Software Tools
software tools
BrainGlobe: a Python ecosystem for computational (neuro)anatomy
Neuroscientists routinely perform experiments aimed at recording or manipulating neural activity, uncovering physiological processes underlying brain function or elucidating aspects of brain anatomy. Understanding how the brain generates behaviour ultimately depends on merging the results of these experiments into a unified picture of brain anatomy and function. We present BrainGlobe, a new initiative aimed at developing common Python tools for computational neuroanatomy. These include cellfinder for fast, accurate cell detection in whole-brain microscopy images, brainreg for aligning images to a reference atlas, and brainrender for visualisation of anatomically registered data. These software packages are developed around the BrainGlobe Atlas API. This API provides a common Python interface to download and interact with reference brain atlases from multiple species (including human, mouse and larval zebrafish). This allows software to be developed agnostic to the atlas and species, increasing adoption and interoperability of software tools in neuroscience.
Open Neuroscience: Challenging scientific barriers with Open Source & Open Science tools
The Open Science movement advocates for more transparent, equitable and reliable science. It focusses on improving existing infrastructures and spans all aspects of the scientific process, from implementing systems that reward pre-registering studies and guarantee their publication, all the way to making research data citable and freely available. In this context, open source tools (and the development ethos supporting them) are becoming more and more present in academic labs, as researchers are realizing that they can improve the quality of their work, while cutting costs. In this talk an overview of OS tools for neuroscience will be given, with a focus on software and hardware, and how their use can bring scientific independence and make research evolve faster.