posted on 2025-05-09, 16:24authored byMartijn P. van den Heuvel, Lianne H. Scholtens, Frauke Beyer, Linda Booij, Kees P.J. Braun, Geraldo Busatto Filho, Wiepke Cahn, Dara M. Cannon, Tiffany M. Chaim-Avancini, Sandra S.M. Chan, Eric Y.H. Chen, Benedicto Crespo-Facorro, Hannelore K. van der Burgh, Eveline A. Crone, Ulrich Schall, Paul E. Rasser, Federica Agosta, Clara Alloza, Celso Arango, Bonnie Auyeung, Simon Baron-Cohen, Silvia Basaia, Manon J.N.L. Benders, D Tordesillas-Gutierrez
We organized 10Kin1day, a pop-up scientific event with the goal to bring together neuroimaging groups from around the world to jointly analyze 10,000+ existing MRI connectivity datasets during a 3-day workshop. In this report, we describe the motivation and principles of 10Kin1day, together with a public release of 8,000+ MRI connectome maps of the human brain. Ongoing grand-scale projects like the European Human Brain Project (1), the US Brain Initiative (2), the Human Connectome Project (3), the Chinese Brainnetome (4) and exciting world-wide neuroimaging collaborations such as ENIGMA (5) herald the new era of big neuroscience. In conjunction with these major undertakings, there is an emerging trend for bottom-up initiatives, starting with small-scale projects built upon existing collaborations and infrastructures. As described by Mainen et al. (6), these initiatives are centralized around self-organized groups of researchers working on the same challenges and sharing interests and specialized expertise. These projects could scale and open up to a larger audience and other disciplines over time, eventually lining up and merging their findings with other programs to make the bigger picture.
Funding
NHMRC
1110414
1095127
History
Journal title
Frontiers in Neurology
Volume
10
Article number
425
Publisher
Frontiers Research Foundation
Place published
Lausanne, Switzerland
Language
en, English
College/Research Centre
Faculty of Health and Medicine
School
School of Medicine and Public Health
Rights statement
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY).