Sustainable Software Tools For Open Science

Sustainable Software Tools For Open Science

Software is an integral component of health research due in part to the speed and growth of new technology innovations in the software and computing fields. An NIH collaboration across 19 institutes, centers, and offices supports the development and enhancement of sustainable software tools for open science by fostering new collaborations between biomedical and clinical scientists and research software engineers.

Two active funding opportunities supporting these efforts are listed below.

Administrative Supplements to Support Enhancement of Software Tools for Open Science

As part of their research projects, investigators often produce innovative, scientifically valuable software tools. Frequently, these valuable tools cannot be supported long-term or are developed under conditions that aren’t optimal for reuse. In an effort to address this, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Office of Data Science Strategy (ODSS), along with other institutes and centers (ICs) at NIH, previously developed several funding opportunities as administrative supplements to enhance software tool development for open science.

These supplements have been utilized to:

  • support robustness, sustainability, and scalability of existing biomedical research software tools and workflows.
  • invest in research software tools with recognized value in a scientific community to enhance their impact by leveraging best practices in software development and advances in cloud computing.
  • support collaborations between researchers and research software engineers to enhance the design, implementation, and “cloud-readiness” of research software.

For more information on software sustainability and researcher engagement, read Dr. Gregurick's blog and conversation with Dr. Daniel S. Katz.

The NIH Council of Councils held a meeting January 19 and 20, 2023, where working group leadership presented a concept clearance: “Building Sustainable Foundations for Open Software and Tools in Biomedical and Behavioral Science.” The concept was approved by the Council of Councils, and you can see the presentation here.

Prior NOSIs:

Awardee projects and their descriptions are available below.

FY2023

FY2022

FY2021

FY2020

This page last reviewed on May 7, 2025