FAIR Practices in Africa

This article investigates expansion of the Internet of FAIR Data and Services (IFDS) to Africa, through the three GO FAIR pillars: GO CHANGE, GO BUILD and GO TRAIN. Introduction of the IFDS in Africa has a focus on digital health. Two examples of introducing FAIR are compared: a regional initiative for digital health by governments in the East Africa Community (EAC) and an initiative by a local health provider (Solidarmed) in collaboration with Great Zimbabwe University in Zimbabwe. The obstacles to introducing FAIR are identified as underrepresentation of data from Africa in IFDS at this moment, the lack of explicit recognition of situational context of research in FAIR at present and the lack of acceptability of FAIR as a foreign and European invention which affects acceptance. It is envisaged that FAIR has an important contribution to solve fragmentation in digital health in Africa, and that any obstacles concerning African participation, context relevance and acceptance of IFDS need to be removed. This will require involvement of African researchers and ICT-developers so that it is driven by local ownership. Assessment of ecological validity in FAIR principles would ensure that the context specificity of research is reflected in the FAIR principles. This will help enhance the acceptance of the FAIR Guidelines in Africa and will help strengthen digital health research and services.

[1]  K. Davids,et al.  Ecological Validity, Representative Design, and Correspondence Between Experimental Task Constraints and Behavioral Setting: Comment on Rogers, Kadar, and Costall (2005) , 2007 .

[2]  van Reisen International cooperation in the digital era , 2017 .

[3]  Thomas A. Stoffregen,et al.  On the nature and evaluation of fidelity in virtual environments: Applications, Implications, and Human Performance , 2019 .

[4]  D. Campbell,et al.  Convergent and discriminant validation by the multitrait-multimethod matrix. , 1959, Psychological bulletin.

[5]  Scott M. Williams,et al.  The Missing Diversity in Human Genetic Studies , 2019, Cell.

[6]  Fred D. Davis,et al.  A Theoretical Extension of the Technology Acceptance Model: Four Longitudinal Field Studies , 2000, Management Science.

[7]  Gertjan van Stam,et al.  Reflections: A Narrative on Displacement of Technology and Meaning in an African Place , 2017 .

[8]  L. M. Laosa,et al.  Population Generalizability, Cultural Sensitivity, and Ethical Dilemmas. , 1989 .

[9]  Eva FM Krah,et al.  Exploring the ambivalent evidence base of mobile health (mHealth): A systematic literature review on the use of mobile phones for the improvement of community health in Africa , 2016, Digital health.

[10]  S. Chaiken,et al.  Causal inferences about communicators and their effect on opinion change , 1978 .

[11]  H. Russell Bernard,et al.  Social Research Methods: Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches , 2000 .

[12]  Mirjam van Reisen,et al.  Theorising Agency in ICT4D:: Epistemic Sovereignty and Transformation-in-Connection , 2017 .

[13]  Ann Lantz,et al.  User Centered Design in Practice - Problems and Possibilities , 1998 .

[14]  H. Blumer,et al.  Symbolic Interactionism: Perspective and Method , 1988 .

[15]  Barend Mons,et al.  Towards the Tipping Point for FAIR Implementation , 2020, Data Intelligence.

[16]  Ann Lantz,et al.  User centered design—problems and possibilities: a summary of the 1998 PDC & CSCW workshop , 1999, SGCH.

[17]  E. Brunswik Perception and the Representative Design of Psychological Experiments , 1957 .

[18]  Erik Schultes,et al.  The FAIR Guiding Principles for scientific data management and stewardship , 2016, Scientific Data.

[19]  B. Pfaffenberger Social Anthropology of Technology , 1992 .

[20]  Barend Mons,et al.  Data Stewardship for Open Science: Implementing FAIR Principles , 2018 .

[21]  Kimberly Hoagwood,et al.  Developmental Psychopathology and the Notion of Culture: Introduction to the Special Section on 'The Fusion of Cultural Horizons: Cultural Influences on the Assessment of Psychopathology in Children and Adolescents' , 1997 .

[22]  T. P. Hughes,et al.  Networks of Power: Electrification in Western Society, 1880-1930 , 1984 .

[23]  Celia B. Fisher,et al.  Research Ethics in Social Science , 2008 .

[24]  Bernd Eggers,et al.  Self And Society A Symbolic Interactionist Social Psychology , 2016 .