caBIG™ FAQs
What is caBIG™?
Who are the caBIG™ partners? What role do they play?
How does caBIG™ work?
Industry Partners FAQs
More information and getting involved
What is caBIG™?
What
is caBIG™?
What
is the mission of caBIG™?
What
current needs does caBIG™ address?
What
are the principles guiding the work funded by caBIG™?
When
did caBIG™ get started?
How
is caBIG™ organized?
How
are the priorities of caBIG™ established?
What
are caBIG™ workspaces?
What
is the benefit of an interoperable infrastructure?
What is the significance of ‘Open Access, Open Source’ to cancer
research?
What are the challenges facing caBIG™?
What is the role of the NCI in caBIG™?
What is NCI’s vision for caBIG™?
Who are the caBIG™ partners? What role do they play?
What organizations and partners currently participate in caBIG™?
What are the specific constituencies in the caBIG™ community and how are they involved?
What is the incentive to become a caBIG™ adopter?
How are the activities of caBIG™ structured and managed?
What are the key elements of caBIG™?
Where can I find information on the grid infrastructure for the caBIG™ initiative?
What is meant by ‘caBIG™ compatibility’?
What are the current caBIG™ compatibility levels?
How is caBIG™ Compatibility Evaluated?
What is the status of caBIG™ compatibility certification for commercial systems?
What can be said about an application that is intended to be caBIG™ compatible
and has been developed in compliance with the compatibility guidelines, but has not been certified?
Can a commercial application that was not created as a caBIG™ application
be converted into a caBIG™-compatible application? If so, does the resulting application become open source?
Does any development work done by a commercial organization for a cancer center
on caBIG™ - funded work or directly funded through a competitive Request For Proposals (RFP) and contract become open source?
How will caBIG™ ensure that data shared across centers will be secure
and that the privacy of human subjects will be upheld?
Can anyone download a caBIG™ application?
How is caBIG™ funded?
What are the benefits to commercial organizations of participating in caBIG™?
Can a commercial organization take the open source software that they have developed
with caBIG™ funding (directly, or indirectly from a Cancer Center) and use this in existing applications? Can applications with this incorporated code be marketed and sold?
How can commercial organizations share caBIG™ compatible applications with the caBIG™ community?
How can commercial organizations participate in the caBIG™ initiative?
Are there opportunities for commercial organizations to assist NCI with the coordination and support of the caBIG™ initiative?
More Information and getting Involved
How can I learn more about caBIG™?
How do I get involved with caBIG™?
What is caBIG™?
caBIG™ stands for the cancer Biomedical Informatics Grid™. It is an open-source, open-access information network enabling cancer researchers to share tools, data, applications, and technologies according to agreed-upon standards and identified needs. The goal of caBIG™ is to provide an informatics infrastructure that supports a collaborative network, or “grid,” among the cancer and biomedical research communities. The infrastructure and tools of caBIG™ are widely applicable beyond the cancer community.
What is the mission of caBIG™?
The mission of caBIG™ is to promote and facilitate the following:
- Set of common data standards
- Sharable, interoperable infrastructure
- Tools for applying information associated with cancer research and care
- Data sharing among appropriate individuals and organizations, with safeguards for privacy and security
What current needs does caBIG™ address?
Recent advances in cancer research methods and technologies have resulted in
an explosion of information and knowledge about cancers and their treatment.
The ability to characterize and understand cancer is growing exponentially on
the basis of information from genetic and protein studies, clinical trials,
and other research endeavors. However, the capacity to capitalize on the opportunities
from these advances is limited by certain factors.
Historically, there has been no one approach to integrate the data tools used
by research, the software that supports clinical trials, and the reporting tools
that make sense of it all.There is no common mechanism for individual researchers,
or even institutions, to easily share data. In addition, there is no unifying
infrastructure or common standard for the technologies that cancer researchers
currently use. This means that researchers often operate in a near vacuum, or
silo approach, without benefit of information from outside their institution.
