />


HACCP is a complicated framework to fully describe in a brief article such as this, but it's set of seven principles should be mentioned at this juncture<ref name="FerrisHazard22" /><ref name="HolahPric23" />:
At this point, the topic of what "research software" represents must be addressed further, and, unsurprisingly, it's not straightforward. Ask 20 researchers what "research software" is, and you may get 20 different opinions. Some definitions can be more objectively viewed as too narrow, while others may be viewed as too broad, with some level of controversy inherent in any mutual discussion.<ref name="GruenpeterDefining21">{{Cite journal |last=Gruenpeter, Morane |last2=Katz, Daniel S. |last3=Lamprecht, Anna-Lena |last4=Honeyman, Tom |last5=Garijo, Daniel |last6=Struck, Alexander |last7=Niehues, Anna |last8=Martinez, Paula Andrea |last9=Castro, Leyla Jael |last10=Rabemanantsoa, Tovo |last11=Chue Hong, Neil P. |date=2021-09-13 |title=Defining Research Software: a controversial discussion |url=https://zenodo.org/record/5504016 |journal=Zenodo |doi=10.5281/zenodo.5504016}}</ref><ref name="JulichWhatIsRes24">{{cite web |url=https://www.fz-juelich.de/en/rse/about-rse/what-is-research-software |title=What is Research Software? |work=JuRSE, the Community of Practice for Research Software Engineering |publisher=Forschungszentrum Jülich |date=13 February 2024 |accessdate=30 April 2024}}</ref><ref name="vanNieuwpoortDefining24">{{Cite journal |last=van Nieuwpoort |first=Rob |last2=Katz |first2=Daniel S. |date=2023-03-14 |title=Defining the roles of research software |url=https://upstream.force11.org/defining-the-roles-of-research-software |language=en |doi=10.54900/9akm9y5-5ject5y}}</ref> In 2021, as part of the FAIRsFAIR initiative, Gruenpeter ''et al.'' made a good-faith effort to define "research software" with the feedback of multiple stakeholders. Their efforts resulted in this definition<ref name="GruenpeterDefining21" />:


#Conduct hazard analyses and identify control measures for a given product and its ingredients.
<blockquote>Research software includes source code files, algorithms, scripts, computational workflows, and executables that were created during the research process, or for a research purpose. Software components (e.g., operating systems, libraries, dependencies, packages, scripts, etc.) that are used for research but were not created during, or with a clear research intent, should be considered "software [used] in research" and not research software. This differentiation may vary between disciplines. The minimal requirement for achieving computational reproducibility is that all the computational components (i.e., research software, software used in research, documentation, and hardware) used during the research are identified, described, and made accessible to the extent that is possible.</blockquote>
#Determine the critical control points (CCPs) along the production chain to better ensure control measures are most effective.
#Establish validated critical levels (with quantifiable and qualifiable parameters) that clearly separate acceptability from unacceptability.
#Establish and maintain the appropriate monitoring methods for the identified CCPs.
#Establish the set of corrective actions that will be enacted when validated critical levels have been identified as violated through the monitoring system.
#Validate the overall HACCP plan before implementation, and establish procedures to confirm the plan is working as intended.
#Document, archive, and make available as appropriate all procedures, corrective action, etc. appropriate to the HACCP principles and their application.


HACCP alone, however, isn't enough to guarantee success to the food and beverage business. As mentioned, it's development and implementation is largely only as good as the knowledge and work that was put into it. Secondarily, a strong culture of food safety and the drive to implement, train on, monitor, and enforce the HACCP principles is also important.<ref name="FerrisHazard22" /> Additionally, a [[laboratory]] staffed with personnel having a strong analytical and diagnostic background in foodborne-disease and equipped with sufficient equipment for that work—which will include providing the verification testing to ensure the HACCP plan is working as intended—is essential.<ref>{{Citation |last=Owusu-Apenten |first=Richard |last2=Vieira |first2=Ernest |date=2023 |editor-last=Owusu-Apenten |editor-first=Richard |editor2-last=Vieira |editor2-first=Ernest R. |title=Food Safety Management, GMP & HACCP |url=https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-65433-7_10 |work=Elementary Food Science |language=en |publisher=Springer International Publishing |place=Cham |pages=217–236 |doi=10.1007/978-3-030-65433-7_10#doi |isbn=978-3-030-65433-7 |accessdate=2024-03-01}}</ref> In order to improve aspects of that work, such a lab will likely use electronic [[information management]] tools like a [[laboratory information management system]] (LIMS).
Note that while the definition primarily recognizes software created during the research process, software created (whether by the research group, other open-source software developers outside the organization, or even commercial software developers) "for a research purpose" outside the actual research process is also recognized as research software. This notably can lead to disagreement about whether a proprietary, commercial spreadsheet or [[laboratory information management system]] (LIMS) offering that conducts analyses and visualizations of research data can genuinely be called research software, or simply classified as software used in research. van Nieuwpoort and Katz further elaborated on this concept, at least indirectly, by formally defining the roles of research software in 2023. Their definition of the various roles of research software—without using terms such as "open-source," "commercial," or "proprietary"—essentially further defined what research software is<ref name="vanNieuwpoortDefining24" />:


==The intersection of LIMS and HACCP compliance==
*Research software is a component of our instruments.
While making the most of any implemented HACCP plan requires deep industry knowledge and an ownership-driven culture of food safety, the role the laboratory—whether in-house or third-party—has in that effort can't be understated. However, a largely paper-based approach to performing the verification testing demanded by HACCP will not do with these labs. A fragmented mix of paper-based and electronic information sources can be a detriment to the traceability of or rapid accessibility to ingredient, additive, and QC sample data and information, as well as standard operating procedure (SOPs), environmental monitoring data, chain of custody data, and other vital aspects of food and beverage production. As such, mindful LIMS implementation has the potential to improve laboratory [[workflow]]s and workloads while enhancing food and beverage safety, quality, and compliance in a number of ways. A well-implemented LIMS can reduce the silos of information and data, while at the same time make that information and data more secure and readily accessible. Given the regulatory demands for providing rapid proof of traceable product movement and relevant QC data, the LIMS can act as the central integrator and [[audit trail]] for that information.<ref name="SmithInteg19">{{cite web |url=https://foodsafetytech.com/feature_article/integrated-informatics-optimizing-food-quality-and-safety-by-building-regulatory-compliance-into-the-supply-chain/ |title=Integrated Informatics: Optimizing Food Quality and Safety by Building Regulatory Compliance into the Supply Chain |author=Smith, K. |work=Food Safety Tech |date=02 July 2019 |accessdate=01 March 2024}}</ref><ref name="McDermottHowDig18">{{cite web |url=https://foodsafetytech.com/column/how-digital-solutions-support-supply-chain-transparency-and-traceability/ |title=How Digital Solutions Support Supply Chain Transparency and Traceability |author=McDermott, P. |work=Food Safety Tech |date=31 July 2018 |accessdate=01 March 2024}}</ref><ref name="EvansTheDig19">{{cite web |url=https://foodsafetytech.com/feature_article/the-digital-transformation-of-global-food-security/ |title=The Digital Transformation of Global Food Security |author=Evans, K. |work=Food Safety Tech |date=15 November 2019 |accessdate=01 March 2024}}</ref> Because the LIMS improves traceability—including through its automated interfaces with instruments and other data systems—real-time monitoring of supply chain issues, QC data, instrument use, and more is further enabled, particularly when paired with configurable dashboards and alert mechanisms. By extension, food and beverage producers can more rapidly act on insights gained from those real-time dashboards.<ref name="SmithInteg19" /> This is also means that the food and beverage testing lab can react more rapidly to issues that compromise compliance with certification to the [[ISO/IEC 17025]] standard, compliance with [[Food and Drug Administration]] (FDA) [[LII:FDA Food Safety Modernization Act Final Rule on Laboratory Accreditation for Analyses of Foods: Considerations for Labs and Informatics Vendors|Food Safety Modernization Act]] (FSMA) requirements, and compliance with the in-house HACCP principles and food safety plan.<ref name="ApteIsYour20">{{cite web |url=https://foodsafetytech.com/column/is-your-food-testing-lab-prepping-for-an-iso-iec-17025-audit/ |title=Is Your Food Testing Lab Prepping for an ISO/IEC 17025 Audit? |author=Apte, A. |work=Food Safety Tech |date=20 October 2020 |accessdate=01 March 2024}}</ref><ref name="PaszkoTrace15">{{cite web |url=https://foodsafetytech.com/feature_article/traceability-leveraging-automation-to-satisfy-fsma-requirements/ |title=Traceability: Leveraging Automation to Satisfy FSMA Requirements |author=Paszko, C. |work=Food Safety Tech |date=19 August 2015 |accessdate=01 March 2024}}</ref><ref name="PaszkoHow15">{{cite web |url=https://foodsafetytech.com/feature_article/how-lims-facilitates-iso-17025-certification-in-food-testing-labs/ |title=How LIMS Facilitates ISO 17025 Certification in Food Testing Labs |author=Paszko, C. |work=Food Safety Tech |date=26 October 2015 |accessdate=01 March 2024}}</ref><ref name="DanielsUsing17">{{cite web |url=https://foodsafetytech.com/column/using-lims-get-shape-fdas-visit/ |title=Using LIMS to Get In Shape for FDA’s Visit |author=Daniels, T. |work=Food Safety Tech |date=22 March 2017 |accessdate=01 March 2024}}</ref><ref name="IngallsHowAdv20">{{cite web |url=https://foodsafetytech.com/feature_article/how-advanced-lims-brings-control-consistency-and-compliance-to-food-safety/ |title=How Advanced LIMS Brings Control, Consistency and Compliance to Food Safety |author=Ingalls, E. |work=Food Safety Tech |date=06 August 2020 |accessdate=01 March 2024}}</ref> Finally, many modern LIMS tailored to the food and beverage industry come pre-configured out of the box with analytical and QC workflow support tools that can be further optimized to a lab's unique workflow.<ref name="IngallsHowAdv20" />
*Research software is the instrument.
*Research software analyzes research data.
*Research software presents research results.
*Research software assembles or integrates existing components into a working whole.
*Research software is infrastructure or an underlying tool.
*Research software facilitates distinctively research-oriented collaboration.


