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Seminar✓ Recording AvailableNeuroscience

A discussion on the necessity for Open Source Hardware in neuroscience research

Andre Maia Chagas

Dr

University of Sussex

Schedule
Monday, March 29, 2021

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Schedule

Monday, March 29, 2021

2:00 PM Europe/London

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Host: Sussex Visions

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Recording provided by the organiser.

Event Information

Domain

Neuroscience

Original Event

View source

Host

Sussex Visions

Duration

70 minutes

Abstract

Research tools are paramount for scientific development, they enable researchers to observe and manipulate natural phenomena, learn their principles, make predictions and develop new technologies, treatments and improve living standards. Due to their costs and the geographical distribution of manufacturing companies access to them is not widely available, hindering the pace of research, the ability of many communities to contribute to science and education and reap its benefits. One possible solution for this issue is to create research tools under the open source ethos, where all documentation about them (including their designs, building and operating instructions) are made freely available. Dubbed Open Science Hardware (OSH), this production method follows the established and successful principles of open source software and brings many advantages over traditional creation methods such as: economic savings (see Pearce 2020 for potential economic savings in developing open source research tools), distributed manufacturing, repairability, and higher customizability. This development method has been greatly facilitated by recent technological developments in fast prototyping tools, Internet infrastructure, documentation platforms and lower costs of electronic off-the-shelf components. Taken together these benefits have the potential to make research more inclusive, equitable, distributed and most importantly, more reliable and reproducible, as - 1) researchers can know their tools inner workings in minute detail - 2) they can calibrate their tools before every experiment and having them running in optimal condition everytime - 3) given their lower price point, a)students can be trained/taught with hands on classes, b) several copies of the same instrument can be built leading to a parallelization of data collection and the creation of more robust datasets. - 4) Labs across the world can share the exact same type of instruments and create collaborative projects with standardized data collection and sharing.

Topics

Open Science Hardwareaccessibilitycustomizabilitydistributed manufacturingeconomic savingsfast prototypingneuroscience researchopen neuroscienceopen sourceopen source hardwarereproducibilityresearch tools

About the Speaker

Andre Maia Chagas

Dr

University of Sussex

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

open-neuroscience.com

@Chagas_AM

Follow on Twitter/X

twitter.com/Chagas_AM

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