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SciCrunch Registry is a curated repository of scientific resources, with a focus on biomedical resources, including tools, databases, and core facilities - visit SciCrunch to register your resource.
| Resource Name | Proper Citation | Abbreviations | Resource Type |
Description |
Keywords | Resource Relationships | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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VoxBo Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
VoxBo (RRID:SCR_002166) | VoxBo | data processing software, software application, image processing software, software resource, image analysis software | Software package for brain image manipulation and analysis, focusing on fMRI and lesion analysis. VoxBo can be used independently or in conjunction with other packages. It provides GLM-based statistical tools, an architecture for interoperability with other tools (they encourage users to incorporate SPM and FSL into their processing pipelines), an automation system, a system for parallel distributed computing, numerous stand-alone tools, decent wiki-based documentation, and lots more. | fmri, neuroimaging, brain, functional, statistical, volume, preprocessing, analysis, display, format conversion, linear, three dimensional display, workflow, lesion, analyze, c++, console (text based), dicom, image display, linux, macos, microsoft, magnetic resonance, nifti, no input/output (daemon), overlap metrics, posix/unix-like, quantification, regression, resampling, sinc function interpolation, spatial transformation, statistical operation, visualization, windows |
is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC) is listed by: Biositemaps is listed by: Debian has parent organization: neurodebian |
NIDA R01DA014418; NIMH R01MH073529 |
PMID:22348882 | Free, Available for download, Freely available | nif-0000-00353 | https://sources.debian.org/src/voxbo/ https://github.com/kimberg/voxbo |
http://www.voxbo.org/ | SCR_002166 | 2026-02-13 10:54:59 | 13 | ||||
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Human Brain Project EU Resource Report Resource Website 50+ mentions |
Human Brain Project EU (RRID:SCR_002241) | HBP EU, HBP, European HBP, | funding resource, data or information resource, organization portal, portal | Global, collaborative effort for neuroscience, medicine and computing to understand brain, its diseases and its computational capabilities. Goal is to obtain access to research, data sources, platforms and infrastructures offered by other organisations, and enabling organizations outside HBP to use HBP platforms to pursue their own research. Coordinating these activities is the responsibility of the European Research Programme. | brain, ethics, neuroscience, medicine, computing, treatment, brain disease, neuroinformatics, software development, computational modeling, software, connectomics |
is related to: BigBrain is related to: Julich-Brain Cytoarchitectonic Atlas is parent organization of: subcellular application is parent organization of: Subcellular App |
Restricted | nlx_155553 | SCR_002241 | European Human Brain Project | 2026-02-13 10:55:00 | 67 | |||||||
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Washington University School of Medicine Knight Alzheimers Disease Research Center Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Washington University School of Medicine Knight Alzheimers Disease Research Center (RRID:SCR_000210) | ADRC, Knight ADRC | material resource, portal, data or information resource, organization portal, brain bank, biomaterial supply resource, tissue bank | The Charles F. and Joanne Knight Alzheimer Disease Research Center (Knight ADRC) supports researchers and our surrounding community in their pursuit of answers that will lead to improved diagnosis and care for persons with Alzheimer disease (AD). The Center is committed to the long-term goal of finding a way to effectively treat and prevent AD. The Knight ADRC facilitates advanced research on the clinical, genetic, neuropathological, neuroanatomical, biomedical, psychosocial, and neuropsychological aspects of Alzheimer disease, as well as other related brain disorders. | genetic, alzheimers disease, biomedical, brain, clinical, cure, dementia, development, disease, neuroanatomical, neurodegenerative disease, neuropathological, neuropsychological, research, senile, treatment, aging |
has parent organization: Washington University in St. Louis; Missouri; USA is parent organization of: Washington University School of Medicine Knight ADRC Request Center Resources Core Facility |
Alzheimer's disease, Dementia, Aging | NIA P50 AG05681 | Available to affiliated researchers, Public | SCR_008779, nif-0000-11285, nlx_144153 | SCR_000210 | Knight Alzheimers Disease Research Center, Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis Knight ADRC, ADRC, WU Knight ADRC, WUADRC, Knight ADRC, Knight Alzheimer's Disease Research Center, Charles F. and Joanne Knight Alzheimer's Disease Research Center | 2026-02-13 10:54:38 | 2 | |||||
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International Consortium for Brain Mapping Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
