Publications

Models for MD Sharing

Published 17 September 2019 in the Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling (v. 59 pp. 4093–4099):

Sharing data from molecular simulations

Mark Abraham, Rossen Apostolov, Jonathan Barnoud, Paul Bauer, Christian Blau, Alexandre MJJ Bonvin, Matthieu Chavent, John Chodera, Karmen Čondić-Jurkić, Lucie Delemotte, Helmut Grubmüller, Rebecca J Howard, E Joseph Jordan, Erik Lindahl, OH Samuli Ollila, Jana Selent, Daniel GA Smith, Phillip J Stansfeld, Johanna KS Tiemann, Mikael Trellet, Christopher Woods, Artem Zhmurov

Given the need for modern researchers to produce open, reproducible scientific output, the lack of standards and best practices for sharing data and workflows used to produce and analyze molecular dynamics (MD) simulations has become an important issue in the field. There are now multiple well-established packages to perform molecular dynamics simulations, often highly tuned for exploiting specific classes of hardware, each with strong communities surrounding them, but with very limited interoperability/transferability options. Thus, the choice of the software package often dictates the workflow for both simulation production and analysis. The level of detail in documenting the workflows and analysis code varies greatly in published work, hindering reproducibility of the reported results and the ability for other researchers to build on these studies. An increasing number of researchers are motivated to make their data available, but many challenges remain in order to effectively share and reuse simulation data. To discuss these and other issues related to best practices in the field in general, we organized a workshop in November 2018. Here, we present a brief overview of this workshop and topics discussed. We hope this effort will spark further conversation in the MD community to pave the way toward more open, interoperable, and reproducible outputs coming from research studies using MD simulations.

Read the full publication here.