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View Full Version : Open Humans Network platform to democratize your DNA for better medical research



rock hunter
03-24-2015, 04:19 PM
New online platform aims to provide researchers with better access to DNA and other biological data by crowd-sourcing it from users.

Get ready to share more than photos of your latest vacation.

A new online platform launched Tuesday allows users to share data about their genomes, gut bacteria and other biological data with scientists and researchers.

The “Open Humans Network,” backed by the Knight Foundation and Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, aims to make more data available for researchers across studies. Its goal is to democratize valuable information that study leaders have typically held secret in order to prevent access by others. The fear is that a competitor could beat them to an important discovery.

Geneticist George Church of Harvard University said that such DNA data are also valuable to gene-testing companies — those companies can profit from the data too, he said.
But the mindset of secrecy slows down important medical research that could lead to breakthroughs on anything from cancer treatments to better flu vaccines.

Open Humans hopes to break that pattern by allowing universal access to the data stored on the site by researchers on other projects. Unlike other “de-identified” data, it will come with names and contact information attached so scientists can follow up with users.

Project director Jason Bobe compares it to other tech platforms: “It’s like open-sourcing your body,” he said.

The site currently hosts three studies that users can sign up for: American Gut looks at the relationship between gut bacteria and disease; GoViral identifies what viruses are circulating during flu season in the U.S.; and the Personal Genome Project, led by Church, gathers DNA data to make connections between genomic patterns and health.

Users allow any legitimate user to access their information when they sign up, which raises potential privacy concerns. In order to sign up, participants must pass a test showing they understand the risks of sharing private health information. If hacked, the leaked information could affect a person’s access to life insurance, or long-term care coverage.

http://fortune.com/2015/03/24/open-humans-platform-dna/

Little bit
03-24-2015, 07:01 PM
Sounds interesting. I already shared my 23andme results on Opensnp so I thought I'd look at this but it doesn't look like I have the right DNA results. Other limitations may be of interest, too:


Sharable data sets supported by Open Humans

Harvard PersonalGenome (whole genome data)
GoViral (viral surveillance)
American Gut (microbiome profiling)

Eligibility Requirements
An active Open Humans member account
At least 18 years of age
United States citizen or permanent resident


https://www.openhumans.org/public-data/