Human Genomes Platform Project
Advancing human genomic research through federated identity and access management
The Australian Access Federation (AAF) partnered with Australian BioCommons on their Human Genomes Platform Project (HGPP), which investigated and prototyped a suite of services aimed at bolstering Australia’s capacity to share human omics research data securely and responsibly.
Affordable DNA sequencing technology has revolutionised genomic research, allowing for the analysis of hundreds of thousands of genomes worldwide. This advancement has significantly improved the understanding of complex diseases, facilitated early detection and diagnosis, and expanded treatment options tailored to individuals.
Harnessing the full potential of genomic data requires comparing information from multiple individuals to form large cohorts for meaningful analysis. This often involves collaboration across different regions or countries, necessitating data to be easily accessible, linkable, searchable, and shareable, while ensuring privacy and ethical handling of sensitive information.
In Australia, various initiatives have emerged to store and manage genome data, each with its own technology and manual systems. However, accessing and sharing this data poses challenges, hindering collaborative research. To address these issues, Australian BioCommons initiated the HGPP in collaboration with leading Australian research institutes including the Garvan Institute for Medical Research, National Computational Infrastructure (NCI), QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute, The University of Melbourne Centre for Cancer Research, Children’s Cancer Institute and ZERO Childhood Cancer.
Opening up access to genomics data
As experts in trust and identity, the AAF played a crucial role in implementing best practice identity and access management solutions, to improve Australia’s capacity to access and share human omics research data.
John Scullen, AAF’s Head of Projects and Managed Services, said “The AAF deployed innovative technologies to enhance FAIRness (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, Reusable) in genomic data sharing. By implementing standards from the Global Alliance for Genomic Health (GA4GH), the HGPP explored controlled access and sharing of data across repositories.
“AAF provided expertise in the discovery and solution phases of the federated identity and access management (IAM) sub-project. IAM is a collection of standards, policies and technologies, that enable a platform to determine whether to permit access to a user.
“In a federated environment such as the Australian and global genomics community, federated identity and access management enables loosely coupled systems to establish strong trust relationships for the purposes of data sharing
“The federated IAM sub-project team established the formal requirements of the system through community consultation. CILogon emerged as the most suitable solution and was implemented in the subsequent pilot phase.
“CILogon provides a means for researchers to use their employer’s organisational login or alternatives such as Google and ORCID to access resources instead of having to create a separate account. As well as allowing system administrators to configure access to resources through a user interface.” John further explains.
AAF experts were also involved in the Data Access Committees (DAC) sub-project. John says, “Navigating restrictions on the secondary use of human genome data, and decisions on how and to whom to grant access to data, requires significant human input by DACs. The Resource Entitlement Management System (REMS) software proved to be the best candidate, enabling DACs to quickly and easily determine whether a researcher’s data access request meets the permitted usage conditions for a specific dataset.”
Crucially, the Human Genomes Platform Project has established a template for other institutions to adopt and implement, supported by comprehensive documentation and training for researchers and IT infrastructure providers.
Find out more
- To learn more about the toolbox contents and the project more generally, you can watch the final HGPP showcase
- Read the initial Federated Identity and Access Management (IAM) Discovery Phase Report
- Read the Federated Identity and Access Management Candidate Solutions Evaluation Report
- Data Access Committee Management Systems discovery phase and candidate solutions evaluation reports including insights from the AAF can be viewed here.
- For more information about CILogon in complex research environments, or to view demonstration videos with CILogon expert Scott Koranda, please visit aaf.edu.au.
Meet our incubators
Pawsey Supercomputing Research Centre
AAF has partnered with the Pawsey Supercomputing Research Centre exploring options to provide seamless and secure access to their supercomputing service using federated identities.
The Pawsey Supercomputing Research Centre is one of two Tier-1 high-performance computing facilities in Australia. Its primary function is to accelerate scientific research for the benefit of the nation. Pawsey’s service and expertise in supercomputing, data, cloud services and visualisation enables research across a variety of fields including astronomy, life sciences, medicine, energy, resources and artificial intelligence.
Pawsey’s supercomputing systems play a critical role, for a wide range of research disciplines and features as an important part of many researchers’ workflows. This Incubator will raise the security profile of Pawsey and provide a single user account across their ecosystem. The Pawsey Incubator is a foundational building block in trust and identity for national research infrastructure and plays a critical role in the implementation of trust and identity across the sector.
Microscopy Australia
AAF has partnered with Microscopy Australia exploring impact tracking through persistent identifiers (PIDs).
Microscopy Australia are a consortium of university-based microscopy facilities that more than 3,500 researchers across Australia use each year. They aim to empower Australian science and innovation by making advanced microscopes accessible to all researchers.
One of the greatest challenges in research is to connect and report on distributed services and this incubator explores how richer reporting, impact tracking and usage data can be provided through ORCID iDs and PIDs across national research infrastructure.
ACCESS-NRI
AAF has partnered with ACCESS-NRI exploring options to provide consistent user tracking and reporting.
The Australian Earth-System Simulator (ACCESS-NRI) is a national research Infrastructure that supports the research and development of the Australian Community Climate and Earth System Simulator (ACCESS) modelling system framework. ACCESS-NRI provides this service in collaboration with National Computational Infrastructure (NCI).
The AAF is currently in the discovery stage of an incubator with ACCESS-NRI, with the objective to develop a solution that can improve the current usage tracking approaches across all ACCESS-NRI resources.
Contact the AAF
If you would like to discuss trust and identity for your organisation, please contact us and one of our project managers will be in contact.
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