Event

Open Science Office Hours - – Imaging and Workflows

Monday, September 22, 2025 16:00to17:00

Atelier "Imagerie et flux de travail"

Lundi, le 22 September 2025
16 – 17 h HNE

En ligne, sur Zoom.

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WorkshopÌý"Imaging and Workflows:ÌýHandling Biomedical Images and Sharing Reproducible Workflows"

Monday, September 22, 2025
4 p.m. – 5 p.m. EST

Online, join on Zoom.

Registration is FREE:Ìý

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Daniel Manrique-Castano
Curation Officer, Digital Research Alliance of Canada

Daniel received his Ph.D. in neuroscience from Ruhr University Bochum in Germany, focusing on rodent models of stroke and glial biology. He is passionate about statistical modeling and research data management and stewardship. After completing a postdoctoral fellowship at Laval University in Quebec, Daniel joined the Digital Research Alliance of Canada as a research data curator for the Federal Research Data Repository (FRDR). In this role, he promotes FAIR data practices, metadata standards, and long-term preservation strategies to researchers across disciplines.

Abstract

In the age of data-intensive neurobiology, imaging technologies produce enormous amounts of complex data. However, these images are often poorly documented, inconsistently analyzed, and inaccessible to others. This presentation invites researchers to consider a fundamental question: What is required to make bioimaging data truly reusable and reproducible? Through the lens of current challenges and emerging solutions, we explore how thoughtful metadata practices, standardized formats, and open-source tools can transform isolated image files into rich, shareable research objects. We delve into community-driven guidelines and practical tools, such as the MicroMeta app and OMERO, that help researchers capture essential experimental context. We highlight how reproducible raw data and analysis workflows promote transparency. Data sharing is not merely a compliance exercise; it is a professional and ethical commitment to the scientific community.

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Visit the eventÌýÌýfor more information.

To book a free one-on-one with Daniel, contact the Open Science Office Hours team.

Contact:
osoh.neuro [at] mcgill.ca
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Open Science Office Hours (OSOH) is an initiative of the Tanenbaum Open Science Institute (TOSI), led by Neuro trainees, and supported by the McConnell Foundation and the TOSI Trainee Council. We organize events, provide one-on-one support, and curate resources to make it easy for neuroscience researchers at all levels to integrate Open Science practices in their work.

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