Are you sure you want to leave this community? Leaving the community will revoke any permissions you have been granted in this community.
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 | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Inside NIA: A Blog for Researchers Resource Report Resource Website |
Inside NIA: A Blog for Researchers (RRID:SCR_012812) | data or information resource, narrative resource, blog | Blog intended for grantees of the National Institute on Aging (NIA) at the NIH, as well as applicants for funding, those with an application in mind, application reviewers, and students pursuing careers in research on aging and Alzheimer's disease. | funding policy, research priority, new program, alzheimer, blog |
is used by: NIF Data Federation is used by: Integrated Blogs has parent organization: National Institute on Aging |
Aging, Alzheimer's disease | NIA | Public, Except where subject to copyright restrictions, Acknowledgement required | nlx_152701 | SCR_012812 | Inside NIA | 2026-02-14 02:06:41 | 0 | ||||||
|
MIITRA atlas Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
MIITRA atlas (RRID:SCR_017566) | data or information resource, atlas | Atlas for studies of older adult brain. Includes T1-weighted template of older adult brain and tissue probability maps. Exhibits high image sharpness, provides higher inter-subject spatial normalization accuracy compared to other standardized templates and similar normalization accuracy to well-constructed study-specific templates. | Older, adult, brain, tissue, probability, map, standardized, template | is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC) | NIA R01 AG052200 | Free, Available for download, Freely available | https://www.nitrc.org/frs/?group_id=1407&release_id=4156 | SCR_017566 | Multichannel Illinois Institute of Technology and Rush University Aging atlas | 2026-02-14 02:06:25 | 4 | |||||||
|
Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System Resource Report Resource Website 1000+ mentions |
Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (RRID:SCR_004718) | PROMIS | material resource, assessment test provider | Repository of person centered measures that evaluates and monitors physical, mental, and social health in adults and children. | adult, child, assessment, clinical, anger, pain, fatigue, physical function, depression, anxiety, social function, patient reported outcome, health, measure |
is recommended by: National Library of Medicine has parent organization: University of Washington; Seattle; USA |
NCCIH ; NCI ; NHLBI ; NIA ; NIAMS ; NIDA ; NIDCD ; NIDDK ; NIMH ; NINDS ; NINR ; OD |
nlx_143881 | http://www.healthmeasures.net/index.php?option=com_content&view=category&layout=blog&id=71&Itemid=817 | SCR_004718 | PROMIS, Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System | 2026-02-14 02:06:37 | 2881 | ||||||
|
KI Biobank - SATSA Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
KI Biobank - SATSA (RRID:SCR_005966) | KI Biobank - SATSA | biomaterial supply resource, material resource | Longitudinal twin study to understand individual differences in aging with corresponding data and biological samples. The twin design and the inclusion of twins reared apart makes it possible to study the importance of genetic and environmental factors that may underlie differing aging outcomes. Further, the broad spectrum of biological, psychological, and social domains assessed across the life span makes it possible to study patterns of change within and across domains and how these predict health and diseases of aging. The study is comprised of several longitudinal components including, a comprehensive questionnaire that was sent to all twins in the Swedish Twin Registry who were separated at an early age and reared apart and a control sample of twins reared together. The questionnaires include items concerning rearing, family, adult, and working environment, health status, health related behaviors (e.g. alcohol, tobacco, and dietary habits) as well as relationships, and personality measures. The questionnaires were sent again at 3 year intervals in 1987, 1990, 1993 and after a break again in 2004, 2007, and 2010. Thus far more than 2,000 twins have responded to at least one of the seven questionnaire assessments conducted between 1984 and 2010. Additionally there is information about midlife life style factors from the Swedish Twin Registry that were collected about twenty years before SATSA started. In the second component a subsample of 861 individuals have participated in at least one wave of in-person testing (IPT). The first IPT started in 1986 and since then eight IPTs have been collected and the last wave will be collected during 2012-2013. The IPT includes a health examination, structured interviews, tests of functional capacity, and memory and thinking abilities. To date, over 76% of the sample has participated in 3 or more measurement waves. At IPT9 a third component was added to SATSA, a measure of day-to-day fluctuations in memory and thinking abilities, and emotions. Information about social interactions is also collected. After the visit by the research nurses the twins fill out the day-to-day booklet during the next five days. This procedure will be repeated in IPT10. This will add information about small and short-term changes and more changes are supposed to indicate the beginning of poor health. Data from SATSA can be used to study various aspects of aging. For example, the relative importance of genetic and environmental factors for individual differences in aging especially in cognitive and physical domains has been studied. A further main focus is to study changes within and across domains and which genetic and life style factors predict these changes. Given the wide spectrum of data from measured genes to social relationships collected over more than two decades they dare to say that SATSA is a unique study, with the possibility to answer many questions within gerontology and geriatrics. Types of samples * Serum * DNA Number of sample donors: 674 (June 2010) | gene, environment, health, disease, longitudinal, questionnaire, life style, interview, functional capacity, memory, thinking, emotion, social interaction, cognitive, physical, behavior, relationship, personality, health |
uses: Swedish Twin Registry is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing is related to: KI Biobank - HARMONY has parent organization: Karolisnka Biobank |
