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| Resource Name | Proper Citation | Abbreviations | Resource Type |
Description |
Keywords | Resource Relationships | |||||||||||||
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Mouse Models For Alzheimer's Disease Research Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Mouse Models For Alzheimer's Disease Research (RRID:SCR_000708) | data or information resource, model, narrative resource | An information resource about several models for mice to develop Alzheimer's-related characteristics as they age. | alzheimer's, aging, mouse, mice, model, transgenic, research | has parent organization: Jackson Laboratory | Aging | NIH | Non-Commercial, Personal Use | nif-0000-00183 | http://jaxmice.jax.org/research/neurobiology/alzheimers-agedmodels.html, http://research.jax.org/grs/alzheimers.html | SCR_000708 | MMFADR | 2026-02-16 09:45:20 | 1 | |||||
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Integrated Blogs Resource Report Resource Website |
Integrated Blogs (RRID:SCR_005386) | Integrated Blogs, Integrated Blog | data or information resource, database, blog, narrative resource | A virtual database created by the Neuroscience Information Framework currently indexing Scientific Blog and News resources such as: Nature Network Blogs, Wired Science Blogs, The Guardian: Science, It Takes 30, Scientific American Cross-Check, Scientific American Bering in Mind, Research Blogging, CENtral Science, ScienceBlogs: Medicine and Health, American Guest Blog, Scientific American Observations, LabSpaces, RetractionWatch.com, Wired Science, Genomes Unzipped, PLoS Blogs, Daring Nucleic Adventures - genegeek, H2SO4Hurts - Brian Krueger PhD, and Sciblogs. | science, commentary, news, multimedia, blog, integrated, database |
uses: Nature Network Blogs uses: Wired Science Blogs uses: The Guardian: Science uses: It Takes 30 uses: Scientific American Cross-Check uses: Scientific American Bering in Mind uses: Research Blogging uses: CENtral Science uses: ScienceBlogs: Medicine and Health uses: ScienceBlogs: Brain and Behavior uses: ScienceBlogs: Life Science uses: Scientific American Guest Blog uses: Scientific American Observations uses: LabSpaces uses: RetractionWatch.com uses: Wired Science uses: Genomes Unzipped uses: PLoS Blogs uses: Daring Nucleic Adventures - genegeek uses: Sciblogs uses: New York Times - Well uses: Lady Scientist uses: SciLogs uses: BioPortfolio uses: ScienceNOW uses: QUEST uses: Discover Magazine uses: Protocol Online - Your labs reference book uses: Naturally Selected uses: Oxford Science Blog uses: Mind Hacks uses: Cassandras Tears uses: PolygenicBlog uses: Now at NEJM uses: Neuroskeptic uses: Inside NIA: A Blog for Researchers uses: Psychology Corner uses: Law and Neuroscience uses: neuropathology blog uses: Mendelspod uses: Neurophilosophy uses: NIF Blog is used by: NIF Data Federation is used by: Aging Portal has parent organization: Integrated |
Aging | Data are licensed by their respective owners, Use and distribution is subject to the Terms of Use by the original resource | nlx_144461 | https://legacy.neuinfo.org/mynif/search.php?q=*&t=indexable&list=cover&nif=nlx_154697-13 http://neuinfo.org/nif/nifgwt.html?query=nlx_144461, https://www.neuinfo.org/mynif/search.php?q=*&t=indexable&nif=nlx_144461-1, https://neuinfo.org/mynif/search.php?q=*&t=indexable&list=cover&nif=nlx_154697-13 | SCR_005386 | NIF Integrated News Blogs, Integrated Blogs View, NIF Integrated News View, NIF Integrated News and Blogs, NIF Integrated Blog, NIF Integrated Blogs, Neuroscience Information Framework Integrated News, Neuroscience Information Framework Integrated Blogs, NIF Blogs, NIF News/Blogs, NIF News and Blogs, NIF News, NIF News Blogs, NIF Integrated Blogs View, NIF Integrated News, Integrated Blog View | 2026-02-16 09:46:27 | 0 | |||||
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NIMH Brain Tissue Collection Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
NIMH Brain Tissue Collection (RRID:SCR_008726) | NIMH Brain Bank | brain bank, tissue bank, material resource, biomaterial supply resource | A collection of brain tissue from individuals suffering from schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, depression, anxiety disorders, and substance abuse, as well as healthy individuals. The research mission of the NIMH Brain Bank is to better understand the underlying biological mechanisms and pathways that contribute to schizophrenia and other neuropsychiatric disorders, as well as to study normal human brain development. | schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, depressive disorder, anxiety disorder, substance abuse, healthy, neurological disorder, mental disease, suicide, tourette's syndrome, dementia, brain development, brain, brain tissue, tissue, post-mortem, normal control, ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00001260 |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing has parent organization: NIMH Intramural Research Program Clinical Brain Disorders Branch |
