Personal Genome Projects: Global Network (original) (raw)

The Personal Genome Project

The Personal Genome Project, initiated in 2005, is a vision and coalition of projects across the world dedicated to creating public genome, health, and trait data. Sharing data is critical to scientific progress, but has been hampered by traditional research practices. The PGP approach is to invite willing participants to publicly share their personal data for the greater good.


International Projects

The Global Network of Personal Genome Projects includes researchers at leading institutions around the globe:

Founded in August 2005, the Harvard Personal Genome Project is the pilot PGP site, and is based in George Church's laboratory at Harvard Medical School.
Go to the Harvard PGP website

Founded in December 2012, PGP Canada is operated by the McLaughlin Centre at the University of Toronto, and The Centre for Applied Genomics at the Hospital for Sick Children.
Go to PGP Canada website

Founded in November 2013, PGP UK is led by Stephen Beck at University College London.
Go to the PGP UK website

Founded in November 2014, Genom Austria is based at the CeMM Research Center for Molecular Medicine of the Austrian Academy of Sciences.
Go to Genom Austria website (German language)

Announced in October 2017, The Personal Genome Project in China (PGP China) is led by Professor Li Jin at Fudan University, Shanghai. PGP China is now collecting contact information from interested participants and potential collaborators.
Go to the PGP China website (in Chinese and English)

Global Network Guidelines

Members of the Global Network of Personal Genome Projects adhere to the following guidelines:

  1. Public Data. Participants are invited to publicly share their genomic and trait data in an integrated, publicly-accessible format using a CC0 waiver or equivalent public domain license.
  2. Non-anonymous. The risks of participant re-identification are addressed up front, as an integral part of the consent and enrollment process; neither anonymity nor confidentiality of participant identities or their data are promised to research participants.
  3. Equal access. Participants are provided access to their individual research data in a timely and complete fashion (i.e., raw data and not just summary results, where feasible).
  4. Oversight. Each member must at all times maintain current Institutional Review Board (IRB) approval or local equivalent, and will work with PersonalGenomes.org to continue to implement identified best practices for responsible public genomics research.
  5. Not for profit. The research project is managed or sponsored by a non-profit organization (or local equivalent). In addition, other than purposes of reasonable cost recovery, the member shall not sell or license participant data or tissues.

News

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2017

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2005


Contact Information

This website listing the Global Network of Personal Genome Projects is maintained by Open Humans Foundation, a United States 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. You may visit the OHF website to contact this organization about issues with this webpage.