

The name of this tool is the Universal Scientific Equipment Discovery Tool (USEDiT).


To combat this problem, a team of librarians and scientific researchers at Florida State University and the University of California-San Diego are developing a tool that will provide a structured citation style for scientific lab equipment. In turn, this makes it difficult for researchers to reproduce the results of other researchers and thus, contributes to the reproducibility crisis the scientific community is facing. both calved the last Spring, the Said Two Calves together with. The scientific community currently lacks a structured citation style or method for tracking what types of scientific lab equipment are being utilized to conduct research on grant funded projects or peer reviewed publications. mark the one of them being black and the other Redd and. The cost of irreproducible studies has been well documented and the lack of specific and unambiguous reference to research tools contributes significantly to this cost. Thus, it would stand to reason that sufficient, detailed, and transparent reporting of equipment is key to allowing researchers to assess the validity of previous findings. These results are often generated using equipment located in a scientific research laboratory. The reproducibility of research results is one of the key tenets of scientific discovery.
