2012
DOI: 10.3389/fninf.2012.00009
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Data sharing in neuroimaging research

Abstract: Significant resources around the world have been invested in neuroimaging studies of brain function and disease. Easier access to this large body of work should have profound impact on research in cognitive neuroscience and psychiatry, leading to advances in the diagnosis and treatment of psychiatric and neurological disease. A trend toward increased sharing of neuroimaging data has emerged in recent years. Nevertheless, a number of barriers continue to impede momentum. Many researchers and institutions remain… Show more

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Cited by 232 publications
(214 citation statements)
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References 58 publications
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“…Moreover, some studies need data on a scale that requires sharing. For example, identifying diseases from brain scans requires access to large numbers of healthy and diseased examples obtained from organised data sharing (Poline et al 2012) using common standards (e.g., Demir et al, 2010). More generally, sharing any kind of academic resource can aid efficiency by ensuring that scholars do not have to needlessly repeat prior work.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, some studies need data on a scale that requires sharing. For example, identifying diseases from brain scans requires access to large numbers of healthy and diseased examples obtained from organised data sharing (Poline et al 2012) using common standards (e.g., Demir et al, 2010). More generally, sharing any kind of academic resource can aid efficiency by ensuring that scholars do not have to needlessly repeat prior work.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, openness and transparency relate directly to reproducibility of all three kinds. Reflecting this sensibility, a diverse array of behavioral scientists have begun arguing that that achieving the scientific ideals of a free and open exchange of information requires the widespread adoption of open and transparent communication practices [15][16][27][28][29][30] . How well has the field of cognitive neuroscience measured up to these ideals?…”
Section: History Of Open Science Practices In Cognitive Neurosciencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…In particular, no project takes into account stage 1. Few data management systems (XNAT and IDA), integrate workflows between stages 2 and 3, based on the stages of electronic data capture (Poline et al, 2012). All other database solutions store the data rather than manage the concepts.…”
Section: Provenance Strategymentioning
confidence: 99%