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Showing 1–4 of 4 results
Advanced filters: Author: Benedict Diederich Clear advanced filters
  • Open standard microscopy is urgently needed to give low-cost solutions to researchers and to overcome the reproducibility crisis in science. Here the authors present a 3D-printed, open-source modular microscopy toolbox UC2 (You. See. Too.) for a few hundred Euros.

    • Benedict Diederich
    • René Lachmann
    • Rainer Heintzmann
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 11, P: 1-9
  • Here we discuss barriers to reproducibility in regard to microscopes and related hardware, along with best practices for sharing novel designs created using computer-aided design (CAD). We hope to start a fruitful community discussion on how instrument development, especially in microscopy, can become more open and reproducible, ultimately leading to better, more trustworthy science.

    • Benedict Diederich
    • Caroline Müllenbroich
    • Andrey Andreev
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Methods
    Volume: 19, P: 1026-1030
  • Haoran Wang and co-authors present an open-source, automated two color structured illumination microscopy module compatible with standard microscopes. Combining low-cost components and real-time super-resolution imaging via open-source software, the system improves resolution by 1.55-fold while reducing complexity and cost.

    • Haoran Wang
    • Peter T. Brown
    • Benedict Diederich
    ResearchOpen Access
    Communications Engineering
    Volume: 4, P: 1-10
  • Light microscopy enables researchers to observe cellular mechanisms with high spatial and temporal resolution. However, the increasing complexity of current imaging technologies, coupled with financial constraints of potential users, hampers the general accessibility and potential reach of cutting-edge microscopy. Open microscopy can address this issue by making well-designed and well-documented hardware and software solutions openly available to a broad audience. In this Comment, we provide a definition of open microscopy and present recent projects in the field. We discuss current and future challenges of open microscopy and their implications for funders, policymakers, researchers and scientists. We believe that open microscopy requires a holistic approach. Sample preparation, designing and building of hardware components, writing software, data acquisition and data interpretation must go hand in hand to enable interdisciplinary and reproducible science to the benefit of society.

    • Johannes Hohlbein
    • Benedict Diederich
    • Kirti Prakash
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Methods
    Volume: 19, P: 1020-1025