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| Resource Name | Proper Citation | Abbreviations | Resource Type |
Description |
Keywords | Resource Relationships | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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HipSci Resource Report Resource Website 100+ mentions |
HipSci (RRID:SCR_003909) | HipSci | biomaterial supply resource, material resource | A UK national induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cell resource that will create and characterize more than 1000 human iPSCs from healthy and diseased tissue for use in cellular genetic studies. Between 2013 and 2016 they aim to generate iPS cells from over 500 healthy individuals and 500 individuals with genetic disease. They will then use these cells to discover how genomic variation impacts on cellular phenotype and identify new disease mechanisms. Strong links with NHS investigators will ensure that studies on the disease-associated cell lines will be linked to extensive clinical information. Further key features of the project are an open access model of data sharing; engagement of the wider clinical genetics community in selecting patient samples; and provision of dedicated laboratory space for collaborative cell phenotyping and differentiation. | stem cell, genomic variation, cellular phenotype, disease mechanism, phenotype, disease, clinical data, clinical, genetics, male, female, cell line, induced pluripotent stem cell |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing has parent organization: European Bioinformatics Institute |
Healthy, Genetic disease | Wellcome Trust ; MRC |
Acknowledgement required, Free, Public | nlx_158252 | SCR_003909 | Human Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells Initiative | 2026-02-14 02:06:58 | 115 | |||||
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NEALS Sample Repository Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
NEALS Sample Repository (RRID:SCR_004271) | NEALS Sample Repository | biomaterial supply resource, material resource | Repository of serum, plasma, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), whole blood, extracted DNA, and urine samples from NEALS and Massachusetts General Hospital Neurology Clinical Trials Unit (NCTU) research studies of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Samples from this repository are available to researchers for the purpose of furthering the understanding of ALS or developing disease biomarkers. Applications will be accepted at any time, but the committee meets bi-monthly to review applications. The application requires a brief description and scientific justification for the use of the samples. Priority will be given to members of NEALS and investigators from sites that participated in the collection of samples. Investigators must provide IRB approval from their institution. Applications may be submitted to: mghneuroclinicaltrialsunit (at) partners.org (please cc: tlincoln (at) partners.org) NEALS collects an administrative fee of $1,000 at the time of application submission to offset processing costs. If an application for samples is denied, 80% of the administrative fee will be returned. The administrative fee is waived for NEALS members. Checks may be made payable to: The Northeast ALS Consortium. | amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, serum, plasma, cerebral spinal fluid, urine, dna, whole blood, blood |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing has parent organization: NEALS: The Northeast ALS Consortium |
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, Motor neuron disease, Healthy | ALS Association | Public, Application, Fee, Acknowledgement required | nlx_143662 | http://www.nealsconsortium.org/news.html | SCR_004271 | Northeast ALS Consortium Sample Repository, NEALS Biofluid Repository, ALS Biofluid Repository | 2026-02-14 02:06:58 | 1 | ||||
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Biobanking and Biomolecular Resources Research Infrastructure (BBMRI) Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
Biobanking and Biomolecular Resources Research Infrastructure (BBMRI) (RRID:SCR_004226) | BBMRI | biomaterial supply resource, material resource | BBMRI is a pan-European and internationally broadly accessible research infrastructure and a network of existing and de novo biobanks and biomolecular resources. The infrastructure will include samples from patients and healthy persons, representing different European populations (with links to epidemiological and health care information), molecular genomic resources and biocomputational tools to optimally exploit this resource for global biomedical research. During the past 3 years BBMRI has grown into a 53-member consortium with over 280 associated organizations (largely biobanks) from over 30 countries, making it the largest research infrastructure project in Europe. During the preparatory phase the concept of a functional pan-European biobank was formulated and has now been presented to Member States of the European Union and for associated states for approval and funding. BBMRI will form an interface between specimens and data (from patients and European populations) and top-level biological and medical research. This can only be achieved through a distributed research infrastructure with operational units in all participating Member States. BBMRI will be implemented under the ERIC (European Research Infrastructure Consortium) legal entity. BBMRI-ERIC foresees headquarters (central coordination) in Graz, Austria, responsible