These touch points of a LIMS with the food and beverage lab's activities help the associated business get the most out of their HACCP activities in multiple ways, directly and indirectly. First, hundreds or even thousands of data points can be generated as part of HACCP- and food safety-related action in the manufacturing facility. A LIMS with strong interfacing and integration capability can gather most if not all of these data points and help the lab automate its verification tasks, while providing timely alerts when critical levels are breached.<ref name="IngallsHowAdv20" /> This type of interfacing isn't easy (especially in a growing trend towards Industry 4.0 methods in manufacturing), however, and not all LIMS are created equal in this department.<ref name="DouglasWhatRoleDoes24">{{cite web |url=https://www.limswiki.org/index.php/LIMS_Q%26A:What_role_does_interoperability_and_systems_integration_play_in_the_laboratory,_and_why_is_this_important_to_address%3F |title=LIMS Q&A:What role does interoperability and systems integration play in the laboratory, and why is this important to address? |author=Douglas, S.E. |work=LIMSwiki |date=February 2024 |accessdate=01 March 2024}}</ref> This interfacing is further complicated by sample point and CCP locations in the facility, as well as general difficulties with interfacing inline monitoring devices such as particle counters and endotoxin detection systems, requiring some sort of middleware solution that can collect the data from those instruments and send it over a network that is rock-solid and highly available to the LIMS or some instrument data system (IDS) or manufacturing execution system (MES) integrated to the LIMS.<ref name="KelleyMODA19" /><ref name="FrontwellLIMS23">{{cite web |url=https://www.frontwell-solutions.com/blog/lims-3/lims-in-a-shop-floor-it-landscape-21 |title=LIMS in a Shop Floor IT Landscape |publisher=FrontWell Solutions GmbH |date=04 June 2023 |accessdate=09 February 2024}}</ref>
When considering these definitions<ref name="GruenpeterDefining21" /><ref name="vanNieuwpoortDefining24" /> of research software and their adoption by other entities<ref name="F1000Open24">{{cite web |url=https://www.f1000.com/resources-for-researchers/open-research/open-source-software-code/ |title=Open source software and code |publisher=F1000 Research Ltd |date=2024 |accessdate=30 April 2024}}</ref>, it would appear that at least in part some [[laboratory informatics]] software—whether open-source or commercially proprietary—fills these roles in academic, military, and industry research laboratories of many types. In particular, [[electronic laboratory notebook]]s (ELNs) like open-source [[Jupyter Notebook]] or proprietary ELNs from commercial software developers fill the role of analyzing and visualizing research data, including developing molecular models for new promising research routes.<ref name="vanNieuwpoortDefining24" /> Even more advanced LIMS solutions that go beyond simply collating, auditing, securing, and reporting analytical results could conceivably fall under the umbrella of research software, particularly if many of the analytical, integration, and collaboration tools required in modern research facilities are included in the LIMS.


Second, the previously mentioned audit trail, preloaded and configurable workflows and methods, and instrument interfacing, along with the LIMS' inherent data visualization, reporting, and data warehousing and archiving abilities, help the food and beverage business better meet many of the seven principles of HACCP. Principles four and five, which address monitoring and corrective action, fall firmly in the wheelhouse of the lab and its verification testing. Pulling relevant data from the LIMS, CCPs can be more readily visualized and monitored, while flagging and notifying key personnel when out-of-trend or out-of-limit results appear, who in turn can more rapidly address the problem and limit future breaches of critical levels. The document and data maintenance aspects of the seventh HACCP principle are also readily addressed through the LIMS. From document management with version control tools to audit trails that maintain a record of every action, including approval and electronic sign-off of the results, the LIMS helps the food and beverage business ensure better HACCP compliance. It can also track training activities and instrument maintenance, ensuring only qualified personnel use calibrated instrumentation to better ensure analytical results are of high quality.<ref name="KelleyMODA19" />
Ultimately, assuming that some laboratory informatics software can be considered research software and not just "software used in research," it's tough not to arrive at some deeper implications of research organizations' increasing need for FAIR data objects and software, particularly for laboratory informatics software and the developers of it.


Finally, some LIMS provide tools that directly allow the laboratory to map CCPs to scheduled and randomized sample and data collection, while providing [[data visualization]] tools to view the touch points of HACCP with the laboratory's workflow. In turn, collected samples can easily be linked to specific CCP test limits and methods, as well as the personnel qualified to run those test methods.<ref name="IngallsHowAdv20" /><ref name="LWOptimizing22">{{cite web |url=https://www.labware.com/blog/lims-7-steps-of-haccp |title=Optimizing Food Safety with LIMS HACCP Integration |publisher=LabWare, Inc |date=10 January 2022 |accessdate=01 March 2024}}</ref> This requires the LIMS to support location management so that personnel can readily associate sample data—or practically any other type of data—to a location or CCP.  
==Implications of the FAIR concept to laboratory informatics software==
===The global FAIR initiative affects, and even benefits, commercial laboratory informatics research software developers as much as it does academic and institutional ones===
To be clear, there is undoubtedly a difference in the software development approach of "homegrown" research software by academics and institutions, and the more streamlined and experienced approach of commercial software development houses as applied to research software. Moynihan of Invenia Technical Computing described the difference in software development approaches thusly in 2020, while discussing the concept of "research software engineering"<ref name="MoynihanTheHitch20">{{cite web |url=https://invenia.github.io/blog/2020/07/07/software-engineering/ |title=The Hitchhiker’s Guide to Research Software Engineering: From PhD to RSE |author=Moynihan, G. |work=Invenia Blog |publisher=Invenia Technical Computing Corporation |date=07 July 2020}}</ref>:
 
<blockquote>Since the environment and incentives around building academic research software are very different to those of industry, the workflows around the former are, in general, not guided by the same engineering practices that are valued in the latter. That is to say: there is a difference between what is important in writing software for research, and for a user-focused software product. Academic research software prioritizes scientific correctness and flexibility to experiment above all else in pursuit of the researchers’ end product: published papers. Industry software, on the other hand, prioritizes maintainability, robustness, and testing, as the software (generally speaking) is the product. However, the two tracks share many common goals as well, such as catering to “users” [and] emphasizing performance and reproducibility, but most importantly both ventures are collaborative. Arguably then, both sets of principles are needed to write and maintain high-quality research software.</blockquote>
 
This brings us to our first point: the application of small-scale, FAIR-driven academic research software engineering practices and elements to the larger development of more commercial laboratory informatics software, and vice versa with the application of commercial-scale development practices to small FAIR-focused academic and institutional research software engineering efforts, has the potential to help better support all research laboratories using both independently-developed and commercial research software.
 
