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  4. NEOBASE: databasing the neocortical microcircuit
 
conference paper

NEOBASE: databasing the neocortical microcircuit

Muhammad, A. J.
•
Markram, H.  
2005
From Grid to Healthgrid: Proceedings of Healthgrid 2005
Healthgrid 2005

Mammals adapt to a rapidly changing world because of the sophisticated perceptual and cognitive function enabled by the neocortex. The neocortex, which has expanded to constitute nearly 80% of the human brain seems to have arisen from repeated duplication of a stereotypical template of neurons and synaptic circuits with subtle specializations in different brain regions and species. Determining the design and function of this microcircuitry is therefore of paramount importance to understanding normal and abnormal higher brain function. Recent advances in recording synaptically-coupled neurons has allowed rapid dissection of the neocortical microcircuitry thus yielding a massive amount of quantitative anatomical, electrical and gene expression data on the neurons and the synaptic circuits that connect the neurons. Due to the availability of the above mentioned data, it has now become imperative to database the neurons of the microcircuit and their synaptic connections. The NEOBASE project, aims to archive the neocortical microcircuit data in a manner that facilitates development of advanced data mining applications, statistical and bioinformatics analyses tools, custom microcircuit builders, and visualization and simulation applications. The database architecture is based on ROOT, a software environment that allows the construction of an object oriented database with numerous relational capabilities. The proposed architecture allows construction of a database that closely mimics the architecture of the real microcircuit, which facilitates the interface with virtually any application, allows for data format evolution, and aims for full interoperability with other databases. NEOBASE will provide an important resource and research tool for studying the microcircuit basis of normal and abnormal neocortical function. The database will be available to local as well as remote users using Grid based tools and technologies.

  • Details
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Type
conference paper
Web of Science ID

WOS:000276262400016

PubMed ID

15923726

Author(s)
Muhammad, A. J.
Markram, H.  
Date Issued

2005

Published in
From Grid to Healthgrid: Proceedings of Healthgrid 2005
ISBN of the book

1-58603-510-X

Series title/Series vol.

Studies in Health Technology and Informatics; 112

Start page

167

End page

77

Subjects

Brain Mapping

•

Computer Communication Networks

•

Database Management Systems

Note

Brain Mind Institute, Ecole Polytechnique Federale De Lausanne, Switzerland. asif.jan@epfl.ch

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LNMC  
BBP-CORE  
Event nameEvent placeEvent date
Healthgrid 2005

Oxford, UK

7-9 April 2005

Available on Infoscience
February 27, 2008
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/19366
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