for coordination of the activities of National Nodes established in participating countries. BBMRI is in the process of submitting its application to the European Commission for a legal status under the ERIC regulation, with an expected start date at the end of 2011. Major synergism, gain of statistical power and economy of scale will be achieved by interlinking, standardizing and harmonizing - sometimes even just cross-referencing - a large variety of well-qualified, up-to date, existing and de novo national resources. The network should cover (1) major European biobanks with blood, serum, tissue or other biological samples, (2) molecular methods resource centers for human and model organisms of biomedical relevance, (3) and biocomputing centers to ensure that databases of samples in the repositories are dynamically linked to existing databases and to scientific literature as well as to statistical expertise. Catalog of European Biobanks www.bbmriportal.eu Username: guest / Password: catalogue The catalogue is intended to be used as a reference for scientists seeking information about biological samples and data suitable for their research. The BBMRI catalogue of European Biobanks provides a high-level description of Europe''s biobanks characteristics using a portal solution managing metadata and aggregate data of biobanks. The catalogue can be queried by country, by biobank, by ICD-groups, by specimen types, by specific strengths, by funding and more. A search function is available for all data. | blood, serum, tissue, dna, cdna, rna, plasma, cell line, bodily fluid, urine, blood cell isolate, buffy coat, patient, healthy, normal, cryopreserved, paraffin embedded, clinical data |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing is related to: BioResource Impact Factor is related to: German Biobank Registry is related to: BioMedBridges is related to: Biological Resource Centre - National Institute for Cancer Research has parent organization: Medical University of Graz; Graz; Austria is parent organization of: BBMRI Wiki |
All, Patient, Healthy, Normal | European Union | Public: The catalogue is intended to be used as a reference for scientists seeking information about biological samples and data suitable for their research. | nlx_24389 | http://www.bbmri.eu/index.php | SCR_004226 | Biobanking and Biomolecular Resources Research Infrastructure, BBMRI: Biobanking Biomolecular Resources Research Infrastructure, Biobanking Biomolecular Resources Research Infrastructure, BBMRI: Biobanking and Biomolecular Resources Research Infrastructure, Biobanking Biomolecular Resources Research Infrastructure (BBMRI) | 2026-02-14 02:07:04 | 29 | ||||
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Biobank Graz Resource Report Resource Website |
Biobank Graz (RRID:SCR_004245) | Biobank Graz | biomaterial supply resource, material resource | Biobank Graz is a non-profit central Medical University of Graz (MUG) service facility that provides the logistics and infrastructure to optimally support MUG research teams in the collection, processing and storage of biological samples and their associated data. In the course of this, special attention is given to sample and data quality and to the protection of the individual rights of patients. Samples from selected patients at the Graz LKH-University Clinical Centre, who have signed an informed consent declaration, are deposited in Biobank Graz. This means that excess tissue and blood samples are collected and placed in storage. The samples are harvested in the course of routine interventions undertaken by the different departments and institutes of the Graz LKH-University Clinical Centre and approved for use in research projects only after the completion of all necessary laboratory and histopathological analyses. No additional material is removed: in other words, there are no associated drawbacks whatsoever for the patients involved. Biobank Graz operates a quality management system according to ISO 9001:2008 and offers the following services for the processing and storage of biological samples and the handling of data: * Consistently high sample quality through the processing of samples using standardized methods in accordance with written working instructions (SOPs) * Efficient use of resources through the building of shared infrastructure and the development of optimized processes * A high degree of reliability provided by the storage of samples in 24/7 - monitored storage systems. * Processing and storage of all data in accordance with data protection legislation. Biobank Graz comprises both population-based and disease-focused collections of biological materials. It currently contains approx. 3.8 mio samples from approx. 1.2 mio patients representing a nonselected patient group characteristic of central Europe. Because the Institute of Pathology was, until 2003, the exclusive pathology service provider for major parts of the province of Styria, including its capital Graz (population approx. 