Schizophrenia, Bipolar Disorder, Depressiive Disorder, Anxiety Disorder, Drug Abuse, Healthy, Neurological disorder, Mental disease, Suicide, Tourette's Syndrome, Dementia, Normal control, Aging | NIMH | Samples available to investigators approved by an NIMH Oversight Committee, Molecular and genetic data available to the scientific community | nlx_143684 | http://cbdb.nimh.nih.gov/neuropath.htm | SCR_008726 | 2026-02-16 09:47:15 | 1 | |||||
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UT Southwestern ADC Brain Tissue Donation Program Resource Report Resource Website |
UT Southwestern ADC Brain Tissue Donation Program (RRID:SCR_008837) | UTSW Brain Tissue Donation Program, UTSW ADC Brain Tissue Donation Program | brain bank, tissue bank, material resource, biomaterial supply resource | Brain tissue donation program at the UT Southwestern Memory Clinic that aims to utilize these contributions for research on Alzheimer's. Diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease or other dementias are made through autopsy, the results of which are available to family members. | brain tissue, tissue, brain, alzheimer's disease, late adult human, mild cognitive impairment, dementia, frontotemporal dementia, autopsy, research |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing has parent organization: University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center - Alzheimer's Disease Center |
Alzheimer's disease, Mild Cognitive Impairment, Aging, Dementia, Frontotemporal Dementia | Private | nlx_144639 | SCR_008837 | 2026-02-16 09:47:17 | 0 | |||||||
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Indiana Alzheimer Disease Center Resource Report Resource Website |
Indiana Alzheimer Disease Center (RRID:SCR_012811) | IADC | brain bank, tissue bank, material resource, biomaterial supply resource | The mission of the Indiana Alzheimer Disease Center is to serve as a shared research resource in order to facilitate research in Alzheimer disease and related disorders and to distinguish them from normal aging. Within this mission, one objective is to provide an environment and core resources to enhance ongoing research and foster new lines by bringing together basic and clinical scientists to study the etiology, pathogenesis, diagnosis, and treatment of Alzheimer disease and related dementias, with an emphasis on hereditary dementias. The Center is composed of 6 cores: Administrative, Clinical, Neuropathology, Data Management, Education and Information Transfer, and Imaging. The Neuropathology Core functions as brain-bank facility, which stores samples from hundreds of autopsied cases and supplies them to research investigators around the world. The focus of the IADC is on behavioral neurology, clinicopathological correlations, biochemistry, and genetics of AD, frontotemporal dementia and parkinsonism linked to chromosome 17 (FTDP-17), Gerstmann-Str��������ussler-Scheinker disease (GSS), Parkinson disease and other hereditary diseases associated with abnormal protein accumulation. The Neuropathology Core carries out state-of-the-art neuropathological examination of brain, spinal cord and other tissue samples obtained from individuals affected by neurodegenerative dementia and/or other related neurodegenerative diseases. The Core is composed of five different laboratories: histology and immunohistochemistry, electron microscopy, molecular biology, biochemistry, as well as a small-animal laboratory dedicated to the study of murine models of human diseases. In the past 15 years, we have been among the first to discover mutations in genes implicated in the etiology and pathogenesis of early-onset dementia. Specifically we have identified novel mutations in the Amyloid Precursor Protein gene (APP) and Presenilin 1 (PSEN1) that are responsible for hereditary forms of early-onset AD. We have also found several novel mutations responsible for Gerstmann-Str��������ussler-Scheinker (GSS) disease, a hereditary degenerative disease causing ataxia, parkinsonism and dementia secondary to the accumulation of mutated prion protein (PrP). We have reported mutations in the MAPT gene in FTDP-17, a tauopathy which causes personality changes, cognitive dysfunction, rigidity and dementia. Other areas of research in neurodegeneration are related to the study of genetic mutations of Neuroserpin (SCNA) and Light Ferritin Polypeptide genes. |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing has parent organization: Indiana University School of Medicine; Indiana; USA |
