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The Canadian Open Neuroscience Platform

Project Overview

Many of the challenges faced by both basic and clinical neuroscientists, such as ensuring the reproducibility of important findings and the representation of underserved populations, can be tackled with Open Science approaches. To achieve these goals, we have built the Canadian Open Neuroscience Platform (CONP), which aims to make neuroscience research, data, and tools accessible to everyone, with the ultimate objective of accelerating scientific discovery and its eventual translation to disease treatments. The CONP takes a multifaceted approach to enabling open science in the field of neuroscience. Central to CONP’s tailor-made infrastructure is its Portal, which allows both datasets and analysis tools to be shared in accordance with FAIR (Findability, Accessibility, Interoperability, and Reuse) principles. Another key piece of CONP infrastructure is NeuroLibre, an open publishing platform that provides interactive, fully transparent and reproducible scientific publications that embed data, text, figures and code along with the full computational environment required to run that code. To situate these efforts in ethically sound data-sharing policy, the CONP has constructed governance frameworks and toolkits that strike a balance between safe-guarding the rights of data subjects and promoting widespread public benefit from scientific advancement. The CONP has also focussed on training the next generation of neuroscientists through its scholar and training program, as well as disseminating findings and fostering Open Science values within the neuroscience community. Taken together, these elements embody the CONP vision for promoting Open Science practices in neuroscience, with attendant benefits for brain researchers and the wider community.

Principal Investigator

Alan Evans , Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital, McGill University

Team Members

Nikola Stikov, Polytechnique Montréal

Pierre Bellec , Université de Montreal 

Jason Karamchandani, McGill University

Sali Farhan, McGill University

Tristan Glatard, Concordia University

Trudo Lemmens, University of Toronto

Samir Das, McGill University

Bryan Caron, McGill University

Alexander Bernier, McGill University

Mathew Abrams, International Neuroinformatics Coordinating Facility

Patrick Bermudez, McGill University

Partners and Donors

The Royal Institution for the Advancement of Learning/McGill University

Project Ongoing

The Canadian Open Neuroscience Platform

  • Grant Type

    Platform grants

  • Area of research

    Neurotechnology

  • Disease Area

    Other

  • Competition

    2024 Platform Support Grants

  • Province

    Québec

  • Start Date

    2025

  • Total Grant Amount

    $2,850,000

  • Health Canada Contribution

    $1,425,000

Contact Us

1200 McGill College Avenue
Suite 1600, Montreal, Quebec
H3B 4G7

+1 (514) 989-2989 info@braincanada.ca

Please note all online donations will receive an electronic tax receipt, issued by Brain Canada Foundation.

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Territorial acknowledgement

The offices of Brain Canada Foundation are located on the traditional, ancestral territory of the Kanien'kehá:ka Peoples, a place which has long served as a site of meeting and exchange amongst nations. We honour and pay respect to elders past, present and emerging, and dedicate ourselves to moving forward in the spirit of partnership, collaboration, and reconciliation. In our work, we focus our efforts on the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s Calls to Action, particularly those that pertain to improving health for Indigenous Peoples and that focus on advancing our own learning on Indigenous issues.

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Registration number: 89105 2094 RR0001

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