1.2 mio people), samples from all human diseases, treated by surgery or diagnosed by biopsy, are included in the collection at their natural frequency of occurrence and thus represent cancers and non-cancerous diseases from all organs, and from all age groups. The scientific value of the existing tissue collection is, thus, not only determined by its size and technical homogeneity (all samples have been processed in a single institute under constant conditions for more than 20 years), but also by its population-based character. These features provide ideal opportunities for epidemiological studies and allow the validation of biomarkers for the identification of specific diseases and determination of their response to treatment. Prospectively collected tissues, blood samples and clinical data comprise, on the one hand, randomly selected samples from all diseases and patient groups to provide sufficient numbers of samples for the evaluation of the disease-specificity of any gene or biomarker. On the other hand, Biobank Graz adopts a disease-focused approach for selected diseases (such as breast, colon and liver cancers as well as some metabolic diseases) through the collection of a range of different human biological samples of highest quality and detailed clinical follow-up data. Graz Medical University established the Biobank to provide improved and sustainable access to biological samples and related (clinical) data both for its own academic research and for external research projects of academic and industrial partners. It is a major interest of the university to initiate co-operative research projects. Biological samples and data are available to external institutions performing high-quality research projects which comply with the Biobank''s ethical and legal framework according to the access rules (Contact: COO Karine Sargsyan, MD, PhD). | tissue, blood, dna, rna, serum, plasma, bodily fluid, urine, cryopreserved, formalin fixed paraffin embedded, csf, frozen, disease, population, patient, healthy, normal, clinical, patient, healthy, normal, disease, cancer, metabolic disease, breast cancer, colon cancer, liver cancer, clinical data, cerebral spinal fluid |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing has parent organization: Medical University of Graz; Graz; Austria |
All, Patient, Healthy, Normal, Disease, Cancer, Metabolic disease, Breast cancer, Colon cancer, Liver cancer | Public: Graz Medical University established the Biobank to provide improved and sustainable access to biological samples and related (clinical) data both for its own academic research and for external research projects of academic and industrial partners. It is a major interest of the university to initiate co-operative research projects. Biological samples and data are available to external institutions performing high-quality research projects which comply with the Biobank''s ethical and legal framework according to the access rules. | nlx_25894 | SCR_004245 | 2026-02-14 02:06:58 | 0 | |||||||
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ResearchMatch Resource Report Resource Website 100+ mentions |
ResearchMatch (RRID:SCR_006387) | ResearchMatch | community building portal, people resource, portal, data or information resource, patient registry | Free and secure registry to bring together two groups of people who are looking for one another: (1) people who are trying to find research studies, and (2) researchers who are looking for people to participate in their studies. It has been developed by major academic institutions across the country who want to involve you in the mission of helping today''''s studies make a real difference for everyone''''s health in the future. Anyone can join ResearchMatch. Many studies are looking for healthy people of all ages, while some are looking for people with specific health conditions. ResearchMatch can help ''''match'''' you with any type of research study, ranging from surveys to clinical trials, always giving you the choice to decide what studies may interest you. | recruit, volunteer, clinical research, clinical, recruitment registry, registry, patient, clinical study, clinical trial, survey |
is related to: Clinical and Translational Science Awards Consortium has parent organization: Vanderbilt University; Tennessee; USA |
Healthy, Specific health condition | NIH ; NCATS UL1TR000445; NCRR 1U54RR032646-01 |
PMID:22104055 | nlx_152168 | SCR_006387 | Research Match | 2026-02-14 02:01:16 | 180 | |||||
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Human Connectome Coordination Facility Resource Report Resource Website 500+ mentions |
Human Connectome Coordination Facility (RRID:SCR_008749) | WU-Minn HCP | image repository, data repository, storage service resource, service resource | Consortium to comprehensively map long-distance brain connections and their variability. It is acquiring data and developing analysis pipelines for several modalities of neuroimaging data plus behavioral and genetic data from healthy adults. | brain, connectivity, adult human, mri, resting-state fmri, functional mri assay, neuroimaging, surface rendering, time domain analysis, tractography, xnat pipeline |
is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC) is related to: FSL is related to: Brain Connectivity Toolbox is related to: FieldTrip is related to: BALSA has parent organization: Washington University in St. Louis; Missouri; USA has parent organization: NIH Human Connectome Project has parent organization: University of Minnesota Twin Cities; Minnesota; USA is parent organization of: WU-Minn HCP 500 Subjects MR and MEG Release |
healthy, twin | NIMH MH091657; NIH Blueprint for Neuroscience Research |
PMID:23684880 PMID:23702419 PMID:23668970 PMID:23702415 PMID:23702418 PMID:23707591 PMID:23702417 PMID:23684877 |
Free, Freely available | nlx_143922 | http://www.nitrc.org/projects/hcp_wuminn http://www.humanconnectome.org/documentation/S500/ |
SCR_008749 | HCP WU-Minn Consortium, WU-Minn: Human Connectome Project, HUMAN CONNECTOME PROJECT WU-Minn Consortium, WU-Minn Consortium: Human Connectome Project, WU-Minn Consortium: HCP | 2026-02-14 02:01:38 | 964 | |||