International Consortium for Brain Mapping (RRID:SCR_000445) | ICBM | data or information resource, atlas, reference atlas, database | Probabilistic reference system for human brain, including tools to establish this reference system for structural and functional anatomy on both macroscopic (in vivo) and microscopic (post mortem) levels. Project has expanded neuroinformatics tools for data sharing and created Conforming Site System that allows laboratories worldwide to contribute data to evolving atlas. Through implementation of ICBM data sharing policy space, they are fostering data exchange while still providing for scientific credit assignment and subject confidentiality.ICBM atlas collection consists of ICBM Template, tool developed to provide reference that includes both set of coordinates and associated anatomical labels; the ICBM 452 T1 atlas, average of T1-weighted MRIs of normal young adult brains, ICBM probabilistic atlases, and Cytoarchitectonic Atlas. ICBM Subject Database is web-based database infrastructure that simplifies image dataset collection, organization and dissemination. Authorized users may view representations of data and form collections of datasets that can be downloaded or fed directly into Pipeline environment for distributed processing and analysis. | Brain atlases, fmri, genetics, anatomy, architecture, atlas, brainstem, cerebellum, cortex, gray matter, histology, imaging, map, morphology, mri, neuroinformatics, pet, receptor, segmentation, subcortical, volume, warping, white matter, brain, early adult human, structural anatomy, functional anatomy, in vivo, post mortem, neuroanatomy, image collection |
is related to: MINC/Atlases has parent organization: Laboratory of Neuro Imaging |
NIMH | PMID:9343592 PMID:11522763 |
Free, Freely available | nif-0000-00103, SCR_001948, nif-0000-00041 | https://resource.loni.usc.edu/ | http://www.loni.ucla.edu/ICBM/Databases/, http://www.loni.usc.edu/ICBM/ | SCR_000445 | , ICBM Subject Database, ICBM - International Consortium for Brain Mapping, International Consortium for Brain Mapping (ICBM), ICBM Atlas | 2026-02-13 10:54:40 | 6 | |||
|
Talairach Daemon Resource Report Resource Website 100+ mentions |
Talairach Daemon (RRID:SCR_000448) | talairach.org | data or information resource, atlas, software application, software resource, database | Software automated coordinate based system to retrieve brain labels from the 1988 Talairach Atlas. Talairach Daemon database contains anatomical names for brain areas using x-y-z coordinates defined by the 1988 Talairach Atlas. | anatomical structure, atlas, fmri, pet, activation foci, cognition, talairach, human, brain, brain mapping, atlas application, database application, atlas application, database application, java, magnetic resonance, os independent, label, probability map, FASEB list |
is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC) is listed by: Biositemaps is related to: WFU PickAtlas has parent organization: University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio; Texas; USA |
EJLB Foundation ; Human Brain Project |
PMID:10912591 | Free, Available for download, Freely available | nif-0000-00042 | http://www.nitrc.org/projects/tal-daemon | SCR_000448 | Talairach Software | 2026-02-13 10:54:40 | 383 | ||||
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Pediatric Brain Tumor Consortium Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Pediatric Brain Tumor Consortium (RRID:SCR_000658) | PBTC | data or information resource, organization portal, portal, consortium | The PEDIATRIC BRAIN TUMOR CONSORTIUM (PBTC) is a multidisciplinary cooperative research organization devoted to the study of correlative tumor biology and new therapies for primary CNS tumors of childhood. PBTC's mission is to contribute rapidly and effectively to the understanding and cure of these tumors through the conduct of multi-center, multidisciplinary, innovative studies with designs and analyses based on uniformly high quality statistical science. While the primary mission of the PBTC is to identify through laboratory and clinical science superior treatment strategies for children with brain cancers, the PBTC investigators recognize their profound responsibility to meet the special needs of the children and families as they face this enormous challenge. Members are committed to working within their institutions and communities to improve support services and follow up care for these patients and their families. The PBTC's primary objective is to rapidly conduct novel phase I and II clinical evaluations of new therapeutic drugs, new biological therapies, treatment delivery technologies and radiation treatment strategies in children from infancy to 21 years of age with primary central nervous system (CNS) tumors. A second objective is to characterize reliable markers and predictors (direct or surrogate) of brain tumors' responses to new therapies. The Consortium conducts research on brain tumor specimens in the laboratory to further understand the biology of pediatric brain tumors. A third objective is to develop and coordinate innovative neuro-imaging techniques. Through the PBTC's Neuro-Imaging Center, formed in May 2000, research to evaluate new treatment response criteria and neuro-imaging methods to understand regional brain effects is in progress. These imaging techniques can also advance understanding of significant neuro-toxicity in a developing child's central nervous system. The Neuro-Imaging