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About Synapse

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Synapse is a collaborative research platform that helps you and your team share, organize, and discuss your scientific research. Whether you are part of a small private team or global consortia, Synapse offers tools to help you make connections across datasets, code, and other insights.

Who manages Synapse?

Synapse was created and is managed by Sage Bionetworks (that’s us!)

Sage is a nonprofit health research organization based in Seattle, Washington. We were founded in 2009 on the basis of open science and patient advocacy. We aim to promote reproducible research and responsible data sharing throughout the biomedical community. That’s why we created Synapse.

Ethical use of data is of the utmost importance to Sage, and we employ robust /wiki/spaces/DOCS/pages/2004255211 policies and procedures to monitor compliance and ensure data privacy.

In addition to, and in conjunction with Synapse, Sage operates multiple platforms and data portals that serve the current and future needs of our communities.

Platforms

Community Portals

Synapse

A collaborative, open-source research platform that allows teams to share data, track analyses, and collaborate.

dHealth (Digital Health) Knowledge Portal

Designed to enable the discovery and download of digital and mobile health data, tools, and benchmarked outcomes and digital biomarkers.

Bridge Platform



A platform for conducting biomedical research studies, primarily using the ResearchKit (iOS) and ResearchStack (Android) frameworks.

Cancer Complexity Knowledge Portal

The NCI Division of Cancer Biology supports multiple research programs composed of interdisciplinary communities of scientists who aim to integrate approaches, data, and tools to address important questions in basic and translational cancer research.

Challenge Platform



An open-science, collaborative competition framework for evaluating and comparing computational algorithms.

AD Knowledge Portal

A platform for accessing data, analyses, and tools that the National Institute on Aging’s Alzheimer’s Disease Translational Research Program generates.

Agora

An interactive platform for visually exploring curated genomic analyses of Alzheimer’s disease (AD), including a list of early AD candidate target nominations.

NF Data Portal

Designed to help openly explore and share NF datasets, analysis tools, resources, and publications related to neurofibromatosis.

 

PsychENCODE (PEC) Knowledge Portal

A platform designed to promote a community for sharing data from neuropsychiatric disease research.

Is Synapse free to use?

Synapse is free for anyone to explore data at synapse.org. We recommend that you register for an account to get access to public data sets.

Synapse is free* for the scientific community to upload and store data, through generous support from various funding sources: National Cancer Institute (NCI), National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NIH NHLBI), Children’s Tumor Foundation (CTF), Neurofibromatosis Therapeutic Acceleration Program, Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, National Insitute on Aging (NIA), and National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH).

*We allow groups to get started for free by subsidizing relatively moderate amounts of internal Synapse cloud storage (i.e., 10s of GB). If your needs will exceed this limit, contact us at synapseinfo@sagebase.org to discuss. For out of scope storage needs, we can suggest other solutions, including the ability for groups to host their own content either in cloud storage, proxied from local file servers or as external links.

How does Synapse help scientific research?

Synapse is helping scientists in several ways:

  • Building community around data sharing: Synapse hosts many research communities and open scientific resources. It is a central place where researchers can come together to share data and collaborate. Data can be annotated and queried in one place, even if it is physically stored in different locations.

  • Making research more reproducible: Most research projects are complex and change over time. Synapse helps you track who performed what parts of an analysis. It also tracks when data was added or changed within a project, and it helps you understand how a dataset or an analysis evolved. These tools help you to publish reproducible work that can be used more easily by others.

  • Benchmarking and challenges: Tackling a complex problem alone can be difficult. Synapse hosts crowdsourced competitions, including DREAM Challenges, where many people come together to solve important computational problems or to compare analytical approaches.

  • Protecting sensitive data: Synapse is designed to keep sensitive data safe while still being shared responsibly. The platform offers built-in features to control who can access data and how that data can be used. Synapse is also backed by a /wiki/spaces/DOCS/pages/2004255211 team who routinely monitor data use and who set policies and procedures to govern data access.

  • Accessing data programmatically: If you are a programmer, you can also access Synapse through a REST APIPython clientR client, or command line client. Accessing Synapse programmatically allows you to seamlessly integrate Synapse with your scientific computing and analytical workflows.

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