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Mount Sinai Alzheimer's Disease Research Center Resource Report Resource Website |
Mount Sinai Alzheimer's Disease Research Center (RRID:SCR_008780) | Mount Sinai ADRC | biomaterial supply resource, material resource, tissue bank, brain bank | A research facility and clinical program that is dedicated to the study and the treatment of both normal aging and Alzheimer's disease. This facility will accommodate requests for its resources (for example, data or tissue) from investigators that are not funded by the ADRC. Their team is composed of experts in geriatrics, geriatric psychiatry and psychology, neurology, pathology, and radiology. All team members work to provide services to those with memory disorders. This center sponsors educational programs for healthcare professionals and community groups. Data from the ADRC cores are available to all ADRC investigators after approval from the PI who collected the data. Data generated by the ADRC cores are communicated to the National Alzheimer's Coordinating Center (NACC) and can be available through them. Tissue can be distributed after approval of the Tissue Allocation Committee, and can be used for further research. | normal aging, alzheimer's disease, late adult human, memory disorder, memory, dementia, healthy, brain tissue, brain, tissue, paraffin embedded, block, stain, clinical |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing has parent organization: Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai; New York; USA |
Alzheimer's disease, Aging, Healthy | NIA | Public / Collaborator: The ADRC at Mount Sinai School of Medicine is receptive to requests of ADRC resources (data, Tissue, And so on). The ADRC welcomes requests for tissue from Investigators not currently funded by the ADRC. Tissues needed for conduct of ADRC projects are distributed directly to PIs. Distribution of tissue will be made on a collaborative basis only and determined on a case by case basis by the Tissue Allocation Committee. | nlx_144162 | SCR_008780 | Mount Sinai School of Medicine ADRC, Mount Sinai School of Medicine Alzheimer's Disease Research Center, Mount Sinai Alzheimer's Disease Research Center | 2026-02-14 02:01:47 | 0 | |||||
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Physiobank Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
Physiobank (RRID:SCR_006949) | PhysioBank | data repository, storage service resource, catalog, data or information resource, service resource, database | Archive of well-characterized digital recordings of physiologic signals and related data for use by the biomedical research community. PhysioBank currently includes databases of multi-parameter cardiopulmonary, neural, and other biomedical signals from healthy subjects and patients with a variety of conditions with major public health implications, including sudden cardiac death, congestive heart failure, epilepsy, gait disorders, sleep apnea, and aging. The PhysioBank Archives now contain over 700 gigabytes of data that may be freely downloaded. PhysioNet is seeking contributions of data sets that can be made freely available in PhysioBank. Contributions of digitized and anonymized (deidentified) physiologic signals and time series of all types are welcome. If you have a data set that may be suitable, please review PhysioNet''s guidelines for contributors and contact them. | physiologic, signal, data, biomedical, research, community, cardiopulmonary, neural, biomedical, health, cardiac, death, congestive heart failure, epilepsy, gait, disorder, sleep apnea, bibliographic, normal, physiologic signal, time series, FASEB list |
is used by: NIF Data Federation is used by: Integrated Datasets is related to: PhysioToolkit is parent organization of: Gait in Aging and Disease Database is parent organization of: Gait in Parkinson's Disease is parent organization of: Gait Dynamics in Neuro-Degenerative Disease Data Base is parent organization of: Noise Enhancement of Sensorimotor Function |
Healthy, Sudden cardiac death, Congestive heart failure, Epilepsy, Gait disorder, Sleep apnea, Aging | NIGMS ; NIBIB U01-EB-008577 |
PMID:10851218 | Free, The community can contribute to this resource, Acknowledgement requested | nlx_48903, r3d100011236 | https://doi.org/10.17616/R3J048 | SCR_006949 | 2026-02-14 02:01:24 | 39 | ||||
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HUPO Brain Proteome Project Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
HUPO Brain Proteome Project (RRID:SCR_007302) | HBPP | data or information resource, portal, topical portal | An open international project under the patronage of the Human Proteome Organisation (HUPO) that aims: To analyze the brain proteome of human as well as mouse models in healthy, neurodiseased and aged status with focus on Alzheimer's and Parkinson's Disease; To perform quantitative proteomics as well as complementary gene expression profiling on disease-related brain areas and bodily fluids; To advance knowledge of neurodiseases and aging in order to push new diagnostic approaches and medications; To exchange knowledge and data with other HUPO projects and national / international initiatives in the neuroproteomic field; To make neuroproteomic research and its results available in the scientific community and society. Recent work has shown that standards in proteomics and especially in bioinformatics are mandatory to allow comparable analyses, but still missing. To address this challenge, the HUPO BPP is closely working together with the HUPO Proteome Standards Initiative (HUPO PSI). | molecular neuroanatomy resource, brain, proteome, gene expression, expression profiling, proteomics, standard | has parent organization: HUPO - Human Proteome Organisation | Healthy, Neurodiseased, Aged, Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, Aging | BMBF | nif-0000-00173 | SCR_007302 | Human Brain Proteom Project, HUPO BPP | 2026-02-14 02:01:30 | 1 | ||||||
