An Opportunity to Increase Collaborative Science in Fetal, Infant, and Toddler Neuroimaging
- PMID: 35987717
- PMCID: PMC10723778
- DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2022.07.005
An Opportunity to Increase Collaborative Science in Fetal, Infant, and Toddler Neuroimaging
Erratum in
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Erratum.Biol Psychiatry. 2023 May 15;93(10):953. doi: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2023.03.016. Biol Psychiatry. 2023. PMID: 37121614 No abstract available.
Abstract
The field of fetal, infant, and toddler (FIT) neuroimaging research—including magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), electroencephalography (EEG), magnetoencephalography, and functional near-infrared spectroscopy, among others—offers pioneering insights into early brain development and has grown in popularity over the past 2 decades. In broader neuroimaging research, multisite collaborative projects, data sharing, and open-source code have increasingly become the norm, fostering big data, consensus standards, and rapid knowledge transfer and development. Given the aforementioned benefits, along with recent initiatives from funding agencies to support multisite and multimodal FIT neuroimaging studies, the FIT field now has the opportunity to establish sustainable, collaborative, and open science practices. By combining data and resources, we can tackle the most pressing issues of the FIT field, including small effect sizes, replicability problems, generalizability issues, and the lack of field standards for data collection, processing, and analysis—together. Thus, the goals of this commentary are to highlight some of the potential barriers that have waylaid these efforts and to discuss the emerging solutions that have the potential to revolutionize how we work together to study the developing brain early in life.
Conflict of interest statement
KAV and all members of the Fetal, Infant, and Toddler Neuroimaging Group report no biomedical financial interests or potential conflicts of interest.
References
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- Pollatou A, Filippi CA, Aydin E, Vaughn K, Thompson D, Korom M, et al. (2022): An ode to fetal, infant, and toddler neuroimaging: Chronicling early clinical to research applications with MRI, and an introduction to an academic society connecting the field. Dev Cogn Neurosci 54: 101083. - PMC - PubMed
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