AUTHOR=Bota Mihail , Dong Hong-Wei , Swanson Larry W. TITLE=Combining collation and annotation efforts toward completion of the rat and mouse connectomes in BAMS JOURNAL=Frontiers in Neuroinformatics VOLUME=6 YEAR=2012 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/neuroinformatics/articles/10.3389/fninf.2012.00002 DOI=10.3389/fninf.2012.00002 ISSN=1662-5196 ABSTRACT=

Many different independently published neuroanatomical parcellation schemes (brain maps, nomenclatures, or atlases) can exist for a particular species, although one scheme (a standard scheme) is typically chosen for mapping neuroanatomical data in a particular study. This is problematic for building connection matrices (connectomes) because the terms used to name structures in different parcellation schemes differ widely and interrelationships are seldom defined. Therefore, data sets cannot be compared across studies that have been mapped on different neuroanatomical atlases without a reliable translation method. Because resliceable 3D brain models for relating systematically and topographically different parcellation schemes are still in the first phases of development, it is necessary to rely on qualitative comparisons between regions and tracts that are either inserted directly by neuroanatomists or trained annotators, or are extracted or inferred by collators from the available literature. To address these challenges, we developed a publicly available neuroinformatics system, the Brain Architecture Knowledge Management System (BAMS; http://brancusi.usc.edu/bkms). The structure and functionality of BAMS is briefly reviewed here, as an exemplar for constructing interrelated connectomes at different levels of the mammalian central nervous system organization. Next, the latest version of BAMS rat macroconnectome is presented because it is significantly more populated with the number of inserted connectivity reports exceeding a benchmark value (50,000), and because it is based on a different classification scheme. Finally, we discuss a general methodology and strategy for producing global connection matrices, starting with rigorous mapping of data, then inserting and annotating it, and ending with online generation of large-scale connection matrices.