The concept of the research software engineer (RSE) began to take full form in 2012, and since then universities and institutions of many types have formally developed their own RSE groups and academic programs.<ref name="WoolstonWhySci22">{{Cite journal |last=Woolston |first=Chris |date=2022-05-31 |title=Why science needs more research software engineers |url=https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-022-01516-2 |journal=Nature |language=en |pages=d41586–022–01516-2 |doi=10.1038/d41586-022-01516-2 |issn=0028-0836}}</ref><ref name="KITRSE@KIT24">{{cite web |url=https://www.rse-community.kit.edu/index.php |title=RSE@KIT |publisher=Karlsruhe Institute of Technology |date=20 February 2024 |accessdate=01 May 2024}}</ref><ref name="PUPurdueCenter">{{cite web |url=https://www.rcac.purdue.edu/rse |title=Purdue Center for Research Software Engineering |publisher=Purdue University |date=2024 |accessdate=01 May 2024}}</ref> RSEs range from pure software developers with little knowledge of a given research discipline, to scientific researchers just beginning to learn how to develop software for their research project(s). While in the past, broadly speaking, researchers often cobbled together research software with less a focus on quality and reproducibility and more on getting their research published, today's push for FAIR data and software by academic journals, institutions, and other researchers seeking to collaborate has placed a much greater focus on the concept of "better software, better research."<ref name="WoolstonWhySci22" /><ref name="CohenTheFour21">{{Cite journal |last=Cohen |first=Jeremy |last2=Katz |first2=Daniel S. |last3=Barker |first3=Michelle |last4=Chue Hong |first4=Neil |last5=Haines |first5=Robert |last6=Jay |first6=Caroline |date=2021-01 |title=The Four Pillars of Research Software Engineering |url=https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8994167/ |journal=IEEE Software |volume=38 |issue=1 |pages=97–105 |doi=10.1109/MS.2020.2973362 |issn=0740-7459}}</ref> Elaborating on that concept, Cohen ''et al.'' add that "ultimately, good research software can make the difference between valid, sustainable, reproducible research outputs and short-lived, potentially unreliable or erroneous outputs."<ref name="CohenTheFour21" />
 
The concept of [[software quality management]] (SQM) has traditionally not been lost on professional, commercial software development businesses. Good SQM practices have been less prevalent in homegrown research software development; however, the expanded adoption of FAIR data and FAIR software approaches has shifted the focus on to the repeatability, reproducibility, and interoperability of research results and data produced by a more sustainable research software. The adoption of FAIR by academic and institutional research labs not only brings commercial SQM and other software development approaches into their workflow, but also gives commercial laboratory informatics software developers an opportunity to embrace many aspects of the FAIR approach to laboratory research practices, including lessons learned and development practices from the growing number of RSEs. This doesn't mean commercial developers are going to suddenly take an open-source approach to their code, and it doesn't mean academic and institutional research labs are going to give up the benefits of the open-source paradigm as applied to research software.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Hasselbring |first=Wilhelm |last2=Carr |first2=Leslie |last3=Hettrick |first3=Simon |last4=Packer |first4=Heather |last5=Tiropanis |first5=Thanassis |date=2020-02-25 |title=From FAIR research data toward FAIR and open research software |url=https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/itit-2019-0040/html |journal=it - Information Technology |language=en |volume=62 |issue=1 |pages=39–47 |doi=10.1515/itit-2019-0040 |issn=2196-7032}}</ref> However, as Moynihan noted, both research software development paradigms stand to gain from the shift to more FAIR data and software.<ref name="MoynihanTheHitch20" /> Additionally, if commercial laboratory informatics vendors want to continue to competitively market relevant and sustainable research software to research labs, they frankly have little choice but to commit extra resources to learning about the application of FAIR principles to their offerings tailored to those labs.
 
===The focus on data types and metadata within the scope of FAIR is shifting how laboratory informatics software developers and RSEs make their research software and choose their database approaches===
Close to the core of any deep discussion of the FAIR data principles are the concepts of data models, data types, [[metadata]], and persistent unique identifiers (PIDs). Making research objects more findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable is no easy task when data types and approaches to metadata assignment (if there even is such an approach) are widely differing and inconsistent. Metadata is a means for better storing and characterizing research objects for the purposes of ensuring provenance and reproducibility of those research objects.<ref name="GhiringhelliShared23">{{Cite journal |last=Ghiringhelli |first=Luca M. |last2=Baldauf |first2=Carsten |last3=Bereau |first3=Tristan |last4=Brockhauser |first4=Sandor |last5=Carbogno |first5=Christian |last6=Chamanara |first6=Javad |last7=Cozzini |first7=Stefano |last8=Curtarolo |first8=Stefano |last9=Draxl |first9=Claudia |last10=Dwaraknath |first10=Shyam |last11=Fekete |first11=Ádám |date=2023-09-14 |title=Shared metadata for data-centric materials science |url=https://www.nature.com/articles/s41597-023-02501-8 |journal=Scientific Data |language=en |volume=10 |issue=1 |pages=626 |doi=10.1038/s41597-023-02501-8 |issn=2052-4463 |pmc=PMC10502089 |pmid=37709811}}</ref><ref name="FirschenAgile22">{{Cite journal |last=Fitschen |first=Timm |last2=tom Wörden |first2=Henrik |last3=Schlemmer |first3=Alexander |last4=Spreckelsen |first4=Florian |last5=Hornung |first5=Daniel |date=2022-10-12 |title=Agile Research Data Management with FDOs using LinkAhead |url=https://riojournal.com/article/96075/ |journal=Research Ideas and Outcomes |volume=8 |pages=e96075 |doi=10.3897/rio.8.e96075 |issn=2367-7163}}</ref> This means as early as possible implementing a software-based approach that is FAIR-driven, capturing FAIR metadata using flexible domain-driven [[Ontology (information science)|ontologies]] (i.e., controlled vocabularies) at the source and cleaning up old research objects that aren't FAIR-ready while also limiting hindrances to research processes as much as possible.<ref name="FirschenAgile22" /> And that approach must value the importance of metadata and PIDs. As Weigel ''et al.'' note in a discussion on making laboratory data and workflows more machine-findable: "Metadata capture must be highly automated and reliable, both in terms of technical reliability and ensured metadata quality. This requires an approach that may be very different from established procedures."<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Weigel |first=Tobias |last2=Schwardmann |first2=Ulrich |last3=Klump |first3=Jens |last4=Bendoukha |first4=Sofiane |last5=Quick |first5=Robert |date=2020-01 |title=Making Data and Workflows Findable for Machines |url=https://direct.mit.edu/dint/article/2/1-2/40-46/9994 |journal=Data Intelligence |language=en |volume=2 |issue=1-2 |pages=40–46 |doi=10.1162/dint_a_00026 |issn=2641-435X}}</ref> Enter non-relational RDF [[knowledge graph]] [[database]]s.
 
This brings us to our second point: given the importance of metadata and PIDs to FAIRifying research objects (and even research software), established, more traditional research software development methods using common relational databases may not be enough, even for commercial laboratory informatics software developers. Non-relational [[Resource Description Framework]] (RDF) knowledge graph databases used in FAIR-driven, well-designed laboratory informatics software help make research objects more FAIR for all research labs.
 
