Researchers poring over brain scans may soon have an easier time integrating that data with information about the genes and proteins that make brain cells tick.
A software vendor and a nonprofit group are teaming up to create NeuroCommons.org, a free, shared repository of data and other tools to speed research on brain function and disease.
Informatics company Teranode will provide an infrastructure and means to store disparate data in common formats. Science Commons, a project of the nonprofit corporation Creative Commons, will develop a community of users and experts, plus work to help create an intuitive interface to find and analyze content.
Science Commons is housed at the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Teranode and Science Commons announced the partnership on Monday and plan to launch NeuroCommons.org in the second half of 2006.
Theres a real need for a shared platform in neurology, said John Wilbanks, executive director of Science Commons. Separate research foundations exist to fund different rare diseases, but they cannot share information without running afoul of technical and legal complications.
One hope is that researchers can gather preliminary evidence for their hypotheses using other researchers datasets. NeuroCommons.org should also allow researchers to readily compare proposed mechanisms about what, how, and when various genes and proteins interact.
Neurologists would use an interface much like a Web search engine, but instead of finding relevant Web sites, they would be able to find other researchers datasets and protocols, as well as working models of how genes, proteins and brain regions interact.
Even better, NeuroCommons.org could automate such tasks and analyze the results. Researchers would not need to spend days doing literature searches or hunting with several available databases for useful data, said Matthew Shanahan, CMO for Teranode. Thats especially important as the number of proteins and genes associated with diseases swells. “The thought that a scientist can do that manually efficiently doesnt make sense; you really need the aid of software now.”