They cannot easily share data or tools or benefit from the innovative technologies
developed by others.
To address these issues, caBIG™ is developing the components of an interoperable
infrastructure.
What are the principles guiding the work funded by caBIG™?
caBIG™ work must be open source (caBIG™ source code that is available
to view, alter, and redistribute), open access (caBIG™ resources that
are freely obtainable), open development (caBIG™ products that are developed
through an open, participatory process), and federated (a caBIG™ united
network of systems that can be locally controlled).
When did caBIG™ get started?
The caBIG™ initiative was announced in July 2003 under the coordinating
supervision of the National Cancer Institute (NCI) and was launched as a 3-year
pilot project in February 2004.
How is caBIG™ organized?
caBIG™ is a partnership with the cancer community and other stakeholders.
In total, nearly 50 cancer centers and 30 other organizations - over 800 people
in all - are working collaboratively on caBIG™.
How are the priorities of caBIG™ established?
caBIG™ development began with a survey of NCI-designated comprehensive
cancer centers to determine their top priorities. The survey demonstrated the
breadth of the needs of the oncology community - a breadth that caBIG™
has been designed to accommodate. Specific caBIG™ areas, or workspaces,
were identified through this community input. The workspaces continue to generate
priorities for the initiative, so that caBIG™ can focus on the needs of
the community. The priorities of the individual workspaces are expressed in
workspace strategic plans, which are integrated into the caBIG™ strategic
plan. Additionally, the NCI identifies areas where caBIG™ can contribute.
What are caBIG™ workspaces?
caBIG™ workspaces are areas of focus that are developing applications,
policy documents, and other efforts within the caBIG™ initiative. caBIG™
workspaces were first identified through the caBIG™ survey. They continue
to be defined and developed based on continu¬ing critical input from the
caBIG™ community. Through the workspace networks, cancer centers provide
help, develop solutions and provide data and subject matter expertise to the
caBIG™ community. Collectively, the workspaces are driving caBIG’s
goals, priorities and activities.
Currently, the workspaces include:
- Architecture
- Clinical Trial Management Systems (CTMS)
- Data Sharing and Intellectual Capi- tal (DSIC)
- Integrative Cancer Research (ICR)
- In Vivo Imaging
- Strategic Planning
- Tissue Banks and Pathology Tools (TBPT)
- Training
- Vocabularies and Common Data Elements (VCDE)
What is the benefit of an interoperable infrastructure?
An interoperable infrastructure will provide users the ability to share tools
and data to address cancer challenges in ways not currently possible. caBIG™
users can choose any number of different applications developed by different
community members as well as commercial applications designed to be interoperable
with caBIG™, and those applications will be able to exchange information.
Interoperability between computer systems from organization to organization—or
even within an organization—is key to this sharing of data. Interoperability
is also becoming a standard of quality in Web services.
What is the significance of ‘Open Access, Open Source’
to cancer research?
By applying many of the same principles that led to the popularity of free software
such as the Linux operating system, the caBIG™ program facilitates a cost-effective,
distributed development of new tools and techniques. Thus, caBIG™ components
remain available to the research community as well as to other government agencies,
and nonprofit and commercial organizations. Software components can be re-used
in new tools, and tools can be bundled into suites of programs by other developers.
As a result, continuous innovation is among the fundamental building blocks
of caBIG™.
What are the challenges facing caBIG™?
caBIG™ is addressing the challenges related to the variability of cancer
research data sets and tools; the volume and complexity of cancer research data;
and the lack of standards, unifying infrastructure, and mechanisms for sharing
data and resources. However, while caBIG™ efforts can enable and promote
the sharing of information, many other stakeholders—including individual
researchers—must make a commitment to information sharing and collaboration.