Center is supported in part by private sources - grants from foundations and non-profit organizations - in addition to the NCI. As an NCI funded Consortium, the Pediatric Brain Tumor Consortium (PBTC) is required to make research data available to other investigators for use in research projects. An investigator who wishes to use individual patient data from one or more of the Consortium's completed and published studies must submit in writing a description of the research project, the PBTC studies from which data are requested, the specific data requested, and a list of investigators involved with the project and their affiliated research institutions. A copy of the requesting investigator's CV must also be provided. Participating Institutions: Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Children's National Medical Center (Washington, DC), Children's Memorial Hospital (Chicago), Duke University, National Cancer Institute, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Texas Children's Cancer Center, University of California at San Francisco, and University of Pittsburgh. | human, child, pediatric, brain, tumor, cancer, brain cancer, central nervous system, imaging | NCI | grid.477819.4, nlx_143885 | https://ror.org/00hj21c17 | SCR_000658 | 2026-02-13 10:54:43 | 1 | ||||||||
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Autism Tissue Program Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
Autism Tissue Program (RRID:SCR_000651) | ATP | portal, data or information resource, funding resource, disease-related portal, database, topical portal | Autism research program that makes available post-mortem brain tissue to qualified scientists all over the world. Working directly with tissue banks, organ procurement agencies, medical examiners and the general public, this is the largest program dedicated to increasing and enhancing the availability of post-mortem brain tissue for basic research in autism. To date, the ATP has collected and stored more than 170 brains in their repositories at Harvard (US) and Oxford (UK). These brains are processed by formalin fixation and/or snap frozen to properly provide high quality tissue of all brain regions, in support of biological research in autism. The ATP is unique in that they diligently pursue all available clinical data (pre and post mortem) on tissue donors in order to create the most biologically relevant brain repository for autism research. These data, together with tissue resources from both banks and associated repositories, are presented to all interested researchers through their extensive web-based data portal (login required). The ATP is not a brain bank, but works directly with the Harvard Brain Tissue Resource Center in Boston (HBTRC), Massachusetts to serve as its tissue repository. This program augments brain bank functions by: * Creating the most biologically relevant brain tissue repository possible * Fully covering all costs associated with brain extraction and transfer to the repositories at Harvard (US and Canada) and Oxford (UK). * Providing scientific oversight of tissue distributions * Overseeing and managing all tissue grants * Clinically phenotyping and acquiring extensive medical data on all of their donors * Providing continuing family support and communication to all of their donors * Directly supporting researchers to facilitate autism research * Maintaining a robust web based data management and secure on-line global interface system * Developing and supporting ATP established scientific initiatives * Actively providing public outreach and education The ATP is not a clinical organ procurement agency, but rather they facilitate the wishes of donors and families to donate their tissue to autism research. Through the ATP's established international infrastructure, they work with any accredited tissue bank, organ procurement agency, or medical examiner that receives a family's request to donate their loved one's tissue to the program. Once contacted, the ATP will insure that the family's request to donate their loved one's tissue is faithfully met, covering all costs to the family and partnering agency as well as ensuring the tissues' proper and rapid transport to the ATP's repository at the Harvard Brain Tissue Resource Center (HBTRC) in Boston, Massachusetts. | autism, brain, tissue, clinical data, post-mortem, brain tissue, donate, brain donation, autism spectrum disorder, pervasive development disorder, formalin fixation, snap frozen, tissue section, stained slide, dna, skin fibroblast culture, control, clinical, clinical neuroinformatics, imaging genomics, magnetic resonance, optical imaging, FASEB list |
is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC) has parent organization: Autism Speaks has parent organization: Harvard Brain Tissue Resource Center |
Autism, Autism spectrum disorder, Pervasive Development Disorder, Control | Autism Speaks | PMID:16933088 | Free, Freely available | nif-0000-10160 | http://www.brainbank.org/ http://www.autismtissueprogram.org/site/c.nlKUL7MQIsG/b.5183271/k.BD86/Home.htm |
SCR_000651 | 2026-02-13 10:54:42 | 28 | ||||
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NIH Blueprint for Neuroscience Research Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
