期刊
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
卷 57, 期 12, 页码 2017-2039出版社
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ejn.15854
关键词
Alzheimer's disease; computational models; FAIR; international cooperation; neuroinformatics
Neuroinformatics is a research field that focuses on software tools for identifying, analyzing, modeling, organizing, and sharing neuroscience data. With the emergence of big data, neuroinformatics has experienced rapid growth in the past two decades, enabling neuroscientists to acquire and process data faster and more cost-effectively. To address this, neuroimaging-focused neuroinformatics platforms have been developed, aiming to archive and organize data, develop data-driven models, and provide computational and storage resources.
Neuroinformatics is a research field that focusses on software tools capable of identifying, analysing, modelling, organising and sharing multiscale neuroscience data. Neuroinformatics has exploded in the last two decades with the emergence of the Big Data phenomenon, characterised by the so-called 3Vs (volume, velocity and variety), which provided neuroscientists with an improved ability to acquire and process data faster and more cheaply thanks to technical improvements in clinical, genomic and radiological technologies. This situation has led to a 'data deluge', as neuroscientists can routinely collect more study data in a few days than they could in a year just a decade ago. To address this phenomenon, several neuroimaging-focussed neuroinformatics platforms have emerged, funded by national or transnational agencies, with the following goals: (i) development of tools for archiving and organising analytical data (XNAT, REDCap and LabKey); (ii) development of data-driven models evolving from reductionist approaches to multidimensional models (RIN, IVN, HBD, EuroPOND, E-DADS and GAAIN BRAIN); and (iii) development of e-infrastructures to provide sufficient computational power and storage resources (neuGRID, HBP-EBRAINS, LONI and CONP). Although the scenario is still fragmented, there are technological and economical attempts at both national and international levels to introduce high standards for open and Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable (FAIR) neuroscience worldwide.
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