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Data Harmonization Projects

NIDA’s data-harmonization efforts aim to promote common measures that can be used by researchers across studies within and across particular research fields. By using common measures, researchers can more easily compare and combine datasets to detect more subtle and complex associations among variables, thereby promoting greater collaboration, efficiency, and return on investment.

  • PhenX - Consensus Measures for Phenotypes and eXposures – This initiative added a collection of standardized measures related to substance abuse and addiction within PhenX, a project that is led by RTI International and funded by the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI). NIDA recommends that all addiction researchers incorporate these standard measures into their human-subject research, thereby facilitating the gathering and sharing of interoperable data in the addiction sciences.
  • Seek, Test, Treat and Retain Initiative – This initiative is intended to increase the comparability, collaboration, and scientific yield of clinical research on HIV and drug abuse. Toward that end, NIDA has facilitated the harmonization of data collection across 22 grants implementing and testing the STTR paradigm. These grants were funded through two separate funding announcements: "Seek, Test, and Treat: Addressing HIV in the Criminal Justice System" (STTR-CJ) and "Seek, Test, Treat, and Retain: Addressing HIV among Vulnerable Populations" (STTR-Vulnerable Populations). Harmonization activities included the identification of common scientific domains and development of core measures for each domain.
  • Genetics Data Harmonization Project – NIDA's Genetic Consortium has created a list of domains and their associated measures to help with the harmonization of data in the area of genetic studies.

This page was last updated April 5, 2012.

Featured Publication

Featured Publication

2010 Strategic Plan

Outlines NIDA’s drug abuse and addiction research strategic priorities for the next 5 years, focusing on prevention, treatment, HIV/AIDS, and other cross-cutting issues.

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