Research objects can take many forms (i.e., data types), making the storage and management of those objects challenging, particularly in research settings with great diversity of data, as with materials research. Some have approached this challenge by combining different database and systems technologies that are best suited for each data type.<ref name="AggourSemantics24">{{Cite journal |last=Aggour |first=Kareem S. |last2=Kumar |first2=Vijay S. |last3=Gupta |first3=Vipul K. |last4=Gabaldon |first4=Alfredo |last5=Cuddihy |first5=Paul |last6=Mulwad |first6=Varish |date=2024-04-09 |title=Semantics-Enabled Data Federation: Bringing Materials Scientists Closer to FAIR Data |url=https://link.springer.com/10.1007/s40192-024-00348-4 |journal=Integrating Materials and Manufacturing Innovation |language=en |doi=10.1007/s40192-024-00348-4 |issn=2193-9764}}</ref> However, while query performance and storage footprint improves with this approach, data across the different storage mechanisms typically remains unlinked and non-compliant with FAIR principles. Here, either a full RDF knowledge graph database or similar integration layer is required to better make the research objects more interoperable and reusable, whether it's materials records or specimen data.<ref name="AggourSemantics24" /><ref name="GrobeFromData19">{{Cite journal |last=Grobe |first=Peter |last2=Baum |first2=Roman |last3=Bhatty |first3=Philipp |last4=Köhler |first4=Christian |last5=Meid |first5=Sandra |last6=Quast |first6=Björn |last7=Vogt |first7=Lars |date=2019-06-26 |title=From Data to Knowledge: A semantic knowledge graph application for curating specimen data |url=https://biss.pensoft.net/article/37412/ |journal=Biodiversity Information Science and Standards |language=en |volume=3 |pages=e37412 |doi=10.3897/biss.3.37412 |issn=2535-0897}}</ref>
 
It is beyond the scope of this Q&A article to discuss RDF knowledge graph databases at length. (For a deeper dive on this topic, see Rocca-Serra ''et al.'' and the FAIR Cookbook.<ref name="Rocca-SerraFAIRCook22">{{Cite book |last=Rocca-Serra, Philippe |last2=Sansone, Susanna-Assunta |last3=Gu, Wei |last4=Welter, Danielle |last5=Abbassi Daloii, Tooba |last6=Portell-Silva, Laura |date=2022-06-30 |title=D2.1 FAIR Cookbook |url=https://zenodo.org/record/6783564 |chapter=FAIR and Knowledge graphs |doi=10.5281/ZENODO.6783564}}</ref>) However, know that the primary strength of these databases to FAIRification of research objects is their ability to provide [[Semantics|semantic]] transparency (i.e., provide a framework for better understanding and reusing the greater research object through basic examination of the relationships of its associated metadata and their constituents), making these objects more easily accessible, interoperable, and machine-readable.<ref name="AggourSemantics24" /> The resulting knowledge graphs, with their "subject-property-object" syntax and PIDs or uniform resource identifiers (URIs) helping to link data, metadata, ontology classes, and more, can be interpreted, searched, and linked by machines, and made human-readable, resulting in better research through derivation of new knowledge from the existing research objects. The end result is a representation of heterogeneous data and metadata that complies with the FAIR guiding principles.<ref name="AggourSemantics24" /><ref name="GrobeFromData19" /><ref name="Rocca-SerraFAIRCook22" /><ref name="TomlinsonRDF23">{{cite web |url=https://21624527.fs1.hubspotusercontent-na1.net/hubfs/21624527/Resources/RDF%20Knowledge%20Graph%20Databases%20White%20Paper.pdf |format=PDF |title=RDF Knowledge Graph Databases: A Better Choice for Life Science Lab Software |author=Tomlinson, E. |publisher=Semaphore Solutions, Inc |date=28 July 2023 |accessdate=01 May 2024}}</ref><ref name="DeagenFAIRAnd22">{{Cite journal |last=Deagen |first=Michael E. |last2=McCusker |first2=Jamie P. |last3=Fateye |first3=Tolulomo |last4=Stouffer |first4=Samuel |last5=Brinson |first5=L. Cate |last6=McGuinness |first6=Deborah L. |last7=Schadler |first7=Linda S. |date=2022-05-27 |title=FAIR and Interactive Data Graphics from a Scientific Knowledge Graph |url=https://www.nature.com/articles/s41597-022-01352-z |journal=Scientific Data |language=en |volume=9 |issue=1 |pages=239 |doi=10.1038/s41597-022-01352-z |issn=2052-4463 |pmc=PMC9142568 |pmid=35624233}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Brandizi |first=Marco |last2=Singh |first2=Ajit |last3=Rawlings |first3=Christopher |last4=Hassani-Pak |first4=Keywan |date=2018-09-25 |title=Towards FAIRer Biological Knowledge Networks Using a Hybrid Linked Data and Graph Database Approach |url=https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/jib-2018-0023/html |journal=Journal of Integrative Bioinformatics |language=en |volume=15 |issue=3 |pages=20180023 |doi=10.1515/jib-2018-0023 |issn=1613-4516 |pmc=PMC6340125 |pmid=30085931}}</ref> This concept can even be extended to ''post factum'' visualizations of the knowledge graph data<ref name="DeagenFAIRAnd22" />, as well as the FAIR management of computational laboratory [[workflow]]s.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=de Visser |first=Casper |last2=Johansson |first2=Lennart F. |last3=Kulkarni |first3=Purva |last4=Mei |first4=Hailiang |last5=Neerincx |first5=Pieter |last6=Joeri van der Velde |first6=K. |last7=Horvatovich |first7=Péter |last8=van Gool |first8=Alain J. |last9=Swertz |first9=Morris A. |last10=Hoen |first10=Peter A. C. ‘t |last11=Niehues |first11=Anna |date=2023-09-28 |editor-last=Palagi |editor-first=Patricia M. |title=Ten quick tips for building FAIR workflows |url=https://dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1011369 |journal=PLOS Computational Biology |language=en |volume=19 |issue=9 |pages=e1011369 |doi=10.1371/journal.pcbi.1011369 |issn=1553-7358 |pmc=PMC10538699 |pmid=37768885}}</ref>
 
While rare, some commercial laboratory informatics vendors like Semaphore Solutions have already recognized the potential of RDF knowledge graph databases to FAIR-driven laboratory research, having implemented such structures into their offerings.<ref name="TomlinsonRDF23" /> (The use of knowledge graphs has already been demonstrated in academic research software, such as with the ELN tools developed by RSEs at the University of Rostock and University of Amsterdam.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Schröder |first=Max |last2=Staehlke |first2=Susanne |last3=Groth |first3=Paul |last4=Nebe |first4=J. Barbara |last5=Spors |first5=Sascha |last6=Krüger |first6=Frank |date=2022-12 |title=Structure-based knowledge acquisition from electronic lab notebooks for research data provenance documentation |url=https://jbiomedsem.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13326-021-00257-x |journal=Journal of Biomedical Semantics |language=en |volume=13 |issue=1 |pages=4 |doi=10.1186/s13326-021-00257-x |issn=2041-1480 |pmc=PMC8802522 |pmid=35101121}}</ref>) As noted in the prior point, it is potentially advantageous to not only laboratory informatics vendors to provide but also research labs to use relevant and sustainable research software that has the FAIR principles embedded in the software's design. Turning to knowledge graph databases is another example of keeping such software relevant and FAIR to research labs.
 
===Applying FAIR-driven metadata schemes to laboratory informatics software development gives data a FAIRer chance at being ready for machine learning and artificial intelligence applications===
The third and final point for this Q&A article highlights another positive consequence of engineering laboratory informatics software with FAIR in mind: FAIRified research objects are much closer to being usable for the trending inclusion of [[machine learning]] (ML) and [[artificial intelligence]] (AI) tools in laboratory informatics platforms and other companion research software. By developing laboratory informatics software with a focus on FAIR-driven metadata and database schemes, not only are research objects more FAIR but also "cleaner" and more machine-ready for advanced analytical uses as with ML and AI.
 
