BIDS apps: Improving ease of use, accessibility, and reproducibility of neuroimaging data analysis methods
Gorgolewski KJ, Alfaro-Almagro F, Auer T, Bellec P, Capotă M, Chakravarty MM, Churchill NW, Cohen AL, Craddock RC, Devenyi GA, Eklund A, Esteban O, Flandin G, Ghosh SS, Guntupalli JS, Jenkinson M, Keshavan A, Kiar G, Liem F, Raamana PR, Raffelt D, Steele CJ, Quirion PO, Smith RE, Strother SC, Varoquaux G, Wang Y, Yarkoni T, Poldrack RA
Identifiers and access
- DOI
- 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005209
- PubMed
- 28278228
- PMC
- PMC5363996
- Open-access copy →
- Cited by
- 56
Key findings
BIDS Apps wrap neuroimaging analysis tools in Singularity-compatible containers with BIDS-aware interfaces, enabling portable, reproducible, multi-user execution on personal machines and HPC, and the paper releases 22 ready-to-use BIDS Apps spanning common neuroimaging algorithms.
Abstract
Source: pubmed
The rate of progress in human neurosciences is limited by the inability to easily apply a wide range of analysis methods to the plethora of different datasets acquired in labs around the world. In this work, we introduce a framework for creating, testing, versioning and archiving portable applications for analyzing neuroimaging data organized and described in compliance with the Brain Imaging Data Structure (BIDS). The portability of these applications (BIDS Apps) is achieved by using container technologies that encapsulate all binary and other dependencies in one convenient package. BIDS Apps run on all three major operating systems with no need for complex setup and configuration and thanks to the comprehensiveness of the BIDS standard they require little manual user input. Previous containerized data processing solutions were limited to single user environments and not compatible with most multi-tenant High Performance Computing systems. BIDS Apps overcome this limitation by taking advantage of the Singularity container technology. As a proof of concept, this work is accompanied by 22 ready to use BIDS Apps, packaging a diverse set of commonly used neuroimaging algorithms.
Topics
- reproducibility-tooling
- open-data-standards
Lab authors
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