NIH Blueprint for Neuroscience Research (RRID:SCR_003670) | NIH Blueprint, Blueprint, | training resource, portal, data or information resource, funding resource, topical portal | Collaborative framework that includes the NIH Office of the Director and the 14 NIH Institutes and Centers that support research on the nervous system. By pooling resources and expertise, the Blueprint identifies cross-cutting areas of research, and confronts challenges too large for any single Institute or Center. The Blueprint makes collaboration a day-to-day part of how the NIH does business in neuroscience, complementing the basic missions of Blueprint partners. During each fiscal year, the partners contribute a small percentage of their funds to a common pool. Since the Blueprint's inception in 2004, this pool has comprised less than 1 percent of the total neuroscience research budget of the partners. In 2009, the Blueprint Grand Challenges were launched to catalyze research with the potential to transform our basic understanding of the brain and our approaches to treating brain disorders. * The Human Connectome Project is an effort to map the connections within the healthy brain. It is expected to help answer questions about how genes influence brain connectivity, and how this in turn relates to mood, personality and behavior. The investigators will collect brain imaging data, plus genetic and behavioral data from 1,200 adults. They are working to optimize brain imaging techniques to see the brain's wiring in unprecedented detail. * The Grand Challenge on Pain supports research to understand the changes in the nervous system that cause acute, temporary pain to become chronic. The initiative is supporting multi-investigator projects to partner researchers in the pain field with researchers in the neuroplasticity field. * The Blueprint Neurotherapeutics Network is helping small labs develop new drugs for nervous system disorders. The Network provides research funding, plus access to millions of dollars worth of services and expertise to assist in every step of the drug development process, from laboratory studies to preparation for clinical trials. Project teams across the U.S. have received funding to pursue drugs for conditions from vision loss to neurodegenerative disease to depression. Since its inception in 2004, the Blueprint has supported the development of new resources, tools and opportunities for neuroscientists. For example, the Blueprint supports several training programs to help students pursue interdisciplinary areas of neuroscience, and to bring students from underrepresented groups into the neurosciences. The Blueprint also funds efforts to develop new approaches to teaching neuroscience through K-12 instruction, museum exhibits and web-based platforms. From fiscal years 2007 to 2009, the Blueprint focused on three major themes of neuroscience - neurodegeneration, neurodevelopment, and neuroplasticity. These efforts enabled unique funding opportunities and training programs, and helped establish new resources including the Blueprint Non-Human Primate Brain Atlas. | animal model, collaboration, computational biology, imaging tool, initiative, neurodegeneration, neurodevelopment, neuroinformatics, brain, brain disorder, pain, drug, nervous system disorder, neurotherapeutics, neuroplasticity, neuroscience |
has parent organization: National Institutes of Health is parent organization of: CRE Driver Network is parent organization of: Blueprint Neurotherapeutics Network is parent organization of: National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine is parent organization of: National Eye Institute (NEI) Commons is parent organization of: National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering is parent organization of: National Institute of Nursing Research is parent organization of: National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism is parent organization of: National Institute on Drug Abuse is parent organization of: National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders is parent organization of: National Institute of General Medical Sciences is parent organization of: National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research is parent organization of: Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research is parent organization of: National Institute of Child Health and Human Development is parent organization of: National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences is parent organization of: National Institute of Mental Health is parent organization of: National Institute on Aging is parent organization of: National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke is parent organization of: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC) |
nif-0000-00219 | SCR_003670 | Neuroscience Blueprint | 2026-02-13 10:55:17 | 9 | ||||||||
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AgedBrainSYSBIO Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