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IXI dataset Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
IXI dataset (RRID:SCR_005839) | IXI dataset | data set, data or information resource, portal, project portal | Data set of nearly 600 MR images from normal, healthy subjects, along with demographic characteristics, collected as part of the Information eXtraction from Images (IXI) project available for download. Tar files containing T1, T2, PD, MRA and DTI (15 directions) scans from these subjects are available. The data has been collected at three different hospitals in London: * Hammersmith Hospital using a Philips 3T system * Guy''s Hospital using a Philips 1.5T system * Institute of Psychiatry using a GE 1.5T system | neuroimaging, structural mri assay, magnetic resonance angiography, nifti, t1, t2, pd, dti, demographic, normal, healthy, adult, mri, brain, image collection |
is used by: NIF Data Federation has parent organization: Imperial College London; London; United Kingdom |
Normal, Healthy | EPSRC GR/S21533/02 | Acknowledgement requested | nlx_149360 | http://brain-development.org/ | SCR_005839 | Information eXtraction from Images dataset | 2026-02-14 02:01:10 | 28 | ||||
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RLS Foundation Brain Bank Resource Report Resource Website |
RLS Foundation Brain Bank (RRID:SCR_005089) | RLS Foundation Brain Bank | biomaterial supply resource, material resource, tissue bank, brain bank | The Restless Legs Syndrome Foundation established the RLS Foundation Brain Bank at the Harvard Brain Tissue Resource Center in 2000. A part of the Harvard University medical system, the Center (housed at McLean Hospital and commonly referred to as The Brain Bank) began in 1978 as a centralized resource for the collection and distribution of human brain specimens for research and diagnostic studies. Over the years, hundreds of scientists from the nation''s top research and medical centers have requested tissue from The Brain Bank for their investigations. Because most of these studies can be carried out on a very small amount of tissue, each donated brain provides a large number of samples for many researchers. For comparative purposes, brain tissue is needed from healthy individuals, as well as from those who had RLS. When possible, a small portion of frozen tissue taken from each brain donated to the RLS Foundation Collection will be kept available to serve as a resource for future genetic testing. The process of donating your brain to RLS research is broken down into 5 steps. To view these steps, please read our Process Steps in RLS Brain Tissue Collection. To read about the process of donating brain tissue for research, visit our Brain Bank Tissue Donation page. | restless legs syndrome, healthy, normal control, brain tissue, brain, tissue, frozen, quick frozen, passive frozen, formalin fixed, paraffin embedded, post-mortem |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing has parent organization: RLS Foundation has parent organization: Harvard Brain Tissue Resource Center has parent organization: Harvard Medical School; Massachusetts; USA |
Restless Legs Syndrome, Healthy, Normal control | Public (non-commercial?): Over the years, Hundreds of scientists from the nation''s top research and medical centers have requested tissue from The Brain Bank for their investigations. | nlx_144146 | SCR_005089 | RLS Foundation Brain Bank Tissue Collection, Restless Legs Syndrome Foundation Brain Bank, RLS Foundation Research Brain Bank | 2026-02-14 02:01:04 | 0 | ||||||
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Ear Lab Resource Report Resource Website |
Ear Lab (RRID:SCR_002531) | Earlab | laboratory portal, data or information resource, organization portal, portal | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on January 13, 2026. Computationally oriented experimental laboratory interested in the encoding of auditory information in the cerebral cortex and brainstem, and in the mechanisms of tinnitus and the effect of various drugs (Lidocaine, steroids, anti-oxidants) in relieving noise trauma induced tinnitus. The ferret (Mustela putorius) and the rat serve as their system model. Through chronic implants, they obtain electrophysiological data from awake behaving animals in order to investigate the response properties and functional organization of the auditory system, both in health and after noise trauma that induces tinnitus in rats. Projects: * Response Modulation to Ongoing Broadband Sounds in Primary Auditory Cortex * Neuronal Response Characteristics in the Inferior Colliculus of the Awake Ferret and Rat * Spectro-Temporal Representation of Feature Onsets in Primary Auditory Cortex * Targeting the changes in inferior colliculus induced by tinnitus | ear, auditory, cerebral cortex, behavior, health, noise, trauma, research, engineering, primary auditory cortex, neuron, brainstem, tinnitus, drug, lidocaine, steroid, anti-oxidant, computation, auditory system, sound, mustela putorius, inferior colliculus | has parent organization: University of Maryland; Maryland; USA | Tinnitus, Healthy | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-00404 | SCR_002531 | the ear lab | 2026-02-14 02:00:25 | 0 | ||||||