What is the role of the NCI in caBIG™?
caBIG™ is a key initiative of the NCI. As a government agency, NCI stewards
caBIG™ so that the needs of the entire cancer community are addressed
and represented. Through its coordination, the NCI ensures that caBIG™
is defined by participant cancer community members and built with their collaboration.
The NCI Center for Bioinformatics (NCICB) provides active management of caBIG™
and works in collaboration with partners in the public, private, and academic
sectors.
What is NCI’s vision for caBIG™?
NCI’s vision is that caBIG™ will eventually involve the full range
of the cancer research community, both nationally and internationally. caBIG™
promises to accelerate progress in all aspects of cancer research - including
etiologic research, prevention, early detection and treatment. NCI believes
that caBIG™ will help redefine how cancer research is conducted, and eventually,
how cancer care is provided.
Who are the caBIG™ partners? What role do they play?
What organizations and partners currently participate in caBIG™?
The first group of caBIG™ participants included the NCI, more than 50
of its designated cancer centers, and dozens of other organizations in the public,
nonprofit, and private sectors. Because caBIG™ is designed as an open-development
process, other members of the cancer community and the private sector can become
involved at any time. NCI welcomes new adopters of and participants in the caBIG™
program. In fact, caBIG™ increasingly includes participants from non-cancer
communities, given the wide applicability of caBIG™’s foundational
infrastructure and tools.
What are the specific constituencies in the caBIG™ community
and how are they involved?
The involvement of a few key caBIG™ constituency groups is briefly described
in the following list:
Cancer Centers
- caBIG™ was conceived, designed, and developed in partnership with the NCI-designated cancer centers. Cancer centers and volunteer teams from within their communities are involved in the development and testing of applications, tools, and other resources that are part of the ongoing design of caBIG™. Cancer centers that are funded to participate in caBIG™ can choose to subcontract with a vendor to undertake caBIG™ project activities. These activities must comply with the principles of the caBIG™ initiative: the work must be open source, open access, open development, and federated.
Individuals
- Scientists, informaticists, and others in the cancer community who have needs addressed by caBIG™ participate in the program through their involvement in workspaces, ongoing caBIG™ meetings and tele¬conferences, and other activities. Patient advocates have been actively involved in all areas of caBIG™ from the beginning, to ensure that the needs of patients are addressed.
Industry and Other Partners
- NCI welcomes the involvement of commercial and other groups as part of caBIG™. Currently, several commercial organizations and nonprofit organizations participate in caBIG™ activities. These organi¬zations include information technology companies, large-scale software vendors, pharmaceutical companies, and biotechnology companies, as well as small, specialized ventures. Participation varies from occasional involvement in open meetings to regular involvement with specific caBIG™ Workspace activities. Some vendors are modifying their products to be caBIG™ compatible. Others are competing for software development contracts. Key standards development organizations such as Health Level 7 (HL7) and Clinical Data Interchange Standards Consortium (CDISC) are also engaged.
What is the incentive to become a caBIG™ adopter?
caBIG™ adopters help identify the requirements for caBIG™ tools.
They gain early access to the tools; and they install, implement and report
on the tools to improve them. Issues such as compatibility of legacy applications
as well as future application designs are important areas of focus in the development
of an interoperable caBIG™ system. Partner participation provides valuable
input in both the assessment of need as well as the definitions of the solutions.
How are the activities of caBIG™ structured and managed?
caBIG™ is a consortium of cancer researchers, informaticists, and other
partners in the public and private sectors who work collaboratively to develop,
adopt and implement interoperable infrastructure and tools. caBIG™ activities
are organized into workspaces (nine currently), which are the primary sources
of program priorities and substantive work. Together, these groups lead the
activities of caBIG™ and build its foundation. The initiative overall
is actively managed by a general contractor and the National Cancer Institute.
What are the key elements of caBIG™?