AgedBrainSYSBIO (RRID:SCR_003825) | AgedBrainSYSBIO | data or information resource, organization portal, portal, consortium | Consortium focused on identifying the foundational pathways responsible for the aging of the brain, with a focus on Late Onset Alzheimer's disease. They aim to identify the interactions through which the aging phenotype develops in normal and in disease conditions; modeling novel pathways and their evolutionary properties to design experiments that identify druggable targets. As early steps of neurodegenerative disorders are expected to impact synapse function the project will focus in particular on pre- or postsynaptic protein networks. The concept is to identify subsets of pathways with two unique druggable hallmarks, the validation of interactions occurring locally in subregions of neurons and a human and/or primate accelerated evolutionary signature. The consortium will do this through six approaches: * identification of interacting protein networks from recent Late-Onset Alzheimer Disease-Genome Wide Association Studies (LOAD-GWAS) data, * experimental validation of interconnected networks working in subregion of a neuron (such as dendrites and dendritic spines), * inclusion of these experimentally validated networks in larger networks obtained from available databases to extend possible protein interactions, * identification of human and/or primate positive selection either in coding or in regulatory gene sequences, * manipulation of these human and/or primate accelerated evolutionary interacting proteins in human neurons derived from induced Pluripotent Stem Cells (iPSCs) * modeling predictions in drosophila and novel mouse transgenic models * validation of new druggable targets and markers as a proof-of-concept towards the prevention and cure of aging cognitive defects. The scientists will share results and know-how on Late-Onset Alzheimer Disease-Genome Wide Association Studies (LOAD-GWAS) gene discovery, comparative functional genomics in mouse and drosophila models, in mouse transgenic approaches, research on human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSC) and their differentiation in vitro and modeling pathways with emphasis on comparative and evolutionary aspects. The four European small to medium size enterprises (SMEs) involved will bring their complementary expertise and will ensure translation of project results to clinical application. | consortium, drug, drug development, brain, phenotype, presynaptic, protein network, postsynaptic, systems biology, synapse, neuron, protein interaction, network, induced pluripotent stem cell, pathway, genome wide association study, cognitive defect, gene, protein |
is listed by: Consortia-pedia is related to: Pasteur Institute of Lille; Lille; France is related to: Mouse Clinical Institute; Alsace; France is related to: Hybrigenics is related to: Inserm Transfert is related to: VIB; Flanders; Belgium is related to: Quretec is related to: Gene Bridges is related to: European Bioinformatics Institute is related to: Tel Aviv University; Ramat Aviv; Israel is related to: SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics is related to: Babraham Institute has parent organization: National Institute of Health and Medical Research; Rennes; France has parent organization: Inserm Transfert |
European Union FP7 305299 | nlx_158132 | SCR_003825 | 2026-02-13 10:55:20 | 3 | ||||||||
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Essential Tremor Centralized Brain Repository Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Essential Tremor Centralized Brain Repository (RRID:SCR_004464) | ETCBR | biomaterial supply resource, material resource, tissue bank, brain bank | Finding a cure for any neurological disorder begins with the scientific study of the disorder''s causes, processes, and development in the brain. For essential tremor (ET), rigorous study of this kind had not been undertaken until 2003, when the Essential Tremor Centralized Brain Repository (ETCBR) was established at Columbia University. For the past five years, brain tissue from ET donors has been collected, processed and compared alongside age-matched control brains at the ETCBR, and already several significant findings have been made. However, there is still much to learn and a severe shortage of ET brains for scientific study. If you have been diagnosed with essential tremor, donating your brain tissue in the hours immediately after your death is of utmost importance in providing crucial information about what causes ET. Direct analysis of the shape and number of nerve cells and their content will provide medical researchers with the information they need in order to understand this complex illness. By advancing our medical knowledge of ET, the gift of brain tissue is a central piece of the puzzle in the search to develop better treatments and find a cure. | essential tremor, control, brain tissue, brain, tissue |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing has parent organization: Columbia University; New York; USA |
Essential tremor, Control | NIH | nlx_143745 | SCR_004464 | 2026-02-13 10:55:26 | 3 | |||||||
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National Alliance for Medical Image Computing Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
National Alliance for Medical Image Computing (RRID:SCR_004460) | NA-MIC, NAMIC | portal, data set, data or information resource, organization portal, software resource, narrative resource, training material | The National Alliance for Medical Image Computing (NA-MIC) is a multi-institutional, interdisciplinary team of computer scientists, software engineers, and medical investigators who develop computational tools for the analysis and visualization of medical image data. The purpose of the Center is to provide the infrastructure and environment for the development of computational algorithms and open-source technologies, and then oversee the training and dissemination of these tools to the medical research community. Electronic resources provided by NA-MIC include software, data, tutorials, presentations, and more. | tutorial, brain, presentation, documentation, image, medical, computational tool, imaging |