To be sure, the FAIRness of any structured dataset alone is not enough to make it ready for ML and AI applications. Factors such as classification, completeness, context, correctness, duplicity, integrity, mislabeling, outliers, relevancy, sample size, and timeliness of the research object and its contents are also important to consider.<ref name="HinidumaDataRead24">{{Cite journal |last=Hiniduma |first=Kaveen |last2=Byna |first2=Suren |last3=Bez |first3=Jean Luca |date=2024 |title=Data Readiness for AI: A 360-Degree Survey |url=https://arxiv.org/abs/2404.05779 |journal=arXiv |doi=10.48550/ARXIV.2404.05779}}</ref><ref name="FletcherFAIRRe24">{{Cite journal |last=Fletcher |first=Lydia |date=2024-04-16 |others=The University Of Texas At Austin, The University Of Texas At Austin |title=FAIR Re-use: Implications for AI-Readiness |url=https://repositories.lib.utexas.edu/handle/2152/124873 |doi=10.26153/TSW/51475}}</ref> When those factors aren't appropriately addressed as part of a FAIRification effort towards AI readiness (as well as part of the development of research software of all types), research data and metadata have a higher likelihood of revealing themselves to be inconsistent. As such, searches and analytics using that data and metadata become muddled, and the ultimate ML or AI output will also be muddled (i.e., "garbage in, garbage out"). Whether retroactively updating existing research objects to a more FAIRified state or ensuring research objects (e.g., those originating in an ELN or LIMS) are more FAIR and AI-ready from the start, research software updating or generating those research objects has to address ontologies, data models, data types, identifiers, and more in a thorough yet flexible way.<ref name="OlsenEmbracing23">{{cite web |url=https://www.pharmasalmanac.com/articles/embracing-fair-data-on-the-path-to-ai-readiness |title=Embracing FAIR Data on the Path to AI-Readiness |author=Olsen, C. |work=Pharma's Almanac |date=01 September 2023 |accessdate=03 May 2024}}</ref>
 
Noting that Wilkinson ''et al.'' originally highlighted the importance of machine-readability of FAIR data, Huerta ''et al.'' add that that core principle of FAIRness "is synergistic with the rapid adoption and increased use of AI in research."<ref name="HuertaFAIRForAI23">{{Cite journal |last=Huerta |first=E. A. |last2=Blaiszik |first2=Ben |last3=Brinson |first3=L. Catherine |last4=Bouchard |first4=Kristofer E. |last5=Diaz |first5=Daniel |last6=Doglioni |first6=Caterina |last7=Duarte |first7=Javier M. |last8=Emani |first8=Murali |last9=Foster |first9=Ian |last10=Fox |first10=Geoffrey |last11=Harris |first11=Philip |date=2023-07-26 |title=FAIR for AI: An interdisciplinary and international community building perspective |url=https://www.nature.com/articles/s41597-023-02298-6 |journal=Scientific Data |language=en |volume=10 |issue=1 |pages=487 |doi=10.1038/s41597-023-02298-6 |issn=2052-4463 |pmc=PMC10372139 |pmid=37495591}}</ref> They go on to discuss the positive interactions of FAIR research objects with FAIR-driven, AI-based research. Among the benefits include<ref name="HuertaFAIRForAI23" />:
 
*greater findability of FAIR research objects for further AI-driven scientific discovery;
*greater reproducibility of FAIR research objects and any AI models published with them;
*improved generalization of AI-driven medical research models when exposed to diverse and FAIR research objects;
*improved reporting of AI-driven research results using FAIRified research objects, lending further credibility to those results;
*more uniform comparison of AI models using well-defined hyperstructure and information training conditions from FAIRified research objects;
*more developed and interoperable "data e-infrastructure," which can further drive a more effective "AI services layer";
*reduced bias in AI-driven processes through the use of FAIR research objects and AI models; and
*improved surety of scientific correctness where reproducibility in AI-driven research can't be guaranteed.
 
In the end, developers of research software (whether discipline-specific research software or broader laboratory informatics solutions) would be advised to keep in mind the growing trends of FAIR research, FAIR software, and ML- and AI-driven research, especially in the [[life sciences]], but also a variety of other fields.<ref name="HuertaFAIRForAI23" />
 
===Restricted clinical data and its FAIRification for greater research innovation===
Broader discussion in the research community continues to occur in regards to how best to ethically make restricted or privacy-protected clinical data and information FAIR for greater innovation and, by extension, improved patient outcomes, particularly in the wake of the [[COVID-19]] [[pandemic]].<ref name="MaxwellFAIREthic23">{{Cite journal |last=Maxwell |first=Lauren |last2=Shreedhar |first2=Priya |last3=Dauga |first3=Delphine |last4=McQuilton |first4=Peter |last5=Terry |first5=Robert F |last6=Denisiuk |first6=Alisa |last7=Molnar-Gabor |first7=Fruzsina |last8=Saxena |first8=Abha |last9=Sansone |first9=Susanna-Assunta |date=2023-10 |title=FAIR, ethical, and coordinated data sharing for COVID-19 response: a scoping review and cross-sectional survey of COVID-19 data sharing platforms and registries |url=https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S2589750023001292 |journal=The Lancet Digital Health |language=en |volume=5 |issue=10 |pages=e712–e736 |doi=10.1016/S2589-7500(23)00129-2 |pmc=PMC10552001 |pmid=37775189}}</ref><ref name="Queralt-RosinachApplying22">{{Cite journal |last=Queralt-Rosinach |first=Núria |last2=Kaliyaperumal |first2=Rajaram |last3=Bernabé |first3=César H. |last4=Long |first4=Qinqin |last5=Joosten |first5=Simone A. |last6=van der Wijk |first6=Henk Jan |last7=Flikkenschild |first7=Erik L.A. |last8=Burger |first8=Kees |last9=Jacobsen |first9=Annika |last10=Mons |first10=Barend |last11=Roos |first11=Marco |date=2022-12 |title=Applying the FAIR principles to data in a hospital: challenges and opportunities in a pandemic |url=https://jbiomedsem.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13326-022-00263-7 |journal=Journal of Biomedical Semantics |language=en |volume=13 |issue=1 |pages=12 |doi=10.1186/s13326-022-00263-7 |issn=2041-1480 |pmc=PMC9036506 |pmid=35468846}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Martínez-García |first=Alicia |last2=Alvarez-Romero |first2=Celia |last3=Román-Villarán |first3=Esther |last4=Bernabeu-Wittel |first4=Máximo |last5=Luis Parra-Calderón |first5=Carlos |date=2023-05 |title=FAIR principles to improve the impact on health research management outcomes |url=https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S2405844023029407 |journal=Heliyon |language=en |volume=9 |issue=5 |pages=e15733 |doi=10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e15733 |pmc=PMC10189186 |pmid=37205991}}</ref> (Note that while there are other types of restricted and privacy-protected data, this section will focus largely on clinical data and research objects as the most obvious type.)
 