Following are the key elements of caBIG™
Bioinformatics and Biomedical Informatics
- The field of bioinformatics, broadly defined as the application of information technology and its tools in biologic disciplines, includes sophisticated computing capabilities and analytical methodologies to manage the large volumes of data generated in molecular biology and genomics. Biomedical informatics provides infrastructure and tools to bridge research and health care, pointing toward the delivery of patient-centric molecular medicine.
Community
- The caBIG™ program helps to build the community of physicians, researchers, information technology professionals and patients that is essential for the creation and delivery of improved cancer treatments. This community provides the sociological infrastructure for interoperable data systems, data sharing and data standards.
Standards for Semantic Interoperability
- The caBIG™ compatibility guidelines provide a framework for true semantic interoperability, that is, the ability for one system to obtain and use information that resides in another system. These guidelines are designed to operate in a federated environment, allowing individuals to express their scientific creativity while still building systems that can interact with each other. In addition, caBIG™ has an active data standards activity, utilizing a consensus based approach for standardizing the representation of certain types of data.
Grid Computing
- Grids are groups of computers that use networks and standard communications
protocols to integrate their functions, share data, and share processing resources.
The computers that make up a grid may be widely distributed within a region
or even around the world. Grids that focus on sharing data are referred to
as “data grids,” while those that focus on sharing computer processing
capacity are called “compute grids.” caBIG™ is a data grid
using open Web Services communications standards. caBIG™ is building
grid software based on Open Grid Services Architecture (OGSA and OGSA-Data
Access Integration [OGSA-DAI]) and the Globus Toolkit from Globus Alliance
(http://www.globus.org/ogsa/), a leading open-source grid computing project. Work
within caBIG™ applies the OGSA standards to biomedical research needs.
They are the basis for the development of a prototype system that satisfied
simple data integration and sharing use cases. As is typical for open-source
projects, the caBIG™ work extends these standards in application-specific
ways and contributes new ideas back to Globus Alliance for possible inclusion
in the overall grid standards. The advantage of true grid architecture such
as OGSA is that each computer runs standard grid software that enables the
computer to do the following:
- Participate in the grid
- Locate resources in the grid for local use by programs or users
- Contribute resources to the grid for remote use
- Provide for data security and other necessities
Where can I find information on the grid infrastructure for the caBIG™
initiative?
General information about the grid infrastructure is presented in a white paper,
available at https://caBIG.nci.nih.gov/guidelines_documentation/caGRIDWhitepaper.pdf.
caGrid version 0.5 was released in 2005, and is available at https://caBIG.nci.nih.gov/workspaces/Architecture/caGrid.
Version 1.0 will be available in the Fall of 2006. Additional information of
caGrid, including scenarios and use cases, can be found at https://caBIG.nci.nih.gov/workspaces/Architecture.
What is meant by ‘caBIG™ compatibility’?
The caBIG™ program is meant to be federated, that is, development is carried
out locally by participating groups using their best scientific judgment, rather
than being directed centrally. In order to make such systems interoperable,
caBIG™ focuses on the interfaces to software systems and on the way in
which systems are described. To aid in the creation of software that will be
able to interoperate within the caBIG™ program, a set of compatibility
guidelines (https://caBIG.nci.nih.gov/guidelines_documentation) was developed
that spells out requirements for interoperability in areas of Interface Integration,
Vocabularies/Terminologies and Ontologies, Information Models and Data Elements.
Systems that meet the requirements are said to be “caBIG™ Compatible.”
Interoperability is not all or nothing, but rather there exists a range of interoperability;
hence the guidelines provide requirements for different ‘Maturity Levels’
from Legacy (closed) to Gold (fully open). Thus a system is judged to be compatible
at a particular maturity level.
What are the current caBIG™ compatibility levels?
The caBIG™ community recognizes that there can be differing degrees of
interoperability between systems, and that these can be quantified in terms
of maturity level. The caBIG™ Compatibility Guidelines are thus organized
into four levels of maturity: Legacy, Bronze, Silver, and Gold, as defined below.