Aging | nlx_83612 | SCR_012811 | 2026-02-16 09:48:22 | 0 | |||||||||
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NKI-RS Multiband Imaging Test-Retest Pilot Dataset Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
NKI-RS Multiband Imaging Test-Retest Pilot Dataset (RRID:SCR_010460) | NKI-RS Multiband Test-Retest Pilot Dataset | data set, data or information resource | A test-retest dataset to assess the reliability of multiband resting state fMRI (R-fMRI) and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) scans prior to launch of the Enhanced Nathan Kline Institute - Rockland Sample (NKI-RS). The dataset is primarily composed of individuals from the initial NKI-RS - for these individuals psychiatric assessment information is available and included (participants were not excluded due to history of illness. In addition to R-fMRI and DTI, they included: 1) simple visual checkerboard stimulation fMRI scans to allow for assessment of traditional fMRI data quality metrics (e.g., contrast-to-noise ratio), 2) breath holding data to enable assessment of regional differences in vascular responsiveness, and 3) eye movement calibration scans to enable the assessment of eye-movement related artifacts which may be particularly troublesome for multiband sequences since several slices are acquired simultaneously. | demographic, multiband imaging, resting state fmri, diffusion tensor imaging, breath hold scan, eye movement calibration scan, visual stimulation scan, brain development, maturation, young human, late adult human, child, adolescent, adult human, image collection, pediatric, geriatric, behavior, cognitive, phentoyping, neuroimaging, dicom, nifti, multiband echo planar imaging, multiband resting state fmri, multiband diffusion tensor imaging, psychiatric assessment |
is related to: NKI/Rockland Sample is related to: NKI-RS Enhanced Sample has parent organization: 1000 Functional Connectomes Project has parent organization: Nathan S. Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research; New York; USA |
Aging | New York State Office of Mental Health and Research Foundation for Mental Hygiene ; Child Mind Institute 1FDN2012-1; NIMH R01MH094639-01; NIMH R01MH081218; NIMH R01MH083246; NIMH R21MH084126 |
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License | nlx_157648 | SCR_010460 | Enhanced Nathan Kline Institute-Rockland Sample Multiband Imaging Test-Retest Pilot Dataset, Enhanced Nathan Kline Institute-Rockland Sample (NKI-RS) Multiband Imaging Test-Retest Pilot Dataset | 2026-02-16 09:47:52 | 1 | |||||
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NKI-RS Enhanced Sample Resource Report Resource Website 50+ mentions |
NKI-RS Enhanced Sample (RRID:SCR_010461) | Enhanced NKI-RS | data set, data or information resource | Dataset of 1000 characterized community-ascertained participants using state-of-the-art multiband imaging-based resting state fMRI (R-fMRI) and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), genetics, and a deep phenotyping protocol from a large cross-sectional sample of brain development, maturation and aging (ages 6 - 85 yrs). The Center for Magnetic Resonance Research (CMRR), University of Minnesota, provided the NKI-RS effort with the latest version of the Multiband EPI sequence (Xu et al. 2012) and associated image reconstruction algorithms, enabling the acquisition of state-of-the-art imaging datasets for this large-scale imaging effort. The enhanced NKI-RS expands upon the phenotypic protocol of the original NKI-RS and captures a broad range of behavioral and cognitive phenomenology relevant to psychiatric health and illness. The validity and value of assessments were evaluated by consulting leaders in the field of psychiatric phenotyping. | demographic, multiband imaging, resting state fmri, diffusion tensor imaging, breath hold scan, eye movement calibration scan, visual stimulation scan, brain development, maturation, young human, late adult human, child, adolescent, adult human, image collection, pediatric, geriatric, behavior, cognitive, phentoyping, neuroimaging, dicom, nifti, multiband echo planar imaging, multiband resting state fmri, multiband diffusion tensor imaging, lifespan, physiological assessment, psychological assessment, genetic |