is related to: National Centers for Biomedical Computing has parent organization: National Centers for Biomedical Computing is parent organization of: SPHARM-PDM Toolbox is parent organization of: SpineSegmentation module for 3DSlicer is parent organization of: NA-MIC Kit |
NIH | PMID:22081219 PMID:27498015 |
nlx_45301 | SCR_004460 | 2026-02-13 10:55:26 | 9 | |||||||
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BrainSpan Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
BrainSpan (RRID:SCR_004219) | expression atlas, data or information resource, atlas | Atlas of developing human brain for studying transcriptional mechanisms involved in human brain development. One of the BrainSpan datasets, Exon microarray summarized to genes, is presented. It is a downloadable archive of files containing normalized RNA-Seq expression values for analysis. | brain, development, brain development, exon, microarray, gene, rna-seq, expression value, expression |
is used by: NIF Data Federation has parent organization: Allen Human Brain Atlas: BrainSpan (Atlas of the Developing Brain) |
Free, Freely available | nlx_98194, nlx_86215, SCR_004877, SCR_005029, SCR_004344, nlx_37081, nlx_2397 | http://brainspan.org/rnaseq/downloads.html?format=html http://brainspan.org/docs.html |
http://brainspan.org/docs.html | SCR_004219 | BrainSpan: RNA-Seq exons, BrainSpan - Exon microarray summarized to genes | 2026-02-13 10:55:23 | 2 | ||||||
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Rocky Mountain MS Center Tissue Bank Resource Report Resource Website |
Rocky Mountain MS Center Tissue Bank (RRID:SCR_004361) | Rocky Mountain MS Center Tissue Bank | biomaterial supply resource, material resource, tissue bank, brain bank | Scientists throughout the world depend on the Rocky Mountain MS Center Tissue Bank to supply high quality human brain tissue and cerebral spinal fluid to support their research. Funded in part by the National MS Society, the Tissue Bank is one of only four MS-related tissue banks in the nation. The Tissue Bank has distributed specimens to more than 160 investigators worldwide and over 1,600 people have consented to be donors after death. Tissue banks provide a unique bridge between those who live with MS and the scientific community. Studies conducted with samples from the Center have led to several important discoveries and 130 publications. While deeply personal, the decision to donate has far-reaching effects as scientists unlock the mysteries of multiple sclerosis. If you would like to donate, arrangements must be made in advance because it is important that tissue is taken within a few hours of death. For more information on making a donation, visit the How To Donate section of this website and contact the Rocky Mountain MS Center Tissue Bank at 303.788.4030 x111. | brain tissue, cerebral spinal fluid, research, multiple sclerosis, brain, tissue |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing has parent organization: Rocky Mountain MS Center |
Multiple Sclerosis | National MS Society | Public | nlx_143691 | SCR_004361 | Rocky Mountain Multiple Sclerosis Center Tissue Bank, Tissue Bank: Rocky Mountain MS Center | 2026-02-13 10:55:25 | 0 | |||||
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All In The Mind Resource Report Resource Website |
All In The Mind (RRID:SCR_004240) | data or information resource, podcast, narrative resource | Radio National''s weekly foray into all things mental a program (podcast) about the mind, brain and behavior, hosted by Lynne Malcolm (previously by Natasha Mitchell). From dreaming to depression, addiction to artificial intelligence, consciousness to coma, psychoanalysis to psychopathy, free will to forgetting ��All in the Mind��explores the human condition through the mind''s eye. All in the Mind brings together unexpected voices, themes and ideas and engages with both leading thinkers and personal stories. Psychology and human behavior are only part of the equation. The program''s scope is considerably broader and explores themes in science, religion, health, philosophy, education, history and pop culture, with the mind as the key focus. | mental, mind, brain, behavior, dream, depressive disorder, addiction, artificial intelligence, consciousness, coma, psychoanalysis, psychopathy, free will, forget, human, psychology, human behavior, science, religion, health, philosophy, education, history, pop culture |
is used by: NIF Data Federation is related to: Integrated Podcasts |
nlx_25223 | SCR_004240 | 2026-02-13 10:55:23 | 0 | ||||||||||
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Brain Science Podcast Resource Report Resource Website |