Aging, Twin, Control, (reared apart vs. reared together) | MacArthur Foundation Research Network on Successful Aging ; NIA AG04563; NIA AG10175; NIA AG08724; Swedish Research Council 825-2007-7460; Swedish Research Council 825-2009-6141; Swedish Research Council 825-3011-6182; Swedish Council for Working Life and Social Research 97:0147:1B 2009-0795 |
nlx_151325 | http://ki.se/forskning/ki-biobank, http://ki.se/ki/jsp/polopoly.jsp?d=29354&a=24035&l=en | SCR_005966 | Swedish Adoption / Twin Study of Aging, KI Biobank - Swedish Adoption/Twin Study of Aging, SATSA - The Swedish Adoption/Twin Study of Aging, Swedish Adoption/Twin Study of Aging | 2026-02-14 02:06:50 | 1 | |||||
|
National Long Term Care Survey Resource Report Resource Website |
National Long Term Care Survey (RRID:SCR_008943) | NLTCS | biomaterial supply resource, material resource | A data set of a longitudinal survey designed to study changes in the health and functional status of older Americans (aged 65+). It also tracks health expenditures, Medicare service use, and the availability of personal, family, and community resources for caregiving. The survey began in 1982, and follow-up surveys were conducted in 1984, 1989, 1994, 1999, and 2004. The surveys are of the entire Medicare-enrolled aged population with a particular emphasis on the functionally impaired. As sample persons are followed through the Medicare record system, virtually 100% of cases can be longitudinally tracked so that declines, as well as increases, in disability may be identified as well as exact dates of death. NLTCS sample persons are followed until death and are permanently and continuously linked to the Medicare record system from which they are drawn. Linkage to the Medicare Part A and B service use records extends from 1982 to 2004, so that detailed Medicare expenditures and types of service use may be studied. Through the careful application of methods to reduce non-sampling error, the surveys provide nationally representative data on: * The prevalence and patterns of functional limitations, both physical and cognitive; * Longitudinal and cohort patterns of change in functional limitation and mortality over 22 years; * Medical conditions and recent medical problems; * Health care services used; * The kind and amount of formal and informal services received by impaired individuals and how it is paid for; * Demographic and economic characteristics like age, race, sex, marital status, education, and income and assets; * Out-of-pocket expenditures for health care services and other sources of payment; * Housing and neighborhood characteristics. In each of the six surveys, large samples (N~20,000) of the oldest-old population (i.e., those 85 and over) are obtained. The survey data (i.e., detailed community and institutional interviews. The linkage to Medicare enrollment files between 1982 and 2004 was 100%, i.e., there was complete follow-up of all cases (including survey non-respondents) for Medicare eligibility (and for most years, detailed Part A and B use), mortality, and date of death. Medicare mortality records (and dates of death) are available for 1982 to 2005. The number of deaths (i.e., about 32,000 from 1982 to 2005) is large enough that detailed mortality analyses can be done. Over the 22 years spanned by the six surveys, a total of 49,242 distinct individuals were followed from and linked to Medicare records. Data Availability: The data are available through ICPSR as Study No. 9681. The data are available only on CD-ROM and only upon completion of a signed Data Use Agreement. Continuously linked Medicare data (1982 through 2004) for the National Long Term Care Surveys are only available from CMS. * Dates of Study: 1982-2004 * Study Features: Longitudinal, Anthropometric Measures * Sample Size: ** 1982: 20,485 ** 1984: 25,401 ** 1989: 17,565 ** 1994: 19,171 ** 1999: 19,907 ** 2004: 20,474 Link: * ICPSR: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/09681 | longitudinal, survey, late adult human, interview, medicare, questionnaire, disabled, non-disabled, community, institution, disability, medical condition, education, income, blood, buccal wash, activity, caregiver, diet, family relations, health care service, health services utilization, health status, life satisfaction, live expectancy, living arrangement, marriage, perception, quality of life, apoe, sod2, physical, cognitive, functional limitation, mortality, demographic, economic, race, marital status, asset, payment, housing, neighborhood |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing is listed by: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR) has parent organization: Duke University; North Carolina; USA has parent organization: National Archive of Computerized Data on Aging (NACDA) |
Aging, Functionally impaired, Late adult human, Non-disabled | NIA N2 U01 AG0007198 | Public, Data use agreement required. | nlx_151860 | http://dx.doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR09681.v5 | SCR_008943 | NLTCS: National Long-Term Care Survey, National Long Term Care Survey (NLTCS), National Long-Term Care Survey | 2026-02-14 02:07:05 | 0 | ||||
|
Layton Center Biomarkers and Genetics Resource Report Resource Website |
Layton Center Biomarkers and Genetics (RRID:SCR_008824) | Layton Biomarkers and Genetics | biomaterial supply resource, material resource | A center that works with the Oregon Alzheimer's Disease Center's Data Core, and collects and stores tissue samples, family history and genotype data of various populations. These include samples and data from subjects from the following sources: OADC clinical studies, the Oregon Brain Aging Study, the Community Brain Donor Program, the Preventing Cognitive Decline with Alternative Therapies program (informally called the Dementia Prevention Study or DPS), the African American Dementia and Aging Project, and the Klamath Exceptional Aging Project. The collected data samples include genomic DNA, lymphoblast cell lines, genome-wide and candidate region SNP marker data, APOE, AD candidate gene markers. | genomic dna, lymphoblast cell line, plasma, dna, cell line, lymphoblast, dementia, late adult human, normal, alzheimer's disease, clinical data, genotype data, genotype, clinical, family history |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing has parent organization: OHSU Layton Aging and Alzheimer's Disease Center |