is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC) is related to: NKI/Rockland Sample is related to: NKI-RS Multiband Imaging Test-Retest Pilot Dataset is related to: Mind Research Network - COINS is related to: NIMH Repository and Genomics Resources has parent organization: Nathan S. Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research; New York; USA |
Aging | New York State Office of Mental Health and Research Foundation for Mental Hygiene ; Child Mind Institute 1FDN2012-1; NIMH R01MH094639-01; NIMH R01MH081218; NIMH R01MH083246; NIMH R21MH084126 |
Public, Data Usage Agreement | nlx_157649 | SCR_010461 | Enhanced Nathan Kline Institute - Rockland Sample | 2026-02-16 09:47:47 | 97 | |||||
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Retinal wave repository Resource Report Resource Website |
Retinal wave repository (RRID:SCR_010462) | Retinal wave repository | data set, data or information resource | A subset of the CARMEN repository, a curated set of data and code of multielectrode array recordings of spontaneous activity in developing mouse and ferret retina. The data have been annotated with minimal metadata and converted into HDF5 (Hierarchical data format, version 5) including the essential features of the recordings, such as developmental age, and genotype. All code and tools used in the analyses are also fully available for reuse, giving the ability to regenerate each figure and table and know exactly how the results were calculated, adding confidence in the research output and allowing others to easily build upon previous work. The addition of published data to the repository is encouraged. | hdf5, development, neural circuit, retina, eye, multielectrode, array recording, spontaneous activity, reproducible research, retinal wave, electrophysiology, multielectrode array, developmental age, genotype |
has parent organization: GigaScience has parent organization: Code Analysis Repository and Modelling for e-Neuroscience has parent organization: University of Cambridge; Cambridge; United Kingdom |
Developing retina, Aging | EPSRC EP/E002331/1; BBSRC BB/H023577/1; BBSRC BB/I000984/1; Wellcome Trust 083205/B/07/Z |
PMID:24666584 | Registration required, (CARMEN), Acknowledgement required, The community can contribute to this resource | nlx_157664 | http://www.damtp.cam.ac.uk/user/eglen/waverepo/ | SCR_010462 | A data repository and analysis framework for spontaneous neural activity recordings in developing retina | 2026-02-16 09:47:46 | 0 | |||
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Human Life-Table Database Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Human Life-Table Database (RRID:SCR_006248) | HLD | data set, data or information resource | A collection of population life tables covering a multitude of countries and many years. Most of the HLD life tables are life tables for national populations, which have been officially published by national statistical offices. Some of the HLD life tables refer to certain regional or ethnic sub-populations within countries. Parts of the HLD life tables are non-official life tables produced by researchers. Life tables describe the extent to which a generation of people (i.e. life table cohort) dies off with age. Life tables are the most ancient and important tool in demography. They are widely used for descriptive and analytical purposes in demography, public health, epidemiology, population geography, biology and many other branches of science. HLD includes the following types of data: * complete life tables in text format; * abridged life tables in text format; * references to statistical publications and other data sources; * scanned copies of the original life tables as they were published. Three scientific institutions are jointly developing the HLD: the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research (MPIDR) in Rostock, Germany, the Department of Demography at the University of California at Berkeley, USA and the Institut national d''��tudes d��mographiques (INED) in Paris, France. The MPIDR is responsible for maintaining the database. | demography, life table, death, late adult human, public health, epidemiology, population geography, population, mortality |
is used by: Aging Portal is used by: NIF Data Federation is related to: Human Mortality Database has parent organization: Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research; Mecklenburg-Vorpommern; Germany |
