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SeminarNeuroscience

Toward an open science ecosystem for neuroimaging

Russ Poldrack
Stanford
Dec 8, 2022

It is now widely accepted that openness and transparency are keys to improving the reproducibility of scientific research, but many challenges remain to adoption of these practices. I will discuss the growth of an ecosystem for open science within the field of neuroimaging, focusing on platforms for open data sharing and open source tools for reproducible data analysis. I will also discuss the role of the Brain Imaging Data Structure (BIDS), a community standard for data organization, in enabling this open science ecosystem, and will outline the scientific impacts of these resources.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Sharing data from your in vivo studies

Matthew Grubb
Kings College London
Jul 28, 2022
SeminarNeuroscience

Digitization as a driving force for collaboration in neuroscience

Michael Denker
Forschungszentrum Jülich
Jul 1, 2021

Many of the collaborations we encounter in our scientific careers are centered on a common idea that can be associated with certain resources, such as a dataset, an algorithm, or a model. All partners in a collaboration need to develop a common understanding of these resources, and need to be able to access them in a simple and unambiguous manner in order to avoid incorrect conclusions especially in highly cross-disciplinary contexts. While digital computers have entered to assist scientific workflows in experiment and simulation for many decades, the high degree of heterogeneity in the field had led to a scattered landscape of highly customized, lab-internal solutions to organizing and managing the resources on a project-by-project basis. Only with the availability of modern technologies such as the semantic web, platforms for collaborative coding or the development of data standards overarching different disciplines, we have tools at our disposal to make resources increasingly more accessible, understandable, and usable. However, without overarching standardization efforts and adaptation of such technologies to the workflows and needs of individual researchers, their adoption by the neuroscience community will be impeded. From the perspective of computational neuroscience, which is inherently dependent on leveraging data and methods across the field of neuroscience for inspiration and validation, I will outline my view on past and present developments towards a more rigorous use of digital resources and how they improved collaboration, and introduce emerging initiatives to support this process in the future (e.g., EBRAINS http://ebrains.eu, NFDI-Neuro http://www.nfdi-neuro.de).

open data coverage

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