These efforts have usually revolved around pulling reusable clinical patient or research data from [[hospital information system]]s (HIS), [[electronic medical record]]s (EMRs), [[clinical trial management system]]s (CTMSs), and research databases (often relational in nature) that either contain de-identified data or can de-identify aspects of data and information before access and extraction. Sometimes that clinical data or research object may have already in part been FAIRified, but often it may not be. In all cases, the concepts of privacy, security, and anonymization come up as part of any desire to gain access to that clinical material. However, any FAIRified clinical data isn't necessarily readily open for access. As Snoeijer ''et al.'' note: "The authors of the FAIR principles, however, clearly indicate that 'accessible' does not mean open. It means that clarity and transparency is required around the conditions governing access and reuse."<ref name="SnoeijerProcess19">{{cite book |url=https://phuse.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/Archive/2019/Connect/EU/Amsterdam/PAP_SA04.pdf |format=PDF |chapter=Paper SA04 - Processing big data from multiple sources |title=Proceedings of PHUSE Connect EU 2019 |author=Snoeijer, B.; Pasapula, V.; Covucci, A. et al. |publisher=PHUSE Limited |year=2019 |accessdate=03 May 2024}}</ref>
 
This is being mentioned in the context of laboratory informatics applications for a couple of reasons. First, a well-designed commercial LIMS that supports clinical research laboratory workflows is already going to address privacy and security aspects, as part of the developer recognizing the need for those labs to adhere to regulations such as the [[Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act]] (HIPAA) and comply with standards such as [[ISO 15189]]. However, such a system may not have been developed with FAIR data principles in mind, and any built-in metadata and ontology schemes may be insufficient for full FAIRification of laboratory-based clinical trial research objects. As Queralt-Rosinach ''et al.'' note, however, "interestingly, ontologies may also be used to describe data access restrictions to complement FAIR metadata with information that supports data safety and patient privacy."<ref name="Queralt-RosinachApplying22" /> Essentially, the authors are suggesting that while a HIS or LIS may have built-in access management tools, setting up ontologies and metadata mechanisms that link privacy aspects of a research object (e.g., "has consent form for," "is de-identified," etc.) to the object's metadata allows for even more flexible, FAIR-driven approaches to privacy and security. Research software developers creating such information management tools for the regulated clinical research space may want to apply FAIR concepts such as this to how access control and privacy restrictions are managed. This will inevitably mean any research objects exported with machine-readable privacy-concerning metadata will be more reusable in a way that still "supports data safety and patient privacy."<ref name="Queralt-RosinachApplying22" />
 
Second, a well-designed research software solution working with clinical data will provide not only support for open, community-supported data models and vocabularies for clinical data, but also standardized community-driven ontologies that are specifically developed for access control and privacy. Queralt-Rosinach ''et al.'' continue<ref name="Queralt-RosinachApplying22" />:
 
<blockquote>Also, very important for accessibility and data privacy is that the digital objects ''per se'' can accommodate the criteria and protocols necessary to comply with regulatory and governance frameworks. Ontologies can aid in opening and protecting patient data by exposing logical definitions of data use conditions. Indeed, there are ontologies to define access and reuse conditions for patient data such as the Informed Consent Ontology (ICO), the Global Alliance for Genomics and Health Data Use Ontology (DUO) standard, and the Open Digital Rights Language (ODRL) vocabulary recommended by W3C.</blockquote>
 
Also of note here is the Observational Medical Outcomes Partnership (OMOP) Common Data Model (CDM) and its OHDSI standardized vocabularies. In all these cases, a developer-driven approach to research software that incorporates community-driven standards that support FAIR principles is welcome. However, as Maxwell ''et al.'' noted in their ''Lancet'' review article in late 2023, "few platforms or registries applied community-developed standards for participant-level data, further restricting the interoperability of ... data-sharing initiatives [like FAIR]."<ref name="MaxwellFAIREthic23" /> As the FAIR principles continue to gain ground in clinical research and diagnostics settings, software developers will need to be more attuned to translating old ways of development to ones that incorporate FAIR data and software principles. Demand for FAIR data will only continue to grow, and any efforts to improve interoperability and reusability while honoring (and enhancing) privacy and security aspects of restricted data will be appreciated by clinical researchers. However, just as FAIR is not an overall goal for researchers, software built with FAIR principles in mind is not the end point of research organizations managing restricted and privacy-protected research objects. Ultimately, those organizations will have make other considerations about restricted data in the scope of FAIR, including addressing data management plans, data use agreements, disclosure review practices, and training as it applies to their research software and generated research objects.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Jang |first=Joy Bohyun |last2=Pienta |first2=Amy |last3=Levenstein |first3=Margaret |last4=Saul |first4=Joe |date=2023-12-06 |title=Restricted data management: the current practice and the future |url=https://journalprivacyconfidentiality.org/index.php/jpc/article/view/844 |journal=Journal of Privacy and Confidentiality |volume=13 |issue=2 |doi=10.29012/jpc.844 |issn=2575-8527 |pmc=PMC10956935 |pmid=38515607}}</ref>


==Conclusion==
==Conclusion==
This brief Q&A article sought to find ways in which a LIMS can help the food and beverage business better comply with its HACCP-driven food safety plan. We found that the HACCP principles have been around a long time, though their greater incorporation and expansion into international standards and best industry practices has been more recent. The seven core HACCP principles help the business to better identify, understand, and measure the hazards facing the production of a specific food or beverage product, and the implementation of these principles requires deep industry knowledge and an authentic cultural commitment to food safety. It also requires well-staffed and -equipped laboratories, ideally using a validated LIMS tailored to the food and beverage industry. Various pieces of LIMS functionality, from audit trails and training management to robust integration and location management, help the laboratory better perform its verification procedures in sympathy with the HACCP principles. However, not all LIMS are the same, and food and beverage labs would be wise to scrutinize LIMS functionality that helps the business better achieve its HACCP goals.
Laboratory informatics developers will also need to remember that FAIRification of research in itself is not a goal for research laboratories; it is a continual process that recognizes improved scientific research and greater innovation as a more likely outcome.<ref name="WilkinsonTheFAIR16" /><ref name="OlsenEmbracing23" /><ref name="HuertaFAIRForAI23" />


==References==
==References==
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Latest revision as of 13:29, 13 May 2024

Sandbox begins below

FAIRResourcesGraphic AustralianResearchDataCommons 2018.png

Title: What are the potential implications of the FAIR data principles to laboratory informatics applications?

Author for citation: Shawn E. Douglas

License for content: Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International

Publication date: May 2024

Introduction

https://www.limswiki.org/index.php/Journal:Infrastructure_tools_to_support_an_effective_radiation_oncology_learning_health_system

This brief topical article will examine

The "FAIR-ification" of research objects and software

First discussed during a 2014 FORCE-11 workshop dedicated to "overcoming data discovery and reuse obstacles," the FAIR data principles were published by Wilkinson et al. in 2016 as a stakeholder collaboration driven to see research "objects" (i.e., research data and information of all shapes and formats) become more universally findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (FAIR) by both machines and people.[1] The authors released the FAIR principles while recognizing that "one of the grand challenges of data-intensive science ... is to improve knowledge discovery through assisting both humans and their computational agents in the discovery of, access to, and integration and analysis of task-appropriate scientific data and other scholarly digital objects."[1]

Since 2016, other research stakeholders have taken to publishing their thoughts about how the FAIR principles apply to their fields of study and practice[2], including in ways beyond what perhaps was originally imagined by Wilkinson et al.. For example, multiple authors have examined whether or not the software used in scientific endeavors itself can be considered a research object worth being developed and managed in tandem with the FAIR data principles.[3][4][5][6][7] Researchers quickly recognized that any planning around updating processes and systems to make research objects more FAIR would have to be tailored to specific research contexts, recognize that digital research objects go beyond data and information, and recognize "the specific nature of software" and not consider it "just data."[4] The end result has been applying the core concepts of FAIR but differently from data, with the added context of research software being more than just data, requiring more nuance and a different type of planning from applying FAIR to digital data and information.

A 2019 survey by Europe's FAIRsFAIR found that researchers seeking and re-using relevant research software on the internet faced multiple challenges, including understanding and/or maintaining the necessary software environment and its dependencies, finding sufficient documentation, struggling with accessibility and licensing issues, having the time and skills to install and/or use the software, finding quality control of the source code lacking, and having an insufficient (or non-existent) software sustainability and management plan.[4] These challenges highlight the importance of software to researchers and other stakeholders, and the roll FAIR has in better ensuring such software is findable, interoperable, and reusable, which in turn better ensures researchers' software-driven research is repeatable (by the same research team, with the same experimental setup), reproducible (by a different research team, with the same experimental setup), and replicable (by a different research team, with a different experimental setup).[4]

At this point, the topic of what "research software" represents must be addressed further, and, unsurprisingly, it's not straightforward. Ask 20 researchers what "research software" is, and you may get 20 different opinions. Some definitions can be more objectively viewed as too narrow, while others may be viewed as too broad, with some level of controversy inherent in any mutual discussion.[8][9][10] In 2021, as part of the FAIRsFAIR initiative, Gruenpeter et al. made a good-faith effort to define "research software" with the feedback of multiple stakeholders. Their efforts resulted in this definition[8]:

Research software includes source code files, algorithms, scripts, computational workflows, and executables that were created during the research process, or for a research purpose. Software components (e.g., operating systems, libraries, dependencies, packages, scripts, etc.) that are used for research but were not created during, or with a clear research intent, should be considered "software [used] in research" and not research software. This differentiation may vary between disciplines. The minimal requirement for achieving computational reproducibility is that all the computational components (i.e., research software, software used in research, documentation, and hardware) used during the research are identified, described, and made accessible to the extent that is possible.