Each maturity level reflects an increasing degree of interoperability with other
caBIG™ applications.
Legacy
- Legacy compliance implies that interoperability with an external system or resource is unlikely. This category is included for systems that were designed either before or without an awareness of the caBIG™ Compatibility Guidelines. Systems identified as legacy-compliant do not meet the requirements for interoperability with caBIG™.
Bronze
- The bronze compliance level requires that a minimum set of requirements must be met. These requirements ensure a minimal degree of interoperability with caBIG™.
Silver
- The silver compliance level requires that a rigorous set of requirements be met. These requirements significantly reduce the barriers to use of a caBIG™ resource by a remote system that was not involved in the development of that resource.
Gold
- The gold compliance level is currently being defined by the caBIG™ community. When defined, the gold compliance level will delineate a formalized grid architecture and data standards that will enable standardized advertising, discovery, and use of all federated caBIG™ resources.
How is caBIG™ Compatibility Evaluated?
For software developed or adopted under the auspices of the caBIG™ program,
the determination of caBIG™ compatibility is made by a formal review conducted
by the cross-cutting workspaces. At this time, only ‘Silver’ compatibility
reviews are being conducted for caBIG™ developed systems; the ‘Gold’
level review process will be developed after the finalization of the caGrid
1.0 Architecture. For software built outside of the auspices of the caBIG™
program, the NCICB has established the first phase of a caBIG™ compatibility
review pro¬cess. This initial process, for Bronze compatibility, is a verified
self-test, and is outlined on the caBIG™ Web site at https://caBIG.nci.nih.gov/guidelines_documentation.
Vendors whose products have completed this process will receive a license to
call the product “caBIG™- Bronze compatible.” NCICB and the
caBIG™ cross-cutting workspaces are also exploring the creation of a formal
process for certifying the Silver- or Gold-level compatibility of applications
developed outside of the caBIG™ program. Although there is currently no
mechanism to certify compliance beyond Bronze, adherence to the existing compatibility
guidelines will facilitate certification in the future.
What is the status of caBIG™ compatibility certification for
commercial systems?
The caBIG™ Bronze Compatibility Certification Process has now been established
(see above). The NCI and caBIG™ will use the experience of the Bronze
program, as well as the ongoing ‘Silver’ interoperability reviews
performed by the cross-cutting workspaces and input from the caBIG™ community
(including our industry partners) to develop the formal ‘Silver’
and/or ‘Gold’ certification process.
What can be said about an application that is intended to be caBIG™
compatible and has been developed in compliance with the compatibility guidelines,
but has not been certified?
Such an application or organization could be described as “planned to
be caBIG™ compatible;” “seeking certification;” or even
“intended to be consistent with caBIG™ compatibility guidelines
as they emerge.” An application that has not been certified cannot be
described as “caBIG™ compatible” without violating the caBIG™
trademark.
Can a commercial application that was not created as a caBIG™
application be converted into a caBIG™-compatible application? If so,
does the resulting application become open source?
A commercial vendor can create or retro-fit an application and make the application
caBIG™-compatible. This can be achieved by following the caBIG™
Guidelines and successfully completing the formal verification process for certifying
caBIG™ compatibility, when that process becomes available. Since this
process is not funded as part of caBIG™, the resulting application and
its code are not required to be open source.
Does any development work done by a commercial organization for a
cancer center on caBIG™ - funded work or directly funded through a competitive
Request For Proposals (RFP) and contract become open source?
Yes, the development done by a commercial vendor for the participating cancer
center or directly funded through a competitive RFP and contract becomes open
source since this development is funded by the caBIG™ initiative. All
funded caBIG™ projects must comply with the caBIG™ principles –
open source, open access, open development and federated. The cancer center
is funded to either create or retrofit applications to be caBIG™ compatible,
so this development by the subcontracted vendor becomes open source.
How will caBIG™ ensure that data shared across centers will
be secure and that the privacy of human subjects will be upheld?
