FOLLOW THE MEETING ONLINE: Using the web-conferencing you may follow on your computer the slides broadcast and hear the sound through the speakers of the PC handsfree. Click on the link and follow the instructions in the powerpoint “participant guide” enclosed. For speaking with good sound quality it's better to use telephone. Please call the local number corresponding to your countryand dial the requested room number.
You will directly join the conference. To avoid background noise during the conference, please avoid noisy/resonant places.
Knowledge Infrastructure and Framework for Nano Safety
26 January 2016 Covent Garden, Brussels, Belgium
Objectives:
a) Form an integrated perspective for a Nano Safety Knowledge Infrastructure (NSKI) supporting the work activities of all stakeholders involved in the research, assessment and regulation of the safety of nanotechnology;
b) Define the critical components of such an NSKI: stakeholders, expertise, frameworks, roadmaps, methods, resources, models, databases;
c) Agree a guidance on how a common harmonisation approach to the NSKI, including working consensus on open standards and ontology, could be best advanced;
d) Formulate a plan for refining the KI both for NSC needs and for supporting international engagement, refinement and collaboration (including re-use and co-working of components required by other communities) and EU-US cooperation and CoPs.
Covent Garden, Brussels
FOLLOW THE MEETING ONLINE:
Using the web-conferencing you may follow on your computer the slides broadcast and hear the sound through the speakers of the PC handsfree. Click on the link and follow the instructions in the powerpoint “participant guide” enclosed.
For speaking with good sound quality it's better to use telephone. Please call the local number corresponding to your country and dial the requested room number.
You will directly join the conference. To avoid background noise during the conference, please avoid noisy/resonant places.
26 January 2016
Covent Garden, Brussels, Belgium
Objectives:
a) Form an integrated perspective for a Nano Safety Knowledge Infrastructure (NSKI) supporting the work activities of all stakeholders involved in the research, assessment and regulation of the safety of nanotechnology;
b) Define the critical components of such an NSKI: stakeholders, expertise, frameworks, roadmaps, methods, resources, models, databases;
c) Agree a guidance on how a common harmonisation approach to the NSKI, including working consensus on open standards and ontology, could be best advanced;
d) Formulate a plan for refining the KI both for NSC needs and for supporting international engagement, refinement and collaboration (including re-use and co-working of components required by other communities) and EU-US cooperation and CoPs.