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Cardiovascular Model Repository Resource Report Resource Website |
Cardiovascular Model Repository (RRID:SCR_002679) | data repository, storage service resource, image collection, data or information resource, service resource | Repository of geometric models collected from on-going and past research projects in the Cardiovascular Biomechanics Research Laboratory at Stanford University. The geometric models are mostly built from imaging data of healthy and diseased individuals. For each of the models, a short description is given with a reference. The geometric models are in VTK PolyData XML .vtp format. * Audience: Biomechanical and computational researchers interested in complex models of cardiovascular applications * Long Term Goals and Related Uses: Allow users to download geometric models for cardiovascular applications. These geometric models can be used for research purposes, such as meshing and scientific visualization. Users are welcome to contact the project administrator, join the project and contribute additional models. | aneurysm, arteriofemoral bypass, cardiovascular simulation, image-based geometric modeling, simvascular, stent, vtk, healthy, diseased, normal, cardiovascular, model, cardiovascular model, cardiovascular system, bypass, palmaz-stent, aorta, source code |
is listed by: Biositemaps has parent organization: Simtk.org |
Normal, Cardiovascular disease, Healthy | Free, Available for download, Freely available | nif-0000-23301 | SCR_002679 | 2026-02-14 02:00:26 | 0 | ||||||||
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CCHMC Pediatric Brain Templates Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
CCHMC Pediatric Brain Templates (RRID:SCR_003276) | Pediatric Brain Templates | data or information resource, image collection, atlas, reference atlas | Brain imaging data collected from a large population of normal, healthy children that have been used to construct pediatric brain templates, which can be used within statistical parametric mapping for spatial normalization, tissue segmentation and visualization of imaging study results. The data has been processed and compiled in various ways to accommodate a wide range of possible research approaches. The templates are made available free of charge to all interested parties for research purposes only. When processing imaging data from children, it is important to take into account the fact that the pediatric brain differs significantly from the adult brain. Therefore, optimized processing requires appropriate reference data be used because adult reference data will introduce a systematic bias into the results. We have shown that, in the in the case of spatial normalization, the amount of non-linear deformation is dramatically less when a pediatric template is used (left, see also HBM 2002; 17:48-60). We could also show that tissue composition is substantially different between adults and children, and more so the younger the children are (right, see also MRM 2003; 50:749-757). We thus believe that the use of pediatric reference data might be more appropriate. | brain, child, human, normal, pediatric, spatial normalization, template, tissue segmentation, visualization, young human, neuroimaging | is related to: SPM | Normal, Healthy | Free, Freely available | nif-0000-01274 | https://jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/wa-jisc.exe?A2=SPM;981fd215.02 | SCR_003276 | 2026-02-14 02:00:25 | 3 | ||||||
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NIH MRI Study of Normal Brain Development Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
NIH MRI Study of Normal Brain Development (RRID:SCR_003394) | Pediatric MRI Study | data or information resource, experimental protocol, narrative resource, data set | Data sets of clinical / behavioral and image data are available for download by qualified researchers from a seven year, multi-site, longitudinal study using magnetic resonance technologies to study brain maturation in healthy, typically-developing infants, children, and adolescents and to correlate brain development with cognitive and behavioral development. The information obtained in this study is expected to provide essential data for understanding the course of normal brain development as a basis for understanding atypical brain development associated with a variety of developmental, neurological, and neuropsychiatric disorders affecting children and adults. This study enrolled over 500 children, ranging from infancy to young adulthood. The goal was to study each participant at least three times over the course of the project at one of six Pediatric Centers across the United States. Brain MR and clinical/behavioral data have been compiled and analyzed at a Data Coordinating Center and Clinical Coordinating Center. Additionally, MR spectroscopy and DTI data are being analyzed. The study was organized around two objectives corresponding to two age ranges at the time of enrollment, each with its own protocols. * Objective 1 enrolled children ages 4 years, 6 months through 18 years (total N = 433). This sample was recruited across the six Pediatric Study Centers using community based sampling to reflect the demographics of the United States in terms of income, race, and ethnicity. The subjects were studied with both imaging and clinical/behavioral measures at two year intervals for three time points. * Objective 2 enrolled newborns, infants, toddlers, and preschoolers from