Aging, Death | Free, User Agreement, Acknowledgement required | nlx_151833 | SCR_006248 | Human Lifetable Database | 2026-02-16 09:46:40 | 9 | ||||||
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Noise Enhancement of Sensorimotor Function Resource Report Resource Website |
Noise Enhancement of Sensorimotor Function (RRID:SCR_006913) | Noise Enhancement of Sensorimotor Function | data set, data or information resource | Data set of postural sway measurements for 15 healthy young (mean age 23, standard deviation 2), and 12 healthy elderly (mean age 73, standard deviation 3) volunteers. Each subject''s postural sway was recorded during a test of 10 minutes for the young subjects, or 5 minutes for the elderly subjects, in all cases with a 2-minute seated break midway through the test. Each test was divided into 30-second trials, and each file of the database contains data for one of these 30-second trials. | aging, late adult human, early adult human |
has parent organization: Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Massachusetts; USA; has parent organization: Physiobank |
Aging, Healthy | PMID:14550702 | Acknowledgement requested | nlx_58609 | SCR_006913 | 2026-02-16 09:46:50 | 0 | ||||||
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National Longitudinal Mortality Study Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
National Longitudinal Mortality Study (RRID:SCR_008946) | NLMS | data set, data or information resource | A database based on a random sample of the noninstitutionalized population of the United States, developed for the purpose of studying the effects of demographic and socio-economic characteristics on differentials in mortality rates. It consists of data from 26 U.S. Current Population Surveys (CPS) cohorts, annual Social and Economic Supplements, and the 1980 Census cohort, combined with death certificate information to identify mortality status and cause of death covering the time interval, 1979 to 1998. The Current Population Surveys are March Supplements selected from the time period from March 1973 to March 1998. The NLMS routinely links geographical and demographic information from Census Bureau surveys and censuses to the NLMS database, and other available sources upon request. The Census Bureau and CMS have approved the linkage protocol and data acquisition is currently underway. The plan for the NLMS is to link information on mortality to the NLMS every two years from 1998 through 2006 with research on the resulting database to continue, at least, through 2009. The NLMS will continue to incorporate data from the yearly Annual Social and Economic Supplement into the study as the data become available. Based on the expected size of the Annual Social and Economic Supplements to be conducted, the expected number of deaths to be added to the NLMS through the updating process will increase the mortality content of the study to nearly 500,000 cases out of a total number of approximately 3.3 million records. This effort would also include expanding the NLMS population base by incorporating new March Supplement Current Population Survey data into the study as they become available. Linkages to the SEER and CMS datasets are also available. Data Availability: Due to the confidential nature of the data used in the NLMS, the public use dataset consists of a reduced number of CPS cohorts with a fixed follow-up period of five years. NIA does not make the data available directly. Research access to the entire NLMS database can be obtained through the NIA program contact listed. Interested investigators should email the NIA contact and send in a one page prospectus of the proposed project. NIA will approve projects based on their relevance to NIA/BSR''s areas of emphasis. Approved projects are then assigned to NLMS statisticians at the Census Bureau who work directly with the researcher to interface with the database. A modified version of the public use data files is available also through the Census restricted Data Centers. However, since the database is quite complex, many investigators have found that the most efficient way to access it is through the Census programmers. * Dates of Study: 1973-2009 * Study Features: Longitudinal * Sample Size: ~3.3 Million Link: *ICPSR: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/00134 | national, longitudinal, mortality, demographic, socio-economic, age, cause of death, death, death record, ethnicity, mortality rate, gender, marital status, race, late adult human, FASEB list |
is listed by: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR) has parent organization: U.S. Census Bureau |
