Category: blog

The most open and sharing labs on OpenNeuro (May – August, 2019)

September 13, 2019

We are excited to release the standings of our triannual Hall of Fame! This Hall of Fame recognizes neuroimaging labs that have shared the most datasets between May and August, 2019. If you have data you would like to share, please consider sharing it on OpenNeuro!   1st place: Stanford Vision and Neuro-Development Lab The […]

BIDS usage survey results

June 4, 2019

We recently distributed a survey to evaluate how the neuroimaging community uses BIDS in their labs. We were interested in what data types BIDS was used for, an estimate of how many subjects’ data are organized in BIDS datasets, and the usage of BIDS Apps. The survey was primarily distributed on Twitter and the BIDS-standard […]

Search by OpenNeuro Metadata

May 31, 2019

We are excited to announce a new resource for searching OpenNeuro public datasets! Our OpenNeuro Dataset Metadata Google Sheet captures dataset information such as the number of subjects, modalities available, diagnosis status, age range, domain studied, species studied, whether processed data are present, whether the data are from a longitudinal study and the DOI(s) of […]

The most open and sharing labs on OpenNeuro (Spring 2019)

May 25, 2019

We are excited to release the updated quarterly standings of our OpenNeuro Hall of Fame! The Hall of Fame recognizes neuroimaging labs that have shared the most datasets on OpenNeuro. If you have data you would like to share, please consider sharing it on OpenNeuro.   1st place: The Princeton Computational Memory Lab The Princeton […]

BIDS-Computational Models Summary

April 18, 2019

A few weeks ago (April 3-5, 2019), we hosted a 3-day meeting at Princeton University to further develop and extend BIDS to cover Computational Models. We invited an international group of researchers with diverse experience in designing and implementing computational models. The goal of the meeting was to devise a set of use cases and […]

BIDS extends into EEG and iEEG. OpenNeuro to support EEG and iEEG data sharing.

March 11, 2019

We are excited to announce BIDS now supports EEG (electroencephalography) and iEEG (intracranial electrophysiology) raw data organization! You will now be able to validate your EEG and iEEG datasets. With this extension, you will also be able to submit and download EEG and iEEG datasets on OpenNeuro. You can find preprints of the BIDS-EEG and […]

The most open and sharing labs on OpenNeuro (February 2019)

February 21, 2019

We are excited to announce the OpenNeuro Hall of Fame! The Hall of Fame celebrates neuroimaging labs that share the most data on OpenNeuro. We will be updating and announcing the standings of this Hall of Fame monthly. The aim is to spotlight the labs that have shared the most datasets or participants on OpenNeuro. […]

fMRIPrep tutorial: Running the docker image

January 31, 2019

Introduction Welcome to our tutorial on running fMRIPrep (for a more detailed description of the tool, please check out our recent paper/preprint). In this tutorial, we will be utilizing the docker container of fMRIPrep. This tutorial will illustrate a detailed step-by-step guide on how to prepare and run this. We will provide the command line […]

BIDS-Statistical Models meeting summary

October 31, 2018

A few weeks ago (October 17th-19th, 2018) we hosted a 3 day meeting at Stanford University to further extend the BIDS standard to describe statistical model specifications of neuroimaging analyses. We invited a diverse international group representing different platforms and groups (i.e. AFNI, NIDM, Gigantum) whose work would benefit from a standard for statistical models. […]

OpenNeuro meeting summary

October 31, 2018

A few weeks ago (October 15th, 2018) we hosted a meeting at Stanford University to affirm the goals and further advancements of OpenNeuro. We invited our engineering team (Squishymedia), the NIMH data science and sharing team as well as a representative of NIMH extramural funding division. The goal of this meeting was for all participants […]

BIDS-Processed meeting summary

September 17, 2018

Last month (Aug 22th-24th, 2018) we hosted a 3 day meeting at Stanford University to further extend the BIDS standard into the processed derivatives domain. We invited an international group representing many different organizations (i.e. MRN, HCP, Invicro, NDA) and analysis packages (i.e. FSL, FreeSurfer, ANTs, dipy, nilearn). The goal of this meeting was to […]

BIDS-Processed Data Survey Results

August 10, 2018

Introduction We launched a survey to investigate what derivatives the neuroimaging community determines has a strong chance of being reused or has a higher priority to save and share. The survey was shared across several prevalent neuroimaging mailing lists. These results will guide our standardization efforts. The survey focused on derivatives for MRI modalities – […]