Aging, Dementia, Alzheimer's disease | NIA P30 AG08017 | Researchers must fill out request forms | nlx_144448 | SCR_008824 | Layton Aging and Alzheimers Disease Center Biomarkers and Genetics, Layton Center Biomarkers and Genetics | 2026-02-14 02:06:55 | 0 | |||||
|
Iowa 65+ Rural Health Study Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Iowa 65+ Rural Health Study (RRID:SCR_008937) | Iowa 65+ Rural Health Study | biomaterial supply resource, material resource | A data set and sister study to the Established Populations for Epidemiologic Study of the Elderly (EPESE). It complements the findings of the three other EPESE sites (East Boston, MA; New Haven, CT; and north-central North Carolina) and has common items and methods in many domains. The target population was all persons 65 years and older in two rural counties in east central Iowa: Iowa and Washington counties. In 1981 a census of older persons in the target area was conducted by the investigators, creating an ascertainment list having 99% of the persons identified in the previous year by the US Decennial Census. The baseline survey was conducted between December 1991 and August 1992. Overall, 3,673 persons, or 80% of the target population were interviewed: 65-69 (N = 986), 70-74 (N = 988), 75-79 (N = 815), 80-84 (N = 523), and 85+ (N = 361). The population is virtually entirely Caucasian. Subsequently, personal follow-up surveys were conducted 3, 6, and 10 years after the baseline survey. Telephone surveys were conducted 1, 2, 4, 5, and 7 years after the baseline survey. Data collected from respondents included information about demographics, major health conditions, health care utilization, hearing and vision, weight and height, elements of nutrition, sleep problems, depressive and anxiety symptoms, alcohol and tobacco use, cognitive performance and dementia screening, incontinence measures, life satisfaction index, social networks and support, worries, medication use, activities of daily living, dental problems, satisfaction with medical care, life events, brief economic status, automobile driving habits, multiple measures of physical and disability status, and blood pressure. At follow-up #6, there were a series of physical function performance tests, the so-called NIA-MacArthur Battery, and blood was drawn for biochemical tests and potentially other determinations. In addition, some datasets were linked to the EPESE dataset under appropriate restrictions, including Iowa state driving records and clinical diagnoses and medical care utilization from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Data Availability: The dataset has been shared with several investigative teams under special arrangement with the Principal Investigator. Early surveys are available from ICPSR. A small storage of blood is available for exploratory analyses. * Dates of Study: 1991-2001 * Study Features: Longitudinal, Anthropometric Measures, Biomarkers * Sample Size: 1991-2: 3,673 (baseline) Link: EPESE 1981-93 ICPSR: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/09915 | blood, mortality, hospitalization, chronic disease, late adult human, longitudinal, anthropometry, biomarker, survey, caucasian, demographics, health, health care, hearing, vision, weight, height, nutrition, sleep, depression, anxiety, alcohol use, tobacco use, cognition, dementia, incontinence, social, medication use, activity, dental, satisfaction, medical care, economic status, driving, physical, disability, blood pressure, interview |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing is listed by: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR) has parent organization: Established Populations for Epidemiologic Studies of the Elderly |
Aging | NIA | Public | nlx_151838 | SCR_008937 | Iowa 65 and over Rural Health Study, Iowa 65 Plus Rural Health Study | 2026-02-14 02:06:43 | 3 | |||||
|
National Social Life Health and Aging Project (NSHAP) Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
National Social Life Health and Aging Project (NSHAP) (RRID:SCR_008950) | NSHAP | biomaterial supply resource, material resource | A longitudinal, population-based study of health and social factors, aiming to understand the well-being of older, community-dwelling Americans by examining the interactions among physical health and illness, medication use, cognitive function, emotional health, sensory function, health behaviors, social connectedness, sexuality, and relationship quality. NSHAP provides policy makers, health providers, and individuals with useful information and insights into these factors, particularly on social and intimate relationships. The study contributes to finding new ways to improve health as people age. In 2005 and 2006, NORC and Principal Investigators at the University of Chicago conducted the first wave of NSHAP, completing more than 3,000 interviews with a nationally representative sample of adults aged 57 to 85. In 2010 and 2011, nearly 3,400 interviews were completed for Wave 2 with these Wave 1 Respondents, Wave 1 Non-Interviewed Respondents, and their spouses or cohabiting romantic partners. The second wave of NSHAP is essential to understanding how social and biological characteristics change. NSHAP, by eliciting a variety of information from respondents over time, provides data that will allow researchers in a number of fields to examine how specific factors may or may not affect each other across the life course. For both waves, data collection included three measurements: in-home interviews, biomeasures, and leave-behind respondent-administered questionnaires. The face-to-face interviews and biomeasure collection took place in respondents'''' homes. NSHAP uses a national area probability sample of community residing adults born between 1920 and 1947 (aged 57 to 85 at the time of the Wave 1 interview), which includes an oversampling of African-Americans and Hispanics. The NSHAP sample is built on the foundation of the national household screening carried out by the Health and Retirement Study (HRS) in 2004. Through a collaborative agreement, HRS identified households for the NSHAP eligible population. A sample of 4,400 people was selected from the screened households. NSHAP made one selection per household. Ninety-two percent of the persons selected for the NSHAP interview were eligible. For Wave 2 in 2010 and 