birth through 4 years, 5 months, who were studied three or more times at two Pediatric Study Centers at intervals ranging from three months for the youngest subjects to one year as the children approach the Objective 1 age range. Both imaging and clinical/behavioral measures were collected at each time point. Participant recruitment used community based sampling that included hospital venues (e.g., maternity wards and nurseries, satellite physician offices, and well-child clinics), community organizations (e.g., day-care centers, schools, and churches), and siblings of children participating in other research at the Pediatric Study Centers. At timepoint 1, of those enrolled, 114 children had T1 scans that passed quality control checks. Staged data release plan: The first data release included structural MR images and clinical/behavioral data from the first assessments, Visit 1, for Objective 1. A second data release included structural MRI and clinical/behavioral data from the second visit for Objective 1. A third data release included structural MRI data for both Objective 1 and 2 and all time points, as well as preliminary spectroscopy data. A fourth data release added cortical thickness, gyrification and cortical surface data. Yet to be released are longitudinally registered anatomic MRI data and diffusion tensor data. A collaborative effort among the participating centers and NIH resulted in age-appropriate MR protocols and clinical/behavioral batteries of instruments. A summary of this protocol is available as a Protocol release document. Details of the project, such as study design, rationale, recruitment, instrument battery, MRI acquisition details, and quality controls can be found in the study protocol. Also available are the MRI procedure manual and Clinical/Behavioral procedure manuals for Objective 1 and Objective 2. | young human, child, pediatric, experimental protocol, brain, brain development, development, mri, minc, clinical, behavior, anatomical mri, diffusion tensor imaging, mr spectroscopy, adolescent, clinical data, behavioral data, data visualization software, clinical measure, behavioral measure, physical neurological examination, behavioral rating, neuropsychological testing, structured psychiatric interview, hormonal measure, image collection, neonate, clinical neuroinformatics, dicom, minc2, magnetic resonance, nifti |
is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC) is listed by: Biositemaps is listed by: NIH Data Sharing Repositories is related to: NIH Data Sharing Repositories has parent organization: National Institutes of Health |
Healthy, Normal | NICHD ; NIDA ; NIMH ; NINDS ; NIH Blueprint for Neuroscience Research |
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-00201 | http://www.bic.mni.mcgill.ca/nihpd/info/, https://nihpd.crbs.ucsd.edu/nihpd/info/index.html | SCR_003394 | NIH Pediatric MRI Data Repository, Pediatric MRI Data Repository | 2026-02-14 02:00:26 | 6 | ||||
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Harvard - Oxford Cortical Structural Atlas Resource Report Resource Website 100+ mentions |
Harvard - Oxford Cortical Structural Atlas (RRID:SCR_001476) | Atlases | data or information resource, atlas, reference atlas | Probabilistic atlases covering 48 cortical and 21 subcortical structural areas, derived from structural data and segmentations kindly provided by the Harvard Center for Morphometric Analysis. T1-weighted images of 21 healthy male and 16 healthy female subjects (ages 18-50) were individually segmented by the CMA using semi-automated tools developed in-house. The T1-weighted images were affine-registered to MNI152 space using FLIRT (FSL), and the transforms then applied to the individual labels. Finally, these were combined across subjects to form population probability maps for each label. Segmentations used to create these atlases were provided by: David Kennedy and Christian Haselgrove, Centre for Morphometric Analysis, Harvard; Bruce Fischl, the Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, MGH; Janis Breeze and Jean Frazier from the Child and Adolescent Neuropsychiatric Research Program, Cambridge Health Alliance; Larry Seidman and Jill Goldstein from the Department of Psychiatry of Harvard Medical School. | male, female, t1-weighted image, cortical, subcortical, neuroanatomy, cortex |
has parent organization: Harvard University; Cambridge; United States is a plug in for: FSL |
Healthy | NCRR R01 RR16594-01A1; NIMH K01 MH01798; NINDS R01 NS052585-01; NIMH K08 MH01573 |
Free, Freely available | nlx_152707 | SCR_001476 | , Harvard Oxford Cortical Structural Atlas, Harvard-Oxford cortical and subcortical structural atlases, Harvard Oxford Atlas | 2026-02-14 02:05:01 | 144 | |||||
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Spatially unbiased atlas template of the cerebellum and brainstem Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