Note that while the definition primarily recognizes software created during the research process, software created (whether by the research group, other open-source software developers outside the organization, or even commercial software developers) "for a research purpose" outside the actual research process is also recognized as research software. This notably can lead to disagreement about whether a proprietary, commercial spreadsheet or laboratory information management system (LIMS) offering that conducts analyses and visualizations of research data can genuinely be called research software, or simply classified as software used in research. van Nieuwpoort and Katz further elaborated on this concept, at least indirectly, by formally defining the roles of research software in 2023. Their definition of the various roles of research software—without using terms such as "open-source," "commercial," or "proprietary"—essentially further defined what research software is[10]:

  • Research software is a component of our instruments.
  • Research software is the instrument.
  • Research software analyzes research data.
  • Research software presents research results.
  • Research software assembles or integrates existing components into a working whole.
  • Research software is infrastructure or an underlying tool.
  • Research software facilitates distinctively research-oriented collaboration.

When considering these definitions[8][10] of research software and their adoption by other entities[11], it would appear that at least in part some laboratory informatics software—whether open-source or commercially proprietary—fills these roles in academic, military, and industry research laboratories of many types. In particular, electronic laboratory notebooks (ELNs) like open-source Jupyter Notebook or proprietary ELNs from commercial software developers fill the role of analyzing and visualizing research data, including developing molecular models for new promising research routes.[10] Even more advanced LIMS solutions that go beyond simply collating, auditing, securing, and reporting analytical results could conceivably fall under the umbrella of research software, particularly if many of the analytical, integration, and collaboration tools required in modern research facilities are included in the LIMS.

Ultimately, assuming that some laboratory informatics software can be considered research software and not just "software used in research," it's tough not to arrive at some deeper implications of research organizations' increasing need for FAIR data objects and software, particularly for laboratory informatics software and the developers of it.

Implications of the FAIR concept to laboratory informatics software

The global FAIR initiative affects, and even benefits, commercial laboratory informatics research software developers as much as it does academic and institutional ones

To be clear, there is undoubtedly a difference in the software development approach of "homegrown" research software by academics and institutions, and the more streamlined and experienced approach of commercial software development houses as applied to research software. Moynihan of Invenia Technical Computing described the difference in software development approaches thusly in 2020, while discussing the concept of "research software engineering"[12]:

Since the environment and incentives around building academic research software are very different to those of industry, the workflows around the former are, in general, not guided by the same engineering practices that are valued in the latter. That is to say: there is a difference between what is important in writing software for research, and for a user-focused software product. Academic research software prioritizes scientific correctness and flexibility to experiment above all else in pursuit of the researchers’ end product: published papers. Industry software, on the other hand, prioritizes maintainability, robustness, and testing, as the software (generally speaking) is the product. However, the two tracks share many common goals as well, such as catering to “users” [and] emphasizing performance and reproducibility, but most importantly both ventures are collaborative. Arguably then, both sets of principles are needed to write and maintain high-quality research software.

This brings us to our first point: the application of small-scale, FAIR-driven academic research software engineering practices and elements to the larger development of more commercial laboratory informatics software, and vice versa with the application of commercial-scale development practices to small FAIR-focused academic and institutional research software engineering efforts, has the potential to help better support all research laboratories using both independently-developed and commercial research software.

The concept of the research software engineer (RSE) began to take full form in 2012, and since then universities and institutions of many types have formally developed their own RSE groups and academic programs.[13][14][15] RSEs range from pure software developers with little knowledge of a given research discipline, to scientific researchers just beginning to learn how to develop software for their research project(s). While in the past, broadly speaking, researchers often cobbled together research software with less a focus on quality and reproducibility and more on getting their research published, today's push for FAIR data and software by academic journals, institutions, and other researchers seeking to collaborate has placed a much greater focus on the concept of "better software, better research."[13][16] Elaborating on that concept, Cohen et al. add that "ultimately, good research software can make the difference between valid, sustainable, reproducible research outputs and short-lived, potentially unreliable or erroneous outputs."[16]

The concept of software quality management (SQM) has traditionally not been lost on professional, commercial software development businesses. Good SQM practices have been less prevalent in homegrown research software development; however, the expanded adoption of FAIR data and FAIR software approaches has shifted the focus on to the repeatability, reproducibility, and interoperability of research results and data produced by a more sustainable research software. The adoption of FAIR by academic and institutional research labs not only brings commercial SQM and other software development approaches into their workflow, but also gives commercial laboratory informatics software developers an opportunity to embrace many aspects of the FAIR approach to laboratory research practices, including lessons learned and development practices from the growing number of RSEs. This doesn't mean commercial developers are going to suddenly take an open-source approach to their code, and it doesn't mean academic and institutional research labs are going to give up the benefits of the open-source paradigm as applied to research software.[17] However, as Moynihan noted, both research software development paradigms stand to gain from the shift to more FAIR data and software.[12] Additionally, if commercial laboratory informatics vendors want to continue to competitively market relevant and sustainable research software to research labs, they frankly have little choice but to commit extra resources to learning about the application of FAIR principles to their offerings tailored to those labs.

The focus on data types and metadata within the scope of FAIR is shifting how laboratory informatics software developers and RSEs make their research software and choose their database approaches

Close to the core of any deep discussion of the FAIR data principles are the concepts of data models, data types, metadata, and persistent unique identifiers (PIDs). Making research objects more findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable is no easy task when data types and approaches to metadata assignment (if there even is such an approach) are widely differing and inconsistent. Metadata is a means for better storing and characterizing research objects for the purposes of ensuring provenance and reproducibility of those research objects.[18][19] This means as early as possible implementing a software-based approach that is FAIR-driven, capturing FAIR metadata using flexible domain-driven ontologies (i.e., controlled vocabularies) at the source and cleaning up old research objects that aren't FAIR-ready while also limiting hindrances to research processes as much as possible.[19] And that approach must value the importance of metadata and PIDs. As Weigel et al. note in a discussion on making laboratory data and workflows more machine-findable: "Metadata capture must be highly automated and reliable, both in terms of technical reliability and ensured metadata quality. This requires an approach that may be very different from established procedures."[20] Enter non-relational RDF knowledge graph databases.

This brings us to our second point: given the importance of metadata and PIDs to FAIRifying research objects (and even research software), established, more traditional research software development methods using common relational databases may not be enough, even for commercial laboratory informatics software developers. Non-relational Resource Description Framework (RDF) knowledge graph databases used in FAIR-driven, well-designed laboratory informatics software help make research objects more FAIR for all research labs.

Research objects can take many forms (i.e., data types), making the storage and management of those objects challenging, particularly in research settings with great diversity of data, as with materials research. Some have approached this challenge by combining different database and systems technologies that are best suited for each data type.[21] However, while query performance and storage footprint improves with this approach, data across the different storage mechanisms typically remains unlinked and non-compliant with FAIR principles. Here, either a full RDF knowledge graph database or similar integration layer is required to better make the research objects more interoperable and reusable, whether it's materials records or specimen data.[21][22]

It is beyond the scope of this Q&A article to discuss RDF knowledge graph databases at length. (For a deeper dive on this topic, see Rocca-Serra et al. and the FAIR Cookbook.[23]) However, know that the primary strength of these databases to FAIRification of research objects is their ability to provide semantic transparency (i.e., provide a framework for better understanding and reusing the greater research object through basic examination of the relationships of its associated metadata and their constituents), making these objects more easily accessible, interoperable, and machine-readable.[21] The resulting knowledge graphs, with their "subject-property-object" syntax and PIDs or uniform resource identifiers (URIs) helping to link data, metadata, ontology classes, and more, can be interpreted, searched, and linked by machines, and made human-readable, resulting in better research through derivation of new knowledge from the existing research objects. The end result is a representation of heterogeneous data and metadata that complies with the FAIR guiding principles.[21][22][23][24][25][26] This concept can even be extended to post factum visualizations of the knowledge graph data[25], as well as the FAIR management of computational laboratory workflows.[27]

While rare, some commercial laboratory informatics vendors like Semaphore Solutions have already recognized the potential of RDF knowledge graph databases to FAIR-driven laboratory research, having implemented such structures into their offerings.[24] (The use of knowledge graphs has already been demonstrated in academic research software, such as with the ELN tools developed by RSEs at the University of Rostock and University of Amsterdam.[28]) As noted in the prior point, it is potentially advantageous to not only laboratory informatics vendors to provide but also research labs to use relevant and sustainable research software that has the FAIR principles embedded in the software's design. Turning to knowledge graph databases is another example of keeping such software relevant and FAIR to research labs.

