FAIR Ecosystems for Science at Scale
Sean R. Wilkinson, Patrick Widener

TL;DR
This paper discusses creating FAIR-compliant ecosystems within HPC centers to facilitate sharing, discovery, and reuse of scientific workflows and artifacts, aiming to reduce duplication and foster cross-disciplinary collaboration.
Contribution
It proposes an architecture based on the EOSC-Life FAIR Workflows Collaboratory tailored for HPC centers, emphasizing FAIR workflow components and user incentives for adoption.
Findings
Architecture tailored for HPC centers like OLCF.
Potential for cross-disciplinary sharing and reuse.
Strategies to incentivize user participation.
Abstract
High Performance Computing (HPC) centers provide resources to users who require greater scale to "get science done". They deploy infrastructure with singular hardware architectures, cutting-edge software environments, and stricter security measures as compared with users' own resources. As a result, users often create and configure digital artifacts in ways that are specialized for the unique infrastructure at a given HPC center. Each user of that center will face similar challenges as they develop specialized solutions to take full advantages of the center's resources, potentially resulting in significant duplication of effort. Much duplicated effort could be avoided, however, if users of these centers found it easier to discover others' solutions and artifacts as well as share their own. The FAIR principles address this problem by presenting guidelines focused around metadata…
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