Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5523677 Trends in Food Science & Technology 2017 19 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Identifying and classifying research infrastructure is challenging.•Research infrastructure is dynamic and constantly developing.•Food and health research is a highly multi-disciplinary scientific domain.•Research infrastructure relevant to food and health remains fragmented and disparate.•There is a lack of infrastructure to facilitate research on both food and health.

BackgroundRecent initiatives in Europe have encouraged the formalisation of research infrastructure to unify fragmented facilities, resources and services; and to facilitate world-class research of complex public health challenges, such as those related to non-communicable disease. How this can be achieved in the area of food and health has, to date, been unclear.Scope and approachThis commentary paper presents examples of the types of food and health research facilities, resources and services available in Europe. Insights are provided on the challenge of identifying and classifying research infrastructure. In addition, suggestions are made for the future direction of food and health research infrastructure in Europe. These views are informed by the EuroDISH project, which mapped research infrastructure in four areas of food and health research: Determinants of dietary behaviour; Intake of foods/nutrients; Status and functional markers of nutritional health; Health and disease risk of foods/nutrients.Key findings and conclusionThere is no objective measure to identify or classify research infrastructure. It is therefore, difficult to operationalise this term. EuroDISH demonstrated specific challenges with identifying the degree an organisation, project, network or national infrastructure could be considered a research infrastructure; and establishing the boundary of a research infrastructure (integral hard or soft facilities/resources/services). Nevertheless, there are opportunities to create dedicated food and health research infrastructures in Europe. These would need to be flexible and adaptable to keep pace with an ever-changing research environment and bring together the multi-disciplinary needs of the food and health research community.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Food Science
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