2011, NSHAP returned to Wave 1 Respondents and eligible non-interviewed respondents from Wave 1 (Wave 1 Non-Interviewed Respondents). NSHAP also extended the Wave 2 sample to include the cohabiting spouses and romantic partners of Wave 1 Respondents and Wave 1 Non-Interviewed Respondents. Partners were considered to be eligible to participate in NSHAP if they resided in the household with the Wave 1 Respondent/Wave 1 Non-Interviewed Respondent at the time of the Wave 2 interview and were at least 18 years of age. Wave I biomeasures: height; weight; waist circumference; blood pressure; smell; taste; vision; touch; respondent-administered vaginal swabs; oral mucosal transudate (OMT) for HIV-1 antibody screening; saliva; ����??get up and go����??; and blood spots. Technological advances in biomeasure collection methods have decreased respondent burden and increased ease of collection, storage, and yield of various biomeasures for the second wave of NSHAP. Wave II biomeasures: anthropometrics, including height, hip and waist circumference, and weight; cardiovascular function, including blood pressure, heart rate variability, and pulse; 2 of the 3 components of the short physical performance battery (SPPB) including chair stands and a timed walk; sensory function including smell; and actigraphy. In addition, we collect dried blood spots, microtainer blood, passive drool and salivettes, urine, and respondent-administered vaginal swabs, each of which are analyzed using multiple assays for a variety of measures and rationales. Furthermore, we assess respondents����?? cognition using the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA). Data Availability: NSHAP data made available to the public does not contain any identifiable respondent information and uses code numbers instead of names for all data. De-identified data from the 2005 and 2006 interviews are available to researchers through the National Archive of Computerized Data on Aging, located within Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR). Data from the Wave 2 interviews in 2010 and 2011 will be available in the summer of 2012. * Dates of Study: 2005-2006, 2010-2011 * Study Features: Biospecimens, Anthropometric Measures * Sample Size: ** Wave 1: 3,005 ** Wave 2: 3,377 Links: * ICPSR: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/20541 | social life, health, man, woman, late adult human, middle adult human, longitudinal, social support, personal relationship, social, physical health, illness, cognitive function, emotional health, sensory function, social connectedness, sexuality, relationship quality, intimate relationship, biospecimen, anthropometric measure, interview, biomeasure, questionnaire, african-american, hispanic, minority, marriage, anxiety, attitude, body height, body weight, doctor visit, drug, ethnicity, family size, health attitude, health problem, health services utilization, health status, intimate partner, life satisfaction, medical evaluation, medical procedure, medication, menopause, mental health, morbidity, nutrition, quality of life, sexual activity, cohabitation, social network, demographic, prevention, cognition, well-being, survey, sleep, actigraphy, healthy aging, vaginal swab, blood spot, saliva, blood, urine |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing is listed by: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR) is related to: Biomarker Network has parent organization: University of Chicago; Illinois; USA has parent organization: National Archive of Computerized Data on Aging (NACDA) |
Aging | Office of Research on Women's Health ; Office of AIDS Research ; National Opinion Research Center ; NIA R01-AG021487; NIA R37-AG030481; NIA R01-AG033903 |
PMID:19837963 | Public: Users must request and complete the NSHAP Restricted Data Use Agreement form. | nlx_151867 | http://gero.usc.edu/CBPH/network/resources/studies/nshap.shtml | SCR_008950 | National Social Life Health and Aging Project | 2026-02-14 02:07:11 | 4 | |||
|
eMouseAtlas Resource Report Resource Website 50+ mentions |
eMouseAtlas (RRID:SCR_002981) | EMAP, EMA, EMAGE, MAP, EMAP, MAP2.0, | data or information resource, atlas, database | Detailed multidimensional digital multimodal atlas of C57BL/6J mouse nervous system with data and informatics pipeline that can automatically register, annotate, and visualize large scale neuroanatomical and connectivity data produced in histology, neuronal tract tracing, MR imaging, and genetic labeling. MAP2.0 interoperates with commonly used publicly available databases to bring together brain architecture, gene expression, and imaging information into single, simple interface.Resource to visualise mouse development, identify anatomical structures, determine developmental stage, and investigate gene expression in mouse embryo. eMouseAtlas portal page allows access to EMA Anatomy Atlas of Mouse Development and EMAGE database of gene expression.EMAGE is freely available, curated database of gene expression patterns generated by in situ techniques in developing mouse embryo. EMA, e-Mouse Atlas, is 3-D anatomical atlas of mouse embryo development including histology and includes EMAP ontology of anatomical structure, provides information about shape, gross anatomy and detailed histological structure of mouse, and framework into which information about gene function can be mapped. | Mouse Atlas Project, molecular neuroanatomy resource, adult mouse, mouse, brain, c57bl/6j, magnetic resonance microscopy, diffusion-weighted image, blockface imaging, immunohistochemistry, in situ hybridization, neuroanatomy, mri, dti, brain architecture, gene expression, neuroimaging, ontology, connectivity, histology, neuronal tract tracing, genetic labeling, newborn mouse, experimental protocol, bio.tools, ontology, histology, mouse embryo, gene expression, gxd query interface, digital anatomical atlas, spatial region, domain, 2d, 3d, virtual embryo model, development atlas, standard anatomical nomenclature, developmental staging criteria, spatially mapped, anatomy nomenclature, molecular neuroanatomy resource, embryonic mouse, FASEB list |
is related to: GUDMAP Ontology is related to: EMAGE Gene Expression Database is related to: EMAGE Gene Expression Database is related to: HUDSEN is related to: Mouse Genome Informatics: The Mouse Gene Expression Information Resource Project has parent organization: University of Edinburgh; Scotland; United Kingdom has parent organization: Jackson Laboratory is parent organization of: Minimal Anatomical Terminology |
