Journal:Development of an informatics system for accelerating biomedical research
Full article title | Development of an informatics system for accelerating biomedical research (Version 2) |
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Journal | F1000Research |
Author(s) | Navale, Vivek; Ji, Micehle; Vovk, Olga; Misquitta, Leonie; Gebremichael, Tsega; Garcia, Alison; Fann, Yang; McAuliffe, Matthew |
Author affiliation(s) | National Institutes of Health; General Dynamics Information Technology, Inc.; Sapient Government Services |
Primary contact | Email: Vivek dot Navale at nih dot gov |
Year published | 2020 |
Volume and issue | 8 |
Article # | 1430 |
DOI | 10.12688/f1000research.19161.2 |
ISSN | 2046-1402 |
Distribution license | Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International |
Website | https://f1000research.com/articles/8-1430/v2 |
Download | https://f1000research.com/articles/8-1430/v2/pdf (PDF) |
This article should be considered a work in progress and incomplete. Consider this article incomplete until this notice is removed. |
Abstract
The Biomedical Research Informatics Computing System (BRICS) was developed to support multiple disease-focused research programs. Seven service modules are integrated together to provide a collaborative and extensible web-based environment. The modules—Data Dictionary, Account Management, Query Tool, Protocol and Form Research Management System, Meta Study, Data Repository, and Globally Unique Identifier—facilitate the management of research protocols, including the submission, processing, curation, access, and storage of clinical, imaging, and derived genomics data within the associated data repositories. Multiple instances of BRICS are deployed to support various biomedical research communities focused on accelerating discoveries for rare diseases, traumatic brain injuries, Parkinson’s disease, inherited eye diseases, and symptom science research. No personally identifiable information is stored within the data repositories. Digital object identifiers are associated with the research studies. Reusability of biomedical data is enhanced by common data elements (CDEs), which enable systematic collection, analysis, and sharing of data. The use of CDEs with a service-oriented informatics architecture enabled the development of disease-specific repositories that support hypothesis-based biomedical research.
Keywords: informatics system, biomedical repository, translational research, FAIR
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This presentation is faithful to the original, with only a few minor changes to presentation. In some cases important information was missing from the references, and that information was added.