One file to share them all: Using the COMBINE Archive and the OMEX format to share all information about a modeling project
Frank T. Bergmann, Richard Adams, Stuart Moodie, Jonathan Cooper,, Mihai Glont, Martin Golebiewski, Michael Hucka, Camille Laibe, Andrew K., Miller, David P. Nickerson, Brett G. Olivier, Nicolas Rodriguez, Herbert M., Sauro, Martin Scharm, Stian Soiland-Reyes, Dagmar Waltemath

TL;DR
The paper introduces the COMBINE Archive, a standardized ZIP container format that consolidates all necessary information for biological modeling and simulation experiments, enhancing reproducibility and data sharing.
Contribution
It defines the OMEX format and demonstrates how it integrates various standards into a single archive for comprehensive model sharing.
Findings
Supports reproducibility of experiments
Facilitates data sharing and archiving
Compatible with existing modeling tools
Abstract
Background: With the ever increasing use of computational models in the biosciences, the need to share models and reproduce the results of published studies efficiently and easily is becoming more important. To this end, various standards have been proposed that can be used to describe models, simulations, data or other essential information in a consistent fashion. These constitute various separate components required to reproduce a given published scientific result. Results: We describe the Open Modeling EXchange format (OMEX). Together with the use of other standard formats from the Computational Modeling in Biology Network (COMBINE), OMEX is the basis of the COMBINE Archive, a single file that supports the exchange of all the information necessary for a modeling and simulation experiment in biology. An OMEX file is a ZIP container that includes a manifest file, listing the content…
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Taxonomy
TopicsScientific Computing and Data Management · Distributed and Parallel Computing Systems · Gene Regulatory Network Analysis
