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2023 journal software Front Neuroinform

NIDM-Terms: community-based terminology management for improved neuroimaging dataset descriptions and query

Queder N, Tien VB, Abraham SA, Urchs SGW, Helmer KG, Chaplin D, van Erp TGM, Kennedy DN, Poline JB, Grethe JS, Ghosh SS, Keator DB

Identifiers and access

DOI
10.3389/fninf.2023.1174156
PubMed
37533796
PMC
PMC10392125
PDF
Open-access copy →
Cited by
6

Key findings

NIDM-Terms provides terminology-management tools and a Neuroimaging Data Model semantic representation for annotating BIDS datasets with lab-specific vocabularies, enabling integrated cross-dataset queries that combine neuroimaging and clinical/behavioural criteria.

Abstract

Source: pubmed

The biomedical research community is motivated to share and reuse data from studies and projects by funding agencies and publishers. Effectively combining and reusing neuroimaging data from publicly available datasets, requires the capability to query across datasets in order to identify cohorts that match both neuroimaging and clinical/behavioral data criteria. Critical barriers to operationalizing such queries include, in part, the broad use of undefined study variables with limited or no annotations that make it difficult to understand the data available without significant interaction with the original authors. Using the Brain Imaging Data Structure (BIDS) to organize neuroimaging data has made querying across studies for specific image types possible at scale. However, in BIDS, beyond file naming and tightly controlled imaging directory structures, there are very few constraints on ancillary variable naming/meaning or experiment-specific metadata. In this work, we present NIDM-Terms, a set of user-friendly terminology management tools and associated software to better manage individual lab terminologies and help with annotating BIDS datasets. Using these tools to annotate BIDS data with a Neuroimaging Data Model (NIDM) semantic web representation, enables queries across datasets to identify cohorts with specific neuroimaging and clinical/behavioral measurements. This manuscript describes the overall informatics structures and demonstrates the use of tools to annotate BIDS datasets to perform integrated cross-cohort queries.

Topics

  • open-data-standards
  • reproducibility-tooling

Lab authors

This record was curated from the lab's CV, NCBI MyBibliography, and OpenAlex. See PROJECTS.md for how to add or correct an entry via a pull request.