Spatially unbiased atlas template of the cerebellum and brainstem (RRID:SCR_004969) | SUIT | data or information resource, software resource, atlas, reference atlas | High-resolution atlas template of the human cerebellum and brainstem, based on the anatomy of 20 young healthy individuals. The atlas is spatially unbiased, i.e. the location of each structure is equal to the expected location of that structure across individuals in MNI space. At the same time, the new template preserves the anatomical detail of cerebellar structures through a nonlinear atlas-generation algorithm. By using automated nonlinear normalization methods, a more accurate intersubject-alignment than current whole-brain methods can be achieved. The toolbox allows you to: * Automatically isolate cerebellar structures from the cerebral cortex based on an anatomical image * Achieve accurate anatomical normalization of cerebellar structures * Normalize functional imaging data for fMRI group analysis * Normalize focal cerebellar lesions for lesion-symptom mapping * Use Voxel-based morphometry (VBM) to determine patterns of cerebellar degeneration or growth * Use a probabilisitc atlas in SUIT space to assign locations to different cerebellar lobuli in an unbiased and informed way * Automatically define ROIs for specific cerebellar lobuli and summarize function and anatomical data * Improve normalization of the deep cerebellar nuclei using an ROI-driven normalization. The suit-toolbox requires Matlab (Version 6.5 and higher) and SPM. The newest version only supports SPM8, although it likely runs under SPM2 or 5 as well. A standalone version for the suit-toolbox is not planned. Usage of the isolation or normalization functions, however, does not require that the analysis is conducted under SPM. | human, cerebellum, brainstem | has parent organization: UCL Motor Control Group | Healthy | PMID:20965257 PMID:16904911 |
The template and software are freely available as an Open unspecified license SPM-toolbox. | nlx_144300 | SCR_004969 | Spatially unbiased atlas template of the cerebellum brainstem, A spatially unbiased atlas template of the cerebellum brainstem (SUIT), A spatially unbiased atlas template of the cerebellum and brainstem, A spatially unbiased atlas template of the cerebellum and brainstem (SUIT), A spatially unbiased atlas template of the cerebellum brainstem | 2026-02-14 02:05:20 | 28 | |||||
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NIMH Brain Tissue Collection Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
NIMH Brain Tissue Collection (RRID:SCR_008726) | NIMH Brain Bank | biomaterial supply resource, material resource, tissue bank, brain bank | A collection of brain tissue from individuals suffering from schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, depression, anxiety disorders, and substance abuse, as well as healthy individuals. The research mission of the NIMH Brain Bank is to better understand the underlying biological mechanisms and pathways that contribute to schizophrenia and other neuropsychiatric disorders, as well as to study normal human brain development. | schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, depressive disorder, anxiety disorder, substance abuse, healthy, neurological disorder, mental disease, suicide, tourette's syndrome, dementia, brain development, brain, brain tissue, tissue, post-mortem, normal control, ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00001260 |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing has parent organization: NIMH Intramural Research Program Clinical Brain Disorders Branch |
Schizophrenia, Bipolar Disorder, Depressiive Disorder, Anxiety Disorder, Drug Abuse, Healthy, Neurological disorder, Mental disease, Suicide, Tourette's Syndrome, Dementia, Normal control, Aging | NIMH | Samples available to investigators approved by an NIMH Oversight Committee, Molecular and genetic data available to the scientific community | nlx_143684 | http://cbdb.nimh.nih.gov/neuropath.htm | SCR_008726 | 2026-02-14 02:04:48 | 1 | |||||
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anage Resource Report Resource Website 100+ mentions |
anage (RRID:SCR_001470) | AnAge | data or information resource, database | Curated database of aging and life history in animals, including extensive longevity records and complementary traits for > 4000 vertebrate species. AnAge was primarily developed for comparative biology studies, in particular studies of longevity and aging, but can also be useful for ecological and conservation studies and as a reference for zoos and field biologists. | senescence, comparative biology, longevity |
is used by: Aging Portal is used by: NIF Data Federation has parent organization: Human Ageing Genomic Resources |
Healthy aging, Aging, Healthy | PMID:23193293 | Free, Freely Available | nlx_152700 | SCR_001470 | Animal Ageing and Longevity Database, AnAge Database of Animal Ageing and Longevity, AnAge: The Animal Ageing and Longevity Database | 2026-02-14 02:06:02 | 144 | |||||
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BraVa Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
BraVa (RRID:SCR_001407) | BraVa | data or information resource, database | A database of digital reconstructions of the human brain arterial arborizations from 61 healthy adult subjects along with extracted morphological measurements. The arterial arborizations include the six major trees stemming from the circle of Willis, namely: the left and right Anterior Cerebral Arteries (ACAs), Middle Cerebral Arteries (MCAs), and Posterior Cerebral Arteries (PCAs). | digital reconstruction, morphometric analysis, cerebrum, arterial vasculature, magnetic resonance angiography, adult human, morphology, artery, arborization, circle of willis, cerebral artery, male, female, magnetic resonance |
is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC) is related to: Bravissima has parent organization: George Mason University: Krasnow Institute for Advanced Study |
Healthy | NINDS NS39600; NIBIB EB001955; NINDS NS061770; NIMH P20 MH52176 |
PMID:23727319 | Free, Freely Available | nlx_152630 | http://www.nitrc.org/projects/breva | SCR_001407 | 2026-02-14 02:06:04 | 8 |
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