Introduction: What is open science hardware?
- Open science hardware (OSH) makes scientific tools freely available to study, build, and adapt—supporting transparency and innovation.
- OSH addresses the limitations of proprietary “black box” tools by promoting reproducibility, accessibility, and customization.
- It empowers researchers worldwide, especially those with limited resources, to participate in and contribute to science.
- Examples of open science hardware can be found in most academic fields, with salient examples in neuroscience, environmental monitoring and microscopy
Lesson 2: How does open science hardware work?
- OSH is developed by a wide range of actors—from academic labs and companies to DIY communities and grassroots collaborations.
- Good documentation includes: design files, bill of materials (BOM), source code or firmware (if applicable), assembly instructions, testing/calibration data, and a clear open license.
- Librarians can support researchers by helping assess documentation completeness and encouraging early sharing—even before a design is finalized.
- Not all “open” projects are truly reusable—many lack the documentation needed for others to replicate or adapt them.
Lesson 3: licenses and open science hardware
- Licensing grants others the legal rights to use, modify, and redistribute a design.
- OSH projects often involve multiple license layers—for hardware designs, documentation, software, and firmware.
- Two main types of open licenses: Copyleft (e.g. CERN-OHL-S, TAPR OHL), requiring that any derivatives are shared under the same license; Permissive (e.g. Solderpad, CERN-OHL-P), allowing broad reuse with minimal restrictions, including in proprietary contexts.
- The CERN Open Hardware Licence v2 is the most used one, and offers three variants (Strong, Weak, Permissive) to suit different openness levels.
- Not all Creative Commons licenses are truly open source—those with NC (Non-Commercial) or ND (No Derivatives) clauses restrict reuse and are not suitable for OSH.
Lesson 4: Open science hardware best practices
- OSH projects are shared on a range of platforms—GitHub, GitLab, Hackaday.io, Wikifactory, academic journals, and institutional repositories—all with different strengthts
- A well-documented OSH project should include at least: A README file, design files in open formats, bill of materials (BOM), assembly/testing instructions, open licensing
- Visible community engagement (e.g. GitHub issues, forum interactions, feedback) is a strong signal of project health and usability.
- Even early-stage sharing—of ideas, trade-offs, and decisions—can foster transparency, collaboration, and reuse.
Lesson 5: Connecting to open science hardware communities
- Researchers engage with OSH as both developers (creating and sharing new tools) and users (replicating or adapting existing tools); recognizing this distinction is key to offering the right support.
- Support can include recommending forums, guiding participation, and lowering entry barriers
- OSH communities value all types of contributions—from bug fixes and documentation improvements to new use cases and adaptations.
- Many researchers hesitate to engage; librarians can help normalize participation and foster confidence by highlighting that OSH is collaborative, not competitive.
- Your library can play a strategic role in supporting open communities—through referrals, programming, infrastructure, or peer learning.