Medical Research Council ; NINDS ; NIBIB ; NIDA ; NIDCD ; NIA |
PMID:15043218 PMID:18077470 PMID:16381949 |
Free, Freely available | nif-0000-00038, nif-0000-00505, biotools:emap, biotools:ma, SCR_007281 | http://www.emouseatlas.org/emap/home.html https://bio.tools/emap https://bio.tools/ma |
http://genex.hgu.mrc.ac.uk/, http://www.loni.ucla.edu/MAP/ | SCR_002981 | emouseatlas, e-mouse Atlas, EMAGE Gene Expression Database, EMA, Edinburgh Mouse Atlas of Gene Expression, e-Mouse Atlas, EMA Anatomy Atlas of Mouse Development | 2026-02-14 02:06:10 | 69 | |||
|
IADRP Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
IADRP (RRID:SCR_004043) | IADRP | data or information resource, database | Database that brings together funded Alzheimer's disease (AD) research supported by public and private organizations both in the US and abroad all categorized using the Common Alzheimer's Disease Research Ontology or CADRO. Launched as a joint collaboration between the National Institute on Aging (NIH) and the Alzheimer's Association, IADRP enables users the ability to assess the portfolios of major organizations (currently 30) for areas of overlap as well as areas of opportunities in which to collaborate and coordinate in a collective effort to advance AD research. | late adult human, alzheimer, database |
uses: CADRO has parent organization: Alzheimers Association has parent organization: National Institute on Aging |
Alzheimer's disease, Aging | NIA | PMID:24780512 | The community can contribute to this resource | nlx_158471 | SCR_004043 | International Alzheimer's Disease Research Portfolio, International Alzheimers Disease Research Portfolio | 2026-02-14 02:05:50 | 3 | ||||
|
Language Map Experiment Management System Resource Report Resource Website |
Language Map Experiment Management System (RRID:SCR_004562) | Language Map EMS | data or information resource, database | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on January 11, 2023. An experiment management system for researchers studying language organization in the brain. Data from thirteen patients are available as a public demo. Language Map EMS | fmri, 3d models, anatomy, cortex, data managementas of 2006/11 data from 110 patients in repository., imaging, mri, segmentation, volume | has parent organization: University of Washington; Seattle; USA | Aging | NIMH ; NIDCD ; NIA |
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-00065 | SCR_004562 | UW Integrated Brain Project Language Map Experiment Management System | 2026-02-14 02:06:20 | 0 | |||||
|
Keypoint MoSeq Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Keypoint MoSeq (RRID:SCR_025032) | software resource, source code | Software application as machine learning-based platform for identifying behavioral modules from keypoint data without human supervision. Package provides tools for fitting MoSeq model to keypoint tracking data. Used to infer pose dynamics with keypoint data in addition to behavioral syllables. | OpenBehavior, infer pose dynamics, keypoint data, identifying behavioral modules, keypoint tracking data, parsing behavior, linking point tracking to pose dynamics, | has parent organization: Harvard University; Cambridge; United States | NIA RF1AG073625; NINDS R01NS114020; NINDS U24NS109520; Simons Foundation Autism Research Initiative ; Simons Collaboration on Plasticity and the Aging Brain ; NINDS U19NS113201; Simons Collaboration on the Global Brain ; NINDS F31NS113385; NINDS F31NS122155; Alfred P. Sloan Foundation ; Salk Collaboration Grant |
DOI:10.1101/2023.03.16.532307 | Free, Available for download, Freely available | SCR_025032 | 2026-02-14 02:08:40 | 9 | ||||||||
|
MiMeDB Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
MiMeDB (RRID:SCR_025108) | data or information resource, database | Database containing detailed information about small molecules produced by human microbiome. Provides metabolite data including structure, names, descriptions, chemical taxonomy, chemical ontology, physico-chemical data, spectra and contains detailed information about microbes that produce these chemicals, enzymatic reactions responsible for their production, bioactivity of chemicals and anatomical location of these chemicals and microbes. Many data fields in the database are hyperlinked to other databases including FooDB, HMDB, KEGG, PubChem, MetaCyc, ChEBI, UniProt, and GenBank. Database is FAIR compliant.The data in MiMeDB are released under the Creative Commons (CC) 4.0 License. | FAIR, small molecule metabolites, human microbiome, metabolite data, |
works with: HMDB works with: KEGG works with: PubChem works with: MetaCyc works with: CHEBI works with: UniProt works with: GenBank |
NIA U19 AG063744; Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada ; Canadian Institutes for Health Research ; Canada Foundation for Innovation ; Genome Canada |
PMID:36215042 | Free, Freely available | SCR_025108 | , Microbial Metabolites Database, The Human Microbial Metabolome Database | 2026-02-14 02:09:09 | 6 | |||||||
|
Find My Understudied Genes Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Find My Understudied Genes (RRID:SCR_025047) | FMUG | software resource, source code, software application | Software data-driven tool to identify understudied genes and characterize their tractability. Users submit list of human genes and can filter these genes down based on list of factors. Code to generate Find My Understudied Genes app for Windows, iOS and macOS platforms. | has parent organization: Northwestern University; Illinois; USA | NIGMS T32GM008449; Northwestern University ; Moderna Inc ; NSF ; NAIAD U19AI135964; Simons Foundation ; NIA K99AG068544 |
DOI:10.7554/eLife.93429 | Free, Available for download, Freely available | https://github.com/amarallab/fmug | SCR_025047 | 2026-02-14 02:09:08 | 2 | |||||||
|