Security and privacy-related issues were at the core of the caBIG™ planning
process. caBIG™ has formed the Data Sharing and Intellectual Capital Strategic
Level Workspace to address these issues as part of its charter. The Architecture
Workspace is addressing the technical aspects of these important issues. A White
Paper detailing security practices is available at https://caBIG.nci.nih.gov/workspaces/Architecture/caBIG_Security_Technology_Evaluation_White_Paper_20060123.pdf.
Can anyone download a caBIG™ application?
Anyone can download any desired software from the caBIG™ Web site. Tools
are listed on the Inventory of Tools page at https://caBIG.nci.nih.gov/inventory.
caBIG™ applications are released under a non-viral open source license;
and can be incorporated into derivative works by both commercial and non-commercial
entities.
How is caBIG™ funded?
caBIG™ is funded through contracts, not grants, with specific deliverables
and milestones. Contracts may be issued directly by NCI or through subcontracts
issued by the General Contractor. Funds support the caBIG™ activities
of the cancer centers participating in the pilot phase of caBIG™ and competitive
contracts for software development and other activities.
What are the benefits to commercial organizations of participating
in caBIG™?
Vendors will find growing demand for their products. As they make their products
caBIG™ compatible, their systems and applications will meet the needs
of a growing number of cancer centers, which will increasingly require caBIG™
compatibility as part of the software acquisition process. Systems that are
caBIG™-compatible are able to access both caBIG™-related data sources
and grid-available tools, providing new opportunities, features, and methodologies.
”Real” research data for testing and demonstration of commercial
organization’s systems will be more easily accessed via the caBIG™
network. Information for commercial organizations are listed on the caBIG™
Web site (https://caBIG.nci.nih.gov/for_vendors). Direct funding may be available
for commercial organizations from caBIG™ through openly competed RFPs,
posted on the caBIG™ Web site as they become available. Companies can
also choose to work with a cancer center on caBIG™ - funded projects,
as long as the caBIG™ guidelines are followed.
Can a commercial organization take the open source software that they
have developed with caBIG™ funding (directly, or indirectly from a Cancer
Center) and use this in existing applications? Can applications with this incorporated
code be marketed and sold?
Yes. Commercial organizations can take a freely available open source piece
of software and incorporate it into existing code base. Such applications can
be marketed and sold by the commercial organization.
How can commercial organizations share caBIG™ compatible applications
with the caBIG™ community?
The caBIG™ Web site will include software solutions which are caBIG™-compatible
and of interest to the community. NCI hopes that there will eventually be a
rich variety of tools and services from throughout the vendor community that
interoperate with the caBIG™ network.
How can commercial organizations participate in the caBIG™ initiative?
There are a variety of ways commercial organizations can participate on a voluntary
basis in caBIG™ activities:
- Track activities on the caBIG™ Web site at https://caBIG.nci.nih.gov.
- Sign up for the “announce” list ser- vice for caBIG™ to
receive regular updates on caBIG™ activities and events. This list service
is open to all interested parties and can be found at
https://list.nih.gov/archives/cabig_announce.html. - Attend open caBIG™ Workspace meetings (teleconferences as well as periodic face-to-face gatherings). These are listed in “What’s BIG this Week” (https://caBIG.nci.nih.gov/News_Folder/WBTW) a weekly update sent to everyone on the “caBIG™_announce” list service. In addition there is a Calendar of events on the caBIG™ Web site, updated weekly, available at https://caBIG.nci.nih.gov/events/. (Note: If meeting space is limited, precedence is given to funded caBIG™ participants.)
- Attend the caBIG™ 2007 Annual Meeting. Information will be posted at https://caBIG.nci.nih.gov/ events/events_webcasts_town halls and on the home page as the event approaches.
- Work toward making a company’s applications and solutions caBIG™ - compatible. Guidelines for caBIG™ compatibility are available at https://caBIG.nci.nih.gov/ guidelines_documentation. Certification processes for caBIG™ compatibility are being developed and will be announced on the Web site.