Applying FAIR-driven metadata schemes to laboratory informatics software development gives data a FAIRer chance at being ready for machine learning and artificial intelligence applications

The third and final point for this Q&A article highlights another positive consequence of engineering laboratory informatics software with FAIR in mind: FAIRified research objects are much closer to being usable for the trending inclusion of machine learning (ML) and artificial intelligence (AI) tools in laboratory informatics platforms and other companion research software. By developing laboratory informatics software with a focus on FAIR-driven metadata and database schemes, not only are research objects more FAIR but also "cleaner" and more machine-ready for advanced analytical uses as with ML and AI.

To be sure, the FAIRness of any structured dataset alone is not enough to make it ready for ML and AI applications. Factors such as classification, completeness, context, correctness, duplicity, integrity, mislabeling, outliers, relevancy, sample size, and timeliness of the research object and its contents are also important to consider.[29][30] When those factors aren't appropriately addressed as part of a FAIRification effort towards AI readiness (as well as part of the development of research software of all types), research data and metadata have a higher likelihood of revealing themselves to be inconsistent. As such, searches and analytics using that data and metadata become muddled, and the ultimate ML or AI output will also be muddled (i.e., "garbage in, garbage out"). Whether retroactively updating existing research objects to a more FAIRified state or ensuring research objects (e.g., those originating in an ELN or LIMS) are more FAIR and AI-ready from the start, research software updating or generating those research objects has to address ontologies, data models, data types, identifiers, and more in a thorough yet flexible way.[31]

Noting that Wilkinson et al. originally highlighted the importance of machine-readability of FAIR data, Huerta et al. add that that core principle of FAIRness "is synergistic with the rapid adoption and increased use of AI in research."[32] They go on to discuss the positive interactions of FAIR research objects with FAIR-driven, AI-based research. Among the benefits include[32]:

  • greater findability of FAIR research objects for further AI-driven scientific discovery;
  • greater reproducibility of FAIR research objects and any AI models published with them;
  • improved generalization of AI-driven medical research models when exposed to diverse and FAIR research objects;
  • improved reporting of AI-driven research results using FAIRified research objects, lending further credibility to those results;
  • more uniform comparison of AI models using well-defined hyperstructure and information training conditions from FAIRified research objects;
  • more developed and interoperable "data e-infrastructure," which can further drive a more effective "AI services layer";
  • reduced bias in AI-driven processes through the use of FAIR research objects and AI models; and
  • improved surety of scientific correctness where reproducibility in AI-driven research can't be guaranteed.

In the end, developers of research software (whether discipline-specific research software or broader laboratory informatics solutions) would be advised to keep in mind the growing trends of FAIR research, FAIR software, and ML- and AI-driven research, especially in the life sciences, but also a variety of other fields.[32]

Restricted clinical data and its FAIRification for greater research innovation

Broader discussion in the research community continues to occur in regards to how best to ethically make restricted or privacy-protected clinical data and information FAIR for greater innovation and, by extension, improved patient outcomes, particularly in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.[33][34][35] (Note that while there are other types of restricted and privacy-protected data, this section will focus largely on clinical data and research objects as the most obvious type.)

These efforts have usually revolved around pulling reusable clinical patient or research data from hospital information systems (HIS), electronic medical records (EMRs), clinical trial management systems (CTMSs), and research databases (often relational in nature) that either contain de-identified data or can de-identify aspects of data and information before access and extraction. Sometimes that clinical data or research object may have already in part been FAIRified, but often it may not be. In all cases, the concepts of privacy, security, and anonymization come up as part of any desire to gain access to that clinical material. However, any FAIRified clinical data isn't necessarily readily open for access. As Snoeijer et al. note: "The authors of the FAIR principles, however, clearly indicate that 'accessible' does not mean open. It means that clarity and transparency is required around the conditions governing access and reuse."[36]

This is being mentioned in the context of laboratory informatics applications for a couple of reasons. First, a well-designed commercial LIMS that supports clinical research laboratory workflows is already going to address privacy and security aspects, as part of the developer recognizing the need for those labs to adhere to regulations such as the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) and comply with standards such as ISO 15189. However, such a system may not have been developed with FAIR data principles in mind, and any built-in metadata and ontology schemes may be insufficient for full FAIRification of laboratory-based clinical trial research objects. As Queralt-Rosinach et al. note, however, "interestingly, ontologies may also be used to describe data access restrictions to complement FAIR metadata with information that supports data safety and patient privacy."[34] Essentially, the authors are suggesting that while a HIS or LIS may have built-in access management tools, setting up ontologies and metadata mechanisms that link privacy aspects of a research object (e.g., "has consent form for," "is de-identified," etc.) to the object's metadata allows for even more flexible, FAIR-driven approaches to privacy and security. Research software developers creating such information management tools for the regulated clinical research space may want to apply FAIR concepts such as this to how access control and privacy restrictions are managed. This will inevitably mean any research objects exported with machine-readable privacy-concerning metadata will be more reusable in a way that still "supports data safety and patient privacy."[34]

Second, a well-designed research software solution working with clinical data will provide not only support for open, community-supported data models and vocabularies for clinical data, but also standardized community-driven ontologies that are specifically developed for access control and privacy. Queralt-Rosinach et al. continue[34]:

Also, very important for accessibility and data privacy is that the digital objects per se can accommodate the criteria and protocols necessary to comply with regulatory and governance frameworks. Ontologies can aid in opening and protecting patient data by exposing logical definitions of data use conditions. Indeed, there are ontologies to define access and reuse conditions for patient data such as the Informed Consent Ontology (ICO), the Global Alliance for Genomics and Health Data Use Ontology (DUO) standard, and the Open Digital Rights Language (ODRL) vocabulary recommended by W3C.

Also of note here is the Observational Medical Outcomes Partnership (OMOP) Common Data Model (CDM) and its OHDSI standardized vocabularies. In all these cases, a developer-driven approach to research software that incorporates community-driven standards that support FAIR principles is welcome. However, as Maxwell et al. noted in their Lancet review article in late 2023, "few platforms or registries applied community-developed standards for participant-level data, further restricting the interoperability of ... data-sharing initiatives [like FAIR]."[33] As the FAIR principles continue to gain ground in clinical research and diagnostics settings, software developers will need to be more attuned to translating old ways of development to ones that incorporate FAIR data and software principles. Demand for FAIR data will only continue to grow, and any efforts to improve interoperability and reusability while honoring (and enhancing) privacy and security aspects of restricted data will be appreciated by clinical researchers. However, just as FAIR is not an overall goal for researchers, software built with FAIR principles in mind is not the end point of research organizations managing restricted and privacy-protected research objects. Ultimately, those organizations will have make other considerations about restricted data in the scope of FAIR, including addressing data management plans, data use agreements, disclosure review practices, and training as it applies to their research software and generated research objects.[37]

Conclusion

Laboratory informatics developers will also need to remember that FAIRification of research in itself is not a goal for research laboratories; it is a continual process that recognizes improved scientific research and greater innovation as a more likely outcome.[1][31][32]

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