4.3 Article

A Standards Organization for Open and FAIR Neuroscience: the International Neuroinformatics Coordinating Facility

Journal

NEUROINFORMATICS
Volume 20, Issue 1, Pages 25-36

Publisher

HUMANA PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1007/s12021-020-09509-0

Keywords

Neuroinformatics; Standards and best practices; FAIR principles; Standards organization; Neuroscience; INCF; INCF endorsement process

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [NIH-NIBIB P41 EB019936, NIH-NIMH R01 MH083320, NIH RF1 MH120021]
  2. National Institute Of Mental Health [R01MH096906]
  3. Canada First Research Excellence Fund
  4. Brain Canada Foundation
  5. Health Canada

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There is a great need for coordination around standards and best practices in neuroscience to address challenges in data science. Developing community standards and gaining their adoption is difficult, as the current landscape is characterized by a lack of robust, validated standards and a plethora of underdeveloped and underutilized standards and best practices. An independent organization, the International Neuroinformatics Coordinating Facility (INCF), is dedicated to promoting data sharing in neuroscience and has implemented procedures for evaluating and endorsing community standards and best practices.
There is great need for coordination around standards and best practices in neuroscience to support efforts to make neuroscience a data-centric discipline. Major brain initiatives launched around the world are poised to generate huge stores of neuroscience data. At the same time, neuroscience, like many domains in biomedicine, is confronting the issues of transparency, rigor, and reproducibility. Widely used, validated standards and best practices are key to addressing the challenges in both big and small data science, as they are essential for integrating diverse data and for developing a robust, effective, and sustainable infrastructure to support open and reproducible neuroscience. However, developing community standards and gaining their adoption is difficult. The current landscape is characterized both by a lack of robust, validated standards and a plethora of overlapping, underdeveloped, untested and underutilized standards and best practices. The International Neuroinformatics Coordinating Facility (INCF), an independent organization dedicated to promoting data sharing through the coordination of infrastructure and standards, has recently implemented a formal procedure for evaluating and endorsing community standards and best practices in support of the FAIR principles. By formally serving as a standards organization dedicated to open and FAIR neuroscience, INCF helps evaluate, promulgate, and coordinate standards and best practices across neuroscience. Here, we provide an overview of the process and discuss how neuroscience can benefit from having a dedicated standards body.

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