Description
Aims: the aims of this session are to explore how industry has profited or not from Open Science and FAIR data practices. The speakers are encouraged to highlight their talks with examples and proposals of what actions should be undertaken to improve the adoption of OS practices in industry, how to make OS more industry friendly and how industry could profit more from OS and vice versa. Obviously, competition between companies, which is a good thing for seeking the best products for consumers, does mean that private research within them will be needed. This is the so-called competitive phase of industry research.
Light sources have a great deal of experience providing industry with the best possible analytical methods to support their pre-competitive as well as their competitive phases of work.
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Denis Spasyuk (CLS)8/11/26, 1:00 PM
Open Science is often discussed as a high level policy, but for the Canadian Light Source (CLS), it is a functional reality that requires custom digital infrastructure. This talk details the devel-opment of XASDB, an open access platform designed to move X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy (XAS) data from fragmented beamline data to a unified web based environment using stand-ard data structures....
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Lisa Keefe (IMCA-CAT , USA)8/11/26, 1:30 PM
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Elizabeth Shotton (Diamond Light Source (UK))8/11/26, 2:00 PM
Open science is increasingly shaping how industry engages with large-scale research infrastructures, including synchrotrons. This talk explores how open science principles can coexist with proprietary research, enabling industrial users to balance confidentiality, competitiveness, and wider scientific impact.
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Established and emerging access models for industrial usage of synchrotrons will be...