Aging | NCI ; NHLBI ; NIA ; National Center for Health Statistics ; U.S. Census Bureau |
Public | nlx_151861 | SCR_008946 | National Longitudinal Mortality Study (NLMS) | 2026-02-16 09:47:18 | 32 | |||||
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Longitudinal Study of Generations Resource Report Resource Website |
Longitudinal Study of Generations (RRID:SCR_008939) | LSOG | data set, data or information resource | A dataset of a survey of intergenerational relations among 2,044 adult members of some 300 three- (and later four-) generation California families: grandparents (then in their sixties), middle-aged parents (then in their early forties), grandchildren (then aged 16 to 26), and later the great-grandchildren as they turn age 16, and further surveys in 1985, 1988, 1991, 1994, 1997 and 2001. This first fully-elaborated generation-sequential design makes it possible to compare sets of parents and adult-children at the same age across different historical periods and addresses the following objectives: # To track life-course trajectories of family intergenerational solidarity and conflict over three decades of adulthood, and across successive generations of family members; # To identify how intergenerational solidarity, and conflict influence the well-being of family members throughout the adult life course and across successive generations; # To chart the effects of socio-historical change on families, intergenerational relationships, and individual life-course development during the past three decades; # To examine women''s roles and relationships in multigenerational families over 30 years of rapid change in the social trajectories of women''s lives. These data can extend understanding of the complex interplay among macro-social change, family functioning, and individual well-being over the adult life-course and across successive generations. Data Availability: Data from 1971-1997 are available through ICPSR as Study number 4076. * Dates of Study: 1971-2001 * Study Features: Longitudinal * Sample Size: ** 345 Three-generational families ** 2,044 Adults (1971 baseline) Link: * ICPSR: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/04076 | adult, california, survey, intergenerational relations, adolescent, middle adult human, early adult human, late adult human, interview, questionnaire, activities of daily living, age, caregiver, child, death, drug use, education, employment, ethnicity, family history, generation, grandchildren, grandparent, household composition, institutional care, interpersonal relations, life satisfaction, marital status, mental health, military service, parent, physical condition, political affiliation, race, religion, self concept, sibling, conflict, woman, social change, family functioning, well-being, longitudinal |
is listed by: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR) has parent organization: University of Southern California; Los Angeles; USA has parent organization: National Archive of Computerized Data on Aging (NACDA) |
Aging | NIA 2R01AG00799-21A2 | Public | nlx_151845 | http://gero.usc.edu/research/4gen/ | SCR_008939 | Longitudinal Study of Generations (LSOG) | 2026-02-16 09:47:18 | 0 | ||||
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Second Malaysian Family Life Survey Resource Report Resource Website |
Second Malaysian Family Life Survey (RRID:SCR_008892) | MFLS-2 | data set, data or information resource | A follow-up of the 1976-1977 MFLS-1 dataset covering the respondents'' and spouses'' marriage, fertility, employment, education and migration histories as well as extensive information on the household economy. The MFLS-2 contains a supplementary sample of persons age 50 or older. The data permit analysis of intergenerational transfers to the elderly and their covariates; the living arrangements of the elderly; the health of the elderly; labor supply, occupation and retirement status of the elderly; and their migration patterns. This supplement fills the gap left by many standard sources of demographic and economic information about Third World populations, such as fertility surveys and labor force surveys, which effectively exclude the elderly. Field work for MFLS-2 began in Aug. 1988 and was completed in Jan. 1989. The survey was fielded in four samples: * The Panel Sample Women who were the primary respondents to the MFLS-1, who at that time (1976) were ever-married women aged 50 or younger. There are 926 panel households in MFLS-2, a follow-up rate of 72%. * The Children Sample Children aged 18 or older in 1988 of the women interviewed as primary