Periodic Reporting for period 1 - EVERSE (European Virtual Institute for Research Software Excellence)
Okres sprawozdawczy: 2024-03-01 do 2025-08-31
The RSQKit provides a structured and openly accessible knowledge base of best practices, tools, and guidelines for assessing and improving software quality. It goes beyond existing catalogues by combining community curation with dynamic versioning, ensuring continual evolution in line with emerging standards. The accompanying indicators and workflows introduce automated, interoperable mechanisms for evaluating software quality through continuous integration, enabling reproducibility and quality assurance to become integral to software development practices.
EVERSE TechRadar provides a community-approved summary of tools and technologies that help ensure research software quality, making it easier for users to find the right solutions and encouraging consistency across different scientific fields. The EVERSE training catalogue brings together more than 80 training resources to help researchers and Research Software Engineers (RSEs) strengthen their skills and ensure quality in their work, making it easier for them to find what they need.
The recognition framework represents a major cultural shift by establishing mechanisms to credit RSEs and researchers for their contributions to software development and quality assurance, integrating these acknowledgements into existing systems such as ORCID and APICURON. Finally, the EVERSE Network connects communities, initiatives, and infrastructures across Europe, providing a long-term collaborative structure that will evolve into a Virtual Institute for Research Software Excellence.
To ensure further uptake and sustainability, continued engagement with research communities, policy alignment with the EOSC and FAIR principles, and support for standardisation and interoperability are essential. Long-term success will also benefit from institutional recognition of software as a first-class research output, sustained funding for training and community activities, and integration of EVERSE tools into broader European research infrastructures.