Texas University Health Science Center at San Antonio Long School of Medicine Department of Cell Systems and Anatomy Optical Imaging Core Facility Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Texas University Health Science Center at San Antonio Long School of Medicine Department of Cell Systems and Anatomy Optical Imaging Core Facility (RRID:SCR_012171) | UTHSCSA OIF | core facility, access service resource, service resource | Service resource which makes imaging technology available to investigators on UTHSCSA campus and neighboring scientific community. Core Optical Imaging Facility offers access to technology for imaging of living cells, tissues, and animals, consultation, education and assistance regarding theory and application of optical imaging techniques, technical advice on specimen preparation techniques and probe selection. | Optical, imaging, facility, living, cell, tissue, animal, consultation, speciment, preparation |
is listed by: ScienceExchange has parent organization: University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio; Texas; USA |
NCI ; UTHSCSA ; NIA P01 AG19316 |
Restricted | SciEx_10134 | http://www.scienceexchange.com/facilities/optical-imaging-facility-oif | SCR_012171 | University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio Optical Imaging Facility, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio Optical Imaging Facility (OIF), UTHSCSA Optical Imaging Facility, UTHSCSA Optical Imaging Facility (OIF) | 2026-02-14 02:08:18 | 1 | |||||
|
National Survey of Self-Care and Aging Resource Report Resource Website |
National Survey of Self-Care and Aging (RRID:SCR_013456) | NSSCA | data or information resource, data set | Data set on the prevalence of self-care behaviors by non-institutionalized older adults. Personal interviews were conducted with 3,485 individuals 65 years of age and older, with oversampling of the oldest old. Questions were asked about the type and extent of self-care behaviors for activities of daily living, management of chronic conditions (through self-care activities, equipment use, and environmental modifications), medical self-care for acute conditions, health promotion/disease preventions, social support, health service utilization, and socio-demographic/economic status. A follow-up study by telephone was conducted in 1994 to continue examination of subjects. Many of the same questions from the baseline were asked, along with questions regarding change in health status since baseline and nursing home visits. For subjects who had been institutionalized since baseline (Part 2), information was gathered (by proxy) regarding demographic status, living arrangements prior to institutionalization, and reasons for institutionalization. For subjects who had died since baseline (Part 3), information was again gathered through interviews with proxies. Questions covered nursing home admissions and date and place of death. In both waves, a proxy was substituted if the subject was hospitalized (or institutionalized since baseline), too ill, cognitively not able to respond, or deceased. Survey data were linked to Medicare/Medicaid health utilization records. The baseline data are archived at NACDA as ICPSR Study No. 6718, and the followup data are archived as ICPSR Study No. 2592 and linkable to the baseline data. * Dates of Study: 1990-1994 * Study Features: Longitudinal * Sample Size: ** 1990-1: 3,485 (Baseline) ** 1994: 2,601 (Followup) Links: * 1990-1991 Baseline ICPSR: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/06718 * 1994 Follow-up ICPSR: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/02592 | late adult human, longitudinal, interview, self-care, daily living, behavior, chronic condition, medical, health promotion, disease prevention, social support, health service utilization, socio-demographic, economic, self medication, assisted living, assistive device, chronic illness, health status, institutional care, living arrangement, quality of life |
is listed by: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR) is related to: National Archive of Computerized Data on Aging (NACDA) has parent organization: University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; North Carolina; USA |
Aging, Non-institutionalized | NIA AG07929-3; NIA 5-P20-AG09648-06 |
Public | nlx_152056 | SCR_013456 | National Survey of Self-Care and Aging | 2026-02-14 02:07:50 | 0 | |||||
|
National Survey of Families and Households Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
National Survey of Families and Households (RRID:SCR_013388) | NSFH | data or information resource, data set | A national sample survey dataset covering a wide variety of issues on American family life beginning in 1987-88 and at two subsequent timepoints1992-93 and 2001-03. Topics covered included detailed household composition, family background, adult family transitions, couple interactions, parent-child interactions, education and work, health, economic and psychological well-being, and family attitudes. The first wave interviewed 13,017 respondents, including a main cross-section sample of 9,643 persons aged 19 and over plus an oversample of minorities and households containing single-parent families, step-families, recently married couples, and cohabiting couples. In each household, a randomly selected adult was interviewed. In addition, a shorter, self-administered questionnaire was filled out by the spouse or cohabiting partner of the primary respondent. Interviews averaged about 100 minutes, although interview length varied considerably with the complexity of the respondent''s family history. In 1992-94, an in-person interview was conducted of all surviving members of the original sample, the current spouse or cohabiting partner, and with the baseline spouse or partner in cases where the relationship had ended. Telephone interviews were conducted with focal children who were aged 5-12 and 13-18 at baseline. Short proxy interviews were conducted with a surviving spouse or other relative in cases where the original respondent died or was too ill to interview. A telephone interview was conducted with one randomly selected parent of the main respondent. In 2001-03, telephone interviews were conducted with: Surviving members of the original respondents who had a focal child age 5 or over at baseline; the baseline spouse/partner of these original respondents, whether or not the couple was still together; the focal children who were in the household and aged 5-18 at baselinemost of whom were interviewed at wave 2; and all other original respondents age 45 or older in 2000, and their baseline spouse/partner. Oversamples: Blacks, 9.2%; Mexican-Americans, 2.4%; Puerto Ricans, 0.7% * Dates of Study: 1987-2003 * Study Features: Longitudinal, Minority Oversampling * Sample Size (original respondents): ** Wave I (1987-88): 13,017 ** Wave II (1992-93): 10,007 ** Wave III (2001-03): 8,990 Links: * Wave I (ICPSR): http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/06041 * Wave II (ICPSR): http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/06906 * Wave III (ICPSR): http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/00171 | longitudinal, minority, african-american, mexican-american, puerto rican, household, couple interaction, parent-child interaction, education, work, health, economic, psychological well-being, family attitude, living arrangement, childhood, marriage, cohabitation, fertility, employment, interview, family, questionnaire, divorce, adoption, child custody, step-family, parent, child, 1adolescent, in-law, wage, self-employment, income, interest, dividend, investment, pension, social security, public assistance, alimony, marital status, adoption, child custody, child support, divorce, family life, family structure, social contact, step-family, salary, adult, married, survey, single parent, stepchild, cohabiting person, spouse |
is listed by: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR) has parent organization: University of Wisconsin-Madison; Wisconsin; USA has parent organization: National Archive of Computerized Data on Aging (NACDA) |
Aging, Married, Adult | NIA ; NICHD ; U.S. Department of Health and Human Services |
Public | nlx_151869 | SCR_013388 | National Survey of Families and Households (NSFH) | 2026-02-14 02:08:33 | 1 | |||||
|
German Socio-Economic Panel Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
German Socio-Economic Panel (RRID:SCR_013140) | GSOEP | data or information resource, data set | A wide-ranging representative longitudinal study of private households that permits researchers to track yearly changes in the health and economic well-being of older people relative to younger people in Germany from 1984 to the present. Every year, there were nearly 11,000 households, and more than 20,000 persons sampled by the fieldwork organization TNS Infratest Sozialforschung. The data provide information on all household members, consisting of Germans living in the Old and New German States, Foreigners, and recent Immigrants to Germany. The Panel was started in 1984. Some of the many topics include household composition, occupational biographies, employment, earnings, health and satisfaction indicators. In addition to standard demographic information, the GSOEP questionnaire also contains objective measuresuse of time, use of earnings, income, benefit payments, health, etc. and subjective measures - level of satisfaction with various aspects of life, hopes and fears, political involvement, etc. of the German population. The first wave, collected in 1984 in the western states of Germany, contains 5,921 households in two randomly sampled sub-groups: 1) German Sub-Sample: people in private households where the head of household was not of Turkish, Greek, Yugoslavian, Spanish, or Italian nationality; 2) Foreign Sub-Sample: people in private households where the head of household was of Turkish, Greek, Yugoslavian, Spanish, or Italian nationality. In each year since 1984, the GSOEP has attempted to re-interview original sample members unless they leave the country. A major expansion of the GSOEP was necessitated by German reunification. In June 1990, the GSOEP fielded a first wave of the eastern states of Germany. This sub-sample includes individuals in private households where the head of household was a citizen of the German Democratic Republic. The first wave contains 2,179 households. In 1994 and 1995, the GSOEP added a sample of immigrants to the western states of Germany from 522 households who arrived after 1984, which in 2006 included 360 households and 684 respondents. In 1998 a new refreshment sample of 1,067 households was selected from the population of private households. In 2000 a sample was drawn using essentially similar selection rules as the original German sub-sample and the 1998 refreshment sample with some modifications. The 2000 sample includes 6,052 households covering 10,890 individuals. Finally, in 2002, an overrepresentation of high-income households was added with 2,671 respondents from 1,224 households, of which 1,801 individuals (689 households) were still included in the year 2006. Data Availability: The data are available to researchers in Germany and abroad in SPSS, SAS, TDA, STATA, and ASCII format for immediate use. Extensive documentation in English and German is available online. The SOEP data are available in German and English, alone or in combination with data from other international panel surveys (e.g., the Cross-National Equivalent Files which contain panel data from Canada, Germany, and the United States). The public use file of the SOEP with anonymous microdata is provided free of charge (plus shipping costs) to universities and research centers. The individual SOEP datasets cannot be downloaded from the DIW Web site due to data protection regulations. Use of the data is subject to special regulations, and data privacy laws necessitate the signing of a data transfer contract with the DIW. The English Language Public Use Version of the GSOEP is distributed and administered by the Department of Policy Analysis and Management, Cornell University. The data are available on CD-ROM from Cornell for a fee. Full instructions for accessing GSOEP data may be accessed on the project website, http://www.human.cornell.edu/che/PAM/Research/Centers-Programs/German-Panel/cnef.cfm * Dates of Study: 1984-present * Study Features: Longitudinal, International * Sample Size: ** 1984: 12,290 (GSOEP West) ** 1990: 4,453 (GSOEP East) ** 2000: 20,000+ Links: * Cornell Project Website: http://www.human.cornell.edu/che/PAM/Research/Centers-Programs/German-Panel/cnef.cfm * GSOEP ICPSR: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/00131 | longitudinal, international, education, family background, health, household composition, job history, life satisfaction, living condition, occupational mobility, late adult human, political change, social change, social indicator, social security, social service, time utilization, wage, salary, economic well-being, questionnaire, survey |
is listed by: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR) is related to: Cross-National Equivalent Files has parent organization: German Institute of Economic Research; Berlin; Germany has parent organization: Cornell University; New York; USA |