- Integrate into a company’s systems the available open-source software, tools, and standards developed by the funded caBIG™ project activities. An inventory of caBIG™ tools, data, and standards, as well as the associated NCICB infrastructure, are available at https://caBIG.nci.nih.gov/inventory/.
- Contribute technologies, tools, or components that are relevant and compatible with caBIG™ and that are not intended to be commercialized under a proprietary licensing arrangement.
- Watch the archived caBIG™ webcasts about specific areas of technical interest. These webcasts can be accessed on the caBIG™ Web site at https://caBIG.nci. nih.gov/webcasts/. NCI hosted its first caBIG™ Industry Partners Meeting on September 30, 2005. Industry representatives learned about the caBIG™ compatibility requirements and commercial opportunities in the caBIG™ program. Information on the meeting can be found at https://cabig.nci.nih.gov/2005_Industry_Partners/.
Are there opportunities for commercial organizations to assist NCI
with the coordination and support of the caBIG™ initiative?
Currently, several commercial organizations contract with the NCI to assist
with some of the coordination and support activities for caBIG™. Any future
related opportunities in this area will be solicited via the usual Federal Government
Procurement mechanisms.
More Information and getting Involved
How can I learn more about caBIG™?
The caBIG™ Web site (https://caBIG.nci.nih.gov) is updated continually
with related activity information. Specific resources also include:
- Introductory slides—available at https://caBIG. nci.nih.gov/seminars/index.html.
- Interactive overview, created early in the pilot available at https://caBIG.nci.nih.gov/over view/interactive_overview/.
- Online training tutorials, designed to further advance the understanding of specific applications and topics related to the caBIG™ program—available at https://caBIG.nci.nih.gov/training.
- Presentations from prior annual meetings—available at https://caBIG.nci.nih.gov/events/ events_webcasts_townhalls.
How do I get involved with caBIG™?
There are many ways that you can become involved with caBIG™:
- Track caBIG™ activities and progress on the National Cancer Institute’s caBIG™ Web site at https://caBIG.nci.nih.gov.
- Attend open caBIG™ meetings to contribute ideas and to better understand caBIG™ activities. Watch the caBIG™ Web site for information on these types of opportunities via the calendar on the right side of the Web site, or the Events folder located in the left navigation bar.
- Attend the caBIG™ 2007 Annual Meeting. Information will be posted
at
https://caBIG.nci.nih.gov/events/events_webcasts_townhalls and on the home page as the event approaches. - Learn more about the NCI’s existing bioinformatics infrastructure
- caCORE - as caBIG™ is harnessing the strengths of this platform and
activities will be undertaken in a complementary way.
Further information is available at the NCICB Web site via the following link: http://ncicb.nci.nih.gov/NCICB/ infrastructure. - Download and become familiar with the tools and applications already available
on the caBIG™ Web site. This is only the beginning, and this list will
start to grow rapidly over the next few months as more informatics
applications become interoperable and available to share. The current inventory of infrastructure, applications, and datasets used to support the caBIG™ initiative can be accessed at the caBIG™ Web site. This inventory includes key infrastructure and applications from the National Cancer Institute Center for Bioinformatics and can be found via the Inventory of Tools section at https://caBIG.nci.nih.gov/inventory. - Start to think about how you could integrate the tools and databases you are developing into the caBIG™ community.
- Sign up for the caBIG™ mailing list at https://list.nih.gov/archives/caBIG_announce.html to receive important notices about current and upcoming activities.
As the caBIG™ community continues to grow, additional infrastructure, tools and data will be made available. Furthermore, resources and informational tools will be provided by the caBIG™ community and the NCI to assist those who want to use or contribute to the network. These will include training resources, support for use and adoption of tools, informational Workshops, and tools to facilitate broader use of caBIG™ by interested organizations.