Brain Science Podcast (RRID:SCR_004491) | BSP | data or information resource, podcast, narrative resource | Podcast, hosted by Dr. Ginger Campbell, featuring the latest books about neuroscience as well as interviews with leading scientists from around the world. In this podcast, she shares recent discoveries from the world of neuroscience in a way that people of all backgrounds can enjoy. Dr. Campbell is an experienced emergency physician with a long-standing interest in mind-body medicine, the brain, and consciousness. She believes that understanding how the brain works gives us insight into what makes us human. She is also committed to showing how the scientific method has unraveled many long-standing mysteries. Brain Science Transcripts are also available. | neuroscience, brain, interview, consciousness, mind |
is used by: NIF Data Federation is related to: Integrated Podcasts |
nlx_47745 | SCR_004491 | 2026-02-13 10:55:27 | 0 | |||||||||
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Brain and Body Donation Program Resource Report Resource Website 100+ mentions |
Brain and Body Donation Program (RRID:SCR_004822) | BBDP | biomaterial supply resource, material resource, tissue bank, brain bank | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on January 11, 2023. An autopsy-based, research-devoted brain bank, biobank and biospecimen bank that derives its human donors from the Arizona Study of Aging and Neurodegenerative Disease (AZSAND), a longitudinal clinicopathological study of the health and diseases of elderly volunteers living in Maricopa county and metropolitan Phoenix, Arizona. Their function is studied during life and their organs and tissue after death. To date, they have concentrated their studies on Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, heart disease and cancer. They share the banked tissue, biomaterials and biospecimens with qualified researchers worldwide. Registrants with suitable scientific credentials will be allowed access to a database of available tissue linked to relevant clinical information, and will allow tissue requests to be initiated., THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 16,2025. | brain, late adult human, autopsy, mini mental state examination, neuropathological data, medical history, organ, tissue, brain, blood serum, cerebral spinal fluid, clinical, FASEB list |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing has parent organization: Banner Sun Health Research Institute |
Aging, Age-related disease, Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, Arthritis, Prostate cancer, Neurodegenerative disease, Cancer, Progressive supranuclear palsy, Hippocampal sclerosis, Vascular dementia, Dementia with Lewy bodies, Multiple system atrophy, Motor neuron disease, Frontotemporal lobar dementia, Corticobasal degeneration, Dementia, Cerebrovascular disease, Atherosclerosis, Renal hypertensive disease, Fatty liver, Type II diabetes | Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research ; Sun Health Foundation |
PMID:25619230 PMID:33143239 |
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nlx_80798 | http://www.bannerhealth.com/Research/Research+Institutes/Banner+Sun+Health+Research+Institute/Research/Research+Programs/Brain+and+Body+Donation/Brain+and+Tissue+Bank.htm | http://www.bannerhealth.com/Research/Research+Institutes/Banner+Sun+Health+Research+Institute/Ways+to+Give/Brain+and+Tissue/_Brain+and+Tissue.htm, http://www.bannerhealth.com/Research/Research+Institutes/Banner+Sun+Health+Research+Institute/Research/Research+Programs/Brain+and+Tissue/_Brain+and+Tissue.htm | SCR_004822 | Banner Sun Health Research Institute Brain and Tissue Bank, Banner Health Brain and Tissue Bank, Brain / Body Donation Program, Banner Brain and Tissue Bank, Banner Sun Health Research Institute Brain and Body Donation Program, Brain/Body Donation Program | 2026-02-13 10:55:31 | 121 | ||
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National Brain Tumor Society Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
National Brain Tumor Society (RRID:SCR_004744) | NBTS | portal, data or information resource, funding resource, disease-related portal, topical portal | National Brain Tumor Society (NBTS) is a nonprofit organization committed to finding a cure for brain tumors. We aggressively drive strategic research, advocate for public policies that meet the critical needs of the brain tumor community, and provide patient information. Headquartered in Watertown, Massachusetts, with offices in San Francisco, California and Wilmington, Delaware, we host activities throughout the United States. Formed in 2008 by the merger of two leading organizations that had served the brain tumor community, the National Brain Tumor Foundation and the Brain Tumor Society, the National Brain Tumor Society is now the largest brain tumor nonprofit organization in the country. Both legacy organizations had been formed in the 1980s by parents and other people who were committed to increasing both research funding and access to resources specific to brain tumors. In 2010, the Kelly Heinz-Grundner Foundation, a Delaware-based organization, joined NBTS as a wholly-owned subsidiary. Founded in 2005, after the death of Kelly Heinz-Grundner to a brain tumor, the group has contributed to NBTS''s efforts to pursue research and public policies that benefit the brain tumor community. NBTS grant programs are effective for academic researchers, inclusive of industry expertise, and promising for the patient community. All funding is open to both the domestic and international research communities. The Innovation Research Grant Program supports catalytic transformative projects that will significantly move the field forward. These may include out-of-the-box projects or research that is critical to move therapies down the pipeline. Research that represents an incremental advance is not considered innovative. NBTS will accept Innovation Letters of Intent throughout the year. Researchers in academic or industry labs and at all stages of their career may be funded through this program. | brain, tumor, brain tumor, cancer, human, grant, child, pediatric, research | nlx_143891 | SCR_004744 | 2026-02-13 10:55:30 | 8 | ||||||||||