Aging | NIA ; German Federal Government ; State of Berlin ; BMBF ; DFG |
Public | nlx_151827 | SCR_013140 | German Socio-Economic Panel (GSOEP), German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP), German SOEP | 2026-02-14 02:07:55 | 1 | |||||
|
Epidemiology of Chronic Disease in the Oldest Old Resource Report Resource Website |
Epidemiology of Chronic Disease in the Oldest Old (RRID:SCR_013466) | Epidemiology of Chronic Disease in the Oldest Old | data or information resource, data set | A collection of data of an epidemiological study of chronic disease in the oldest old based on information collected from Kaiser Permanente facilities in Northern California (KPNC). The initial sample was drawn from the Kaiser''s active membership lists for the years 1971 and 1980. The sample was restricted to members that had a Multiphasic Health Checkup examination (MHC) within 7 years of the baseline date. The sample was stratified to attain equal numbers of observations (1,000 in each) in three sex-age cells for each cohort: 65-69, 70-79, and 80+. Each cohort was followed for 9 years through existing medical records and computerized hospitalization tapes. Mortality data was collected by matching the sampled data with state Vital Statistics data for an additional 3 years for a total follow-up time of 12 years. Part 1 of the data collections consists of Master Records, which includes information from the morbidity review, in which over 35 chronic conditions or diagnoses were abstracted from the member charts, as well as detailed diagnostic criteria for the major conditions. A prevalence review was done, which included the 4 years prior to the baseline date for these same conditions. Recurrent disease is included for the following conditions: cancers, myocardial infarction, and various forms of strokes. A detailed account of outpatient health services use, and data from the multiphasic health checkup, which was administered to each participant during the nine yearly follow-ups, are also included in the Master Records file. The labs and procedures included: chemistry, hematology, urinalysis, bacteriology, chest x-ray, GI x-ray, ultrasound, CT/MRI, mammogram, resting ECG, treadmill ECG, echocardiograms, nuclear scans, outpatient breast biopsy, cystoscopy, and cataract surgery. Inpatient utilization includes all hospitalizations, procedures done during a hospital stay, length of stay, admitting/discharge diagnosis. Part 2, Hospitalization, contains records of causes and dates of hospitalizations and discharges and nursing home admissions. There is also a section on incomplete reviews and the reasons for them. Demographic information and some lifestyle information from the multiphasic health checkup (e.g., smoking, alcohol, and Body Mass Index) are also in this file. Data Availability: These datasets have been documented extensively and are available from the ICPSR (Study No. 4219). * Dates of Study: 1971-1992 * Study Features: Longitudinal, Anthropometric Measures * Sample Size: ** 1971 cohort: 2,877 (baseline) ** 1980 cohort: 3,113 (baseline) ** 1971 & 1980: 5,990 ** Hospitalization: 14,730 Links: * ICPSR: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/04219 * HSRR: http://wwwcf.nlm.nih.gov/hsrr_search/view_hsrr_record_table.cfm?TITLE_ID=381&PROGRAM_CAME=toc_with_source2.cfm | late adult human, kaiser permanente, male, female, chronic disease, elderly, longevity, epidemiology, ambulatory care, cause of death, death, disease, doctor visit, health, health care, hospitalization, illness, medical evaluation, medical record, morbidity, questionnaire, hematology, urinalysis, bacteriology, chest x-ray, gi x-ray, ultrasound, ct, mri, mammogram, resting ecg, treadmill ecg, echocardiogram, nuclear scan, outpatient, breast biopsy, cystoscopy, cataract surgery |
is listed by: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR) has parent organization: University of California at Davis; California; USA has parent organization: National Library of Medicine |
Aging | NIA | Public | nlx_151824 | SCR_013466 | Kaiser Permanente Study of the Oldest Old | 2026-02-14 02:08:23 | 0 | |||||
|
Annotation Comparison Explorer Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Annotation Comparison Explorer (RRID:SCR_026496) | ACE | software resource, web application | Web application for comparing cell type assignments and other cell-based annotations (e.g., donor demographics, anatomic locations, batch variables, and quality control metrics). Used for connecting brain cell types across studies of health and Alzheimer's Disease. | comparing cell type assignments, cell-based annotations, connecting brain cell types, |
has parent organization: Allen Institute is organization facet of: BRAIN Initiative Cell Atlas Network |
NINDS U24NS133077; NIA U19AG060909 |
PMID:39990500 | Free, Freely available | github.com/AllenInstitute/ACE | SCR_026496 | Annotation Comparison Explorer (ACE) | 2026-02-14 02:09:37 | 1 |
Can't find your Tool?
We recommend that you click next to the search bar to check some helpful tips on searches and refine your search firstly. Alternatively, please register your tool with the SciCrunch Registry by adding a little information to a web form, logging in will enable users to create a provisional RRID, but it not required to submit.
Welcome to the NIF Resources search. From here you can search through a compilation of resources used by NIF and see how data is organized within our community.
You are currently on the Community Resources tab looking through categories and sources that NIF has compiled. You can navigate through those categories from here or change to a different tab to execute your search through. Each tab gives a different perspective on data.
If you have an account on NIF then you can log in from here to get additional features in NIF such as Collections, Saved Searches, and managing Resources.
Here is the search term that is being executed, you can type in anything you want to search for. Some tips to help searching:
If you are logged into NIF you can add data records to your collections to create custom spreadsheets across multiple sources of data.
Here are the facets that you can filter the data by.
If you have any further questions please check out our FAQs Page to ask questions and see our tutorials. Click this button to view this tutorial again.