respondents for MFLS-1; i.e. adult children of the women eligible for the MFLS-2 Panel sample. There were interviews with one child, selected at random, inside the Panel household and two children, selected at random, living elsewhere in Peninsular Malaysia. There are 1,136 respondents in the Children sample. * The New Sample A sample of households with a woman aged 18-49 (regardless of her marital status) or an ever-married woman under age 18. There are 2,184 respondents in MFLS-2 New Sample. * The Senior Sample Selected households with a person age 50 or over. There are 1,357 respondents in the Senior Sample. Data Availability: The MFLS-2 (and MFLS-1) data files and documentation are available on-line or from NACDA at ICPSR as Study No. 9805. * Dates of Study: 1988-1989 * Study Features: International * Sample Size: Seniors (aged 50+): 1,357 Link: * ICPSR: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/09805 | late adult human, middle adult human, fertility, nuptiality, migration, mortality, social, economic, family, household, behavior, interview, community, employment, health, income, marriage, mortality rate, reproductive history, social change, social network, male, female, adult, malaysia, survey, living arrangement, labor supply, occupation, retirement, early adult human, married, woman, senior, adolescent |
is listed by: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR) has parent organization: National Archive of Computerized Data on Aging (NACDA) |
Aging, Etc | NIA ; NICHD |
Public | nlx_151852 | SCR_008892 | Second Malaysian Family Life Survey (MFLS-2) | 2026-02-16 09:47:18 | 0 | |||||
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National Longitudinal Survey of Older Men Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
National Longitudinal Survey of Older Men (RRID:SCR_008947) | NLS Older Men, | data set, data or information resource | A dataset that permits examination of health, economic, work, and retirement trajectories for a representative national sample of men from middle to old age. The original sample of 5,020 men, first interviewed in 1966, was re-interviewed periodically until 1983 under a contract with the US Department of Labor. The study provided a detailed longitudinal record of their labor market activity, health, financial status, family structure, and attitudes toward and experience in retirement. The NIA grant made possible a re-interview in 1990 with the surviving men and the widows (or other next-of-kin) of the decedents. The merging of the 1990 data includes death certificate information for the decedents, Blacks were over-represented in the original sample in a ratio of about three or four to one, resulting in about 500 surviving black men in the sample. Information on labor market activity, income, and assets also is available for a sample of about 1,350 widows, 90 percent of whom are between 60 and 89 years of age. This information can be linked to earlier data on the women''s health and work activity that was reported by their late husbands. Due to the original sample selection, other NLS cohorts contain wives and daughters of the older men. These other surveys also hold a wealth of detailed information on aging and retirement issues, especially on income transfers. * Dates of Study: 1966-1990 * Study Features: Longitudinal, Minority Oversamples * Sample Size: ** 1966: 5,020 men (baseline) ** 1990: 2,092 surviving men, 1,341 widows, 865 other next-of-kin Links: * BLS Website on NLS: http://www.bls.gov/nls/ * ICPSR: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/04675 | middle adult human, late adult human, labor, longitudinal, minority, retirement, compensation, education, educational program, employment, employment discrimination, earned degree, finance, asset, health, health care, health problem, higher education, health insurance, industry, job description, job tenure, job training, leisure, military service, occupation, pension, psychological well-being, retirement planning, unemployment, union membership, vocational education, volunteer, work attitude, working hour, male, man, interview, questionnaire, financial status, family structure, death certificate, african-american, death, widow, daughter, female, income transfer, survey, labor market, discrimination, training, alcohol use, cigarette use, demographic, family |
is listed by: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR) has parent organization: Ohio State University; Ohio; USA |
Aging | NIA ; U.S. Department of Labor |
