This lesson provides an overview of the current status in the field of neuroscientific ontologies, presenting examples of data organization and standards, particularly from neuroimaging and electrophysiology.
This lesson continues from part one of the lecture Ontologies, Databases, and Standards, diving deeper into a description of ontologies and knowledg graphs.
This lecture covers the NIDM data format within BIDS to make your datasets more searchable, and how to optimize your dataset searches.
This lecture covers positron emission tomography (PET) imaging and the Brain Imaging Data Structure (BIDS), and how they work together within the PET-BIDS standard to make neuroscience more open and FAIR.
This lecture discusses the FAIR principles as they apply to electrophysiology data and metadata, the building blocks for community tools and standards, platforms and grassroots initiatives, and the challenges therein.
This lecture discusses how to standardize electrophysiology data organization to move towards being more FAIR.
The International Brain Initiative (IBI) is a consortium of the world’s major large-scale brain initiatives and other organizations with a vested interest in catalyzing and advancing neuroscience research through international collaboration and knowledge sharing. This workshop introduces the IBI, the efforts of the Data Standards and Sharing Working Group, and keynote lectures on the impact of data standards and sharing on large-scale brain projects, as well as a discussion on prospects and needs for neural data sharing.
This presentation by the OHBM OpenScienceSIG covers common scenarios where Git can be extremely valuable. The essentials covered include cloning a repository and keeping it up to date, how to create and use your own repository, and how to contribute to other projects via forking and pull requests.
DataLad is a versatile data management and data publication multi-tool. In this session, you can learn the basic concepts and commands for version control and reproducible data analysis. You’ll get to see, create, and install DataLad datasets of many shapes and sizes, master local version workflows and provenance-captured analysis-execution, and you will get ideas for your next data analysis project.
This short video shows how a brainlife.io publication can be opened from the Data Deposition page of the journal Nature Scientific Data.
This short video shows how data in a brainlife.io publication can be opened from a DOI inside a published article. The video provides an example of how the DOI deposited on the journal can be opened with a web browser to redirect to the associated data publication on brainlife.io.