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Alabama Head Injury Foundation Resource Report Resource Website |
Alabama Head Injury Foundation (RRID:SCR_004580) | AHIF | patient-support portal, portal, data or information resource, disease-related portal, topical portal | The Alabama Head Injury Foundation (AHIF) was founded in 1983 to increase public awareness of Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) and to stimulate the development of supportive services. Today, AHIF is among the largest state brain injury associations in the nation with model programs and statewide services. Its mission is to improve the quality of life for people who have survived traumatic brain injuries and for their families. Whether the injury is mild or severe the life of the injured person and their family is changed forever. The impact can be both emotionally and financially devastating. AHIF provides the information to help clients and families understand the results of injury. AHIF helps access available resources and provides services and programs which meet the unique needs of individuals with traumatic brain injury (TBI) as well as spinal cord injury (SCI) in certain programs. | traumatic brain injury, brain, brain injury, human, clinical trial, one mind tbi | nlx_143826 | SCR_004580 | Alabama Head Injury Foundation: Improving Life After Traumatic Brain Injury | 2026-02-13 10:55:28 | 0 | |||||||||
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Florida Brain Tumor Association Resource Report Resource Website |
Florida Brain Tumor Association (RRID:SCR_004739) | FBTA | training resource, portal, data or information resource, meeting resource, funding resource, disease-related portal, topical portal | The mission of the Florida Brain Tumor Association (FBTA) is to provide hope, support and education to brain tumor survivors, their families and friends; to conquer brain tumors by funding research into their causes and cures; and to enrich the quality of life of those touched by brain tumors. In October, 1991, the Florida Brain Tumor Association (formerly South Florida Brain Tumor Association) began due to a desperate need from brain tumor survivors and families who were searching for support and a safe place to share their life changing experiences. Beginning in Boca Raton, Florida, as a grass roots organization and a handful of people, the first support group was conceived. Today, there are many additional FBTA support groups, from coast to coast in the state of Florida. The Florida Brain Tumor Association (FBTA) has become a major force in the brain tumor community. We host many fundraisers yearly, donating funds for research to brain tumor centers. The FBTA has hosted over 20 three day conferences, seminars and meetings, attracting thousands of survivors, families and health care professionals in the United States and Canada. Many of the most renowned physicians in the world travel from far and near to present at FBTA conferences. We are proud and grateful for their commitment and dedication to our cause. The FBTA is a not-for-profit 501(c)(3) organization that is supported by contributions from individuals, corporations, and foundations. We are the only organization of this kind, relying on the strength and dedication of our members, who are brain tumor survivors, family members and friends. Our Medical Advisory Board is also voluntary; we are very thankful to them for their generous gifts of time. | brain, tumor, cancer, human, brain tumor, brain cancer | nlx_143890 | http://www.fbta.info/site/homepage.htm | SCR_004739 | South Florida Brain Tumor Association | 2026-02-13 10:55:30 | 0 | ||||||||
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Brain Tumor Foundation For Children Resource Report Resource Website |
Brain Tumor Foundation For Children (RRID:SCR_004735) | BTFC | portal, data or information resource, funding resource, disease-related portal, topical portal | Established in 1983 in Atlanta, GA, the Brain Tumor Foundation for Children (BTFC) was the first nonprofit organization in the United States to focus on pediatric brain tumor disease. The mission of the Brain Tumor Foundation for Children is to provide financial assistance, social support, and information for families of children with brain and spinal cord tumors; fund research projects that improve treatment options and search for a cure; and raise public awareness of the disease and advocate on behalf of children who are affected. | human, child, brain, tumor, cancer, pediatric, spinal cord, brain cancer | nlx_143888 | SCR_004735 | Brain Tumor Foundation For Children Inc. | 2026-02-13 10:55:30 | 0 |
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