September Data Sharing and Reuse Seminar

Friday, September 8, 2023

Professor Steven Kleinstein, Ph.D. will present Leveraging Shared Data for Systems Immunology: Signatures of Vaccination and Infection at the monthly Data Sharing and Reuse Seminar on Friday, September 8, 2023, at 12 p.m. EDT.

About the Seminar

This seminar will discuss how we can leverage shared data to discover signatures of human vaccination and infection responses. A key example will be work done as part of the NIH Human Immunology Project Consortium (HIPC) where data from ImmPort was compiled and reanalyzed to identify pre-vaccination and temporal signatures of antibody responses that were shared across multiple vaccines.

About the Speaker

Professor Steven Kleinstein is a computational immunologist with a combination of big data analysis and immunology domain expertise. His research interests include both developing new computational methods and applying these methods to study human immune responses. His lab develops the widely used Immcantation framework, which provides a start-to-finish analytical ecosystem for high-throughput adaptive immune receptor repertoire sequencing (AIRR-seq) datasets. He currently co-leads the data coordinating center for the NIH Human Immunology Project Consortium (HIPC).

Prof. Kleinstein is Anthony N. Brady Professor of Pathology at the Yale School of Medicine where he co-directs the Program in Computational Biology & Bioinformatics. He received a B.A.S. in Computer Science from the University of Pennsylvania and a Ph.D. in Computer Science from Princeton University.

About the Seminar Series

The seminar is open to the public and registration is required each month. Individuals who need interpreting services and/or other reasonable accommodations to participate in this event should contact Janiya Peters at 301-670-4990. Requests should be made at least five days in advance of the event.

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) Office of Data Science Strategy hosts this seminar series to highlight exemplars of data sharing and reuse on the second Friday of each month at noon ET. The monthly series highlights researchers who have taken existing data and found clever ways to reuse the data or generate new findings. A different NIH institute or center will also share its data science activities each month.

Data Scientist

Portfolio Analysis and Evaluation Branch (PAEB) at National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), located in the Office of Planning, Analytics & Evaluation (OPAE) within the Office of Management, seeks an experienced data scientist with an understanding of the NIH extramural research administration and procedures. The selected individual will have a strong interest and background in quantitative analysis methods that support data-driven decision making, and be familiar with internal NIH processes, programs, and data systems (i.e., IMPACII IRDB).

August Data Sharing and Reuse Seminar

Friday, August 11, 2023

Dr. Ana Navas-Acien will present Environment, justice, and health: consortia and data sharing needs through a community lens at the monthly Data Sharing and Reuse Seminar on Friday, August 11, 2023, at 12 p.m. EDT.

About the Seminar

This session will discuss the growing evidence and the critical need to further study the role of the environment in human health and the importance of environmental justice to address existent inequalities in environmental exposures and related disease, with a focus on metal exposures, related molecular pathways and gene-environment interactions, and relevant interventions. Lessons learned from Indigenous communities and successful experiences in data sharing and reuse will be presented.

About the Speaker

Ana Navas-Acien, M.D., Ph.D. is a Professor of Environmental Health Sciences at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health. Her research investigates the health effects of environmental exposures (metals, tobacco smoke, e-cigarettes, air pollution, water pollution), molecular pathways and gene-environment interactions, and effective interventions for reducing involuntary exposures and their health effects, with the goal of improving people’s health and advance environmental justice. She trained in Medicine obtaining her MD from the University of Granada, Spain, and completed her residency training in Preventive Medicine and Public Health at the Hospital La Paz, Madrid and her PhD in Epidemiology at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD. She is recognized for bridging medical and environmental health sciences using a participatory approach. She directs the Columbia University Northern Plains Superfund Research Program, a center that integrates science, technology, and traditional knowledge to protect the Northern Plains water resources and Indigenous communities from hazardous metal exposures.

About the Seminar Series

The seminar is open to the public and registration is required each month. Individuals who need interpreting services and/or other reasonable accommodations to participate in this event should contact Janiya Peters at 301-670-4990. Requests should be made at least five days in advance of the event.

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) Office of Data Science Strategy hosts this seminar series to highlight exemplars of data sharing and reuse on the second Friday of each month at noon ET. The monthly series highlights researchers who have taken existing data and found clever ways to reuse the data or generate new findings. A different NIH institute or center will also share its data science activities each month.

Swapping Data Management Recipes

Tuesday, July 11, 2023

The 2023 DataWorks! Prize Challenge is underway, building off the successes of its first year. The challenge is sponsored by the NIH Office of Data Science Strategy, in partnership with the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology (FASEB).

The 2022 DataWorks! Prize saw over 100 teams, consisting of over 500 individuals, register to compete for the most innovative approaches to data sharing and reuse. It wasn’t just researchers who were excited about this challenge: Over 2,100 members of the data science community voted for their favorite projects, two of which were awarded the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology (FASEB) People’s Choice award.

This year’s challenge builds on the successes and insights from the 2022 prize. This challenge has the potential to make an enduring impact on the field of data science. Instead of novel data management techniques, this year’s prize will focus on best-practice “recipes” that advance biological and biomedical research activities by prioritizing practices that enable robust data management during the research process. This will enable the creation of an ongoing archive of best practices and resources that can be used by researchers to facilitate better data storage, sharing, and reuse. 

This year’s prize offers up to 16 NIH-funded monetary awards, totaling up to $500,000, and up to two People’s Choice Awards, as determined by FASEB. Submissions will be evaluated based on:

  • Excellence in Data Sharing and Reuse
  • Innovative Impact on Human Health
  • Excellence in Communication and Adoption of Practices Outside of Original Context

I’m very excited about the possibilities this challenge offers. A compilation of data management best practices has the potential for wide-ranging impact in the fields of biological and biomedical research.

The 2023 DataWorks! Prize is accepting submissions now through August 15. We truly hope that you’ll help others enhance their data management practices by sharing your wisdom and recipes.

2023 DataWorks! Prize Launches

Tuesday, May 23, 2023

Dataworks! Prize

ODSS and the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology (FASEB) partnered together to sponsor the DataWorks! Prize, pursuing a bold vision of data sharing and reuse. The prize fuels this vision with an annual challenge that showcases the benefits of research data management while recognizing and rewarding teams whose research demonstrates the power of data sharing or reuse practices to advance scientific discovery and human health.

2024 DataWorks! Prize Challenge

To be announced shortly.

2023 DataWorks! Prize Challenge

The 2023 DataWorks! Prize distributed 7 monetary team awards to best practice “recipes” that advanced biological and biomedical research activities, with a focus on practices enabling robust data management during the research process. Submissions underwent an expert review and selection by a panel of NIH judges.  Winning teams were recognized with a cash prize and will be invited to participate in DataWorks! Symposium planned for Spring 2024.

View 2023 Challenge winners.

2022 DataWorks! Prize

To incentivize effective practices and increase community engagement around data sharing and reuse, the 2022 DataWorks! Prize distributed 11 monetary team awards. Submissions underwent a two-stage review process, with final awards to be selected by a judging panel of NIH officials. The NIH recognized winning teams with a cash prize, and winners shared their stories in a DataWorks! Prize symposium.

View 2022 challenge winners.