Workshop: Analyzing and visualizing single-cell genomics data from the BRAIN Initiative with the Neuroscience Multi-Omic Archive and NeMO Analytics
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Single-cell genomics is rapidly transforming our understanding of cell types and cell states. The Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies (BRAIN) Initiative Cell Census Network (BICCN) is an NIH-funded consortium, which aims to map all of the cell types in the mammalian brain. Researchers within BICCN have sequenced the transcriptomes and epigenomes of >10 million cells from the brains of humans, non-human primates, and mice.
In this interactive workshop, we will introduce participants to tools for accessing, analyzing, and visualizing BICCN data using the Neuroscience Multi-Omic Archive (NeMO Archive) and NeMO Analytics. The NeMO Archive serves as the primary repository for genomics data from the BRAIN Initiative, while NeMO Analytics is a web-based, biologist-friendly visualization and analysis portal for BICCN data.
Participants will learn how to find BICCN data in the NeMO Archive and perform high-throughput data processing in the BICCN Cloud-Computing Environment (powered by Terra, terra.bio); interact with BICCN data at NeMO Analytics and use the gEAR software underlying NeMO Analytics to create publication-ready visualization portals from their own data.
Seth Ament, PhD
Associate Professor
Department of Psychiatry, Institute for Genome Sciences, and Maryland Psychiatric Research Center at the University of Maryland School of Medicine
Dr. Ament is an Associate Professor in the Department of Psychiatry, Institute for Genome Sciences, and Maryland Psychiatric Research Center at the University of Maryland School of Medicine. His research aims to characterize the development and diversity of cell types in the human brain and their perturbation in brain disorders using single-cell genomics and related technologies.
Ronna Hertzano, MD, PhD
Professor
Department of Otorhinolaryngology-Head & Neck Surgery at the University of Maryland School of Medicine
Ronna Hertzano, MD, PhD. Dr. Hertzano is an Associate Professor in the Department of Otorhinolaryngology-Head & Neck Surgery at the University of Maryland School of Medicine. A surgeon-scientist, her clinical practice focuses on the diagnosis and treatment of diseases of the ear, while her research characterizes regulatory signaling cascades in the developing ear. Several years ago, Dr. Hertzano realized that the lack of intuitive tools for the non-informatics trained biologists for visualization and analysis of omics data presents a major barrier to effective dissemination, sharing and analysis of expression data by cellular and molecular biologists. This led to the inception and development of the gEAR (umgear.org), a web platform for the visualization and analysis of transcriptomic and epigenomic data from the inner ear, and subsequently to the development of NeMO Analytics.
Joshua Orvis
Bioinformatics Software Engineer
Institute for Genome Sciences at the University of Maryland School of Medicine
Mr. Orvis is a Bioinformatics Software Engineer in the Institute for Genome Sciences at the University of Maryland School of Medicine. He is the lead developer of the gEAR software that powers NeMO Analytics.
Brian Herb, PhD
Bioinformatics Software Engineer
Institute for Genome Sciences at the University of Maryland School of Medicine
Dr. Herb is a Bioinformatics Software Engineer in the Institute for Genome Sciences. He contributes to the development of scalable, data analysis pipelines that are being used in the analysis of massive single-cell genomics datasets from the BRAIN Initiative and other consortia.