Publicly available to the research community | nlx_151863 | SCR_008947 | National Longitudinal Survey: 1990 Resurvey of Older Males, National Longitudinal Survey: 1990 Resurvey of Older Males (NLS-Older Males), NLS-Older Males, National Longitudinal Surveys of Older Men | 2026-02-16 09:47:18 | 3 | |||||
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NKI/Rockland Sample Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
NKI/Rockland Sample (RRID:SCR_009435) | data set, data or information resource | A phenotypically rich neuroimaging sample, consisting of data obtained from individuals between the ages of 4 and 85 years-old. All individuals included in the sample undergo semi-structured diagnostic psychiatric interviews, and complete a battery of psychiatric, cognitive and behavioral assessments in order to provide comprehensive phenotypic information for the purpose of exploring brain / behavior relationships. | image collection, young human, late adult human, neuroimaging, phenotype, fmri, dti, mprage, t2, psychiatric assessment, cognitive assessment, behavioral assessment, resting state fmri, dicom, nifti |
is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC) is related to: Rockland Download Link Script is related to: NKI-RS Multiband Imaging Test-Retest Pilot Dataset is related to: NKI-RS Enhanced Sample has parent organization: 1000 Functional Connectomes Project |
Aging | New York State Office of Mental Health and Research Foundation for Mental Hygiene ; NKI Center for Advanced Brain Imaging CABI ; the Brain Research Foundation Chicago ; the Stavros Niarchos Foundation ; NIMH P50 MH086385-S1 |
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License | nlx_155538 | http://www.nitrc.org/projects/dl_dataset | SCR_009435 | Nathan Kline Institute / Rockland Sample, NKI Rockland Sample, Nathan Kline Institute (NKI) / Rockland Sample | 2026-02-16 09:47:24 | 17 | |||||
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Panel Study of Income Dynamics Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
Panel Study of Income Dynamics (RRID:SCR_008976) | PSID | data set, data or information resource | Long-term longitudinal dataset with information on generational links and socioeconomic and health conditions of individuals over time. The central foci of the data are economic and demographic, with substantial detail on income sources and amounts, wealth, savings, employment, pensions, family composition changes, childbirth and marriage histories, and residential location. Over the life of the PSID, the NIA has funded supplements on wealth, health, parental health and long term care, housing, and the financial impact of illness, thus also making it possible to model retirement and residential mobility. Starting in 1999, much greater detail on specific health conditions and health care expenses is included for respondent and spouse. Other enhancements have included a question series about emotional distress (2001); the two stem questions from the Composite International Diagnostic Interview to assess symptoms of major depression (2003); a supplement on philanthropic giving and volunteering (2001-03); a question series on Internet and computer use (2003); linkage to the National Death Index with cause of death information for more than 4,000 individuals through the 1997 wave, updated for each subsequent wave; social and family history variables and GIS-linked environmental data; basic data on pension plans; event history calendar methodology to facilitate recall of employment spells (2001). The reporting unit is the family: single person living alone or sharing a household with other non-relatives; group of people related by blood, marriage, or adoption; unmarried couple living together in what appears to be a fairly permanent arrangement. Interviews were conducted annually from 1968 through 1997; biennial interviewing began in 1999. There is an oversample of Blacks (30%). Waves 1990 through 1995 included a 20% Hispanic oversample; within the Hispanic oversample, Cubans and Puerto Ricans were oversampled relative to Mexicans. All data from 1994 through 2001 are available as public release files; prior waves can be obtained in archive versions. The special files with weights for families are also available. Restricted files include the Geocode Match File with information for 1968 through 2001, the 1968-2001 Death File, and the 1991 Medicare Claims File. * Dates of Study: 1968-2003 * Study Features: Longitudinal, Minority Oversampling * Sample Size: 65,000+ Links * ICPSR Series: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/series/00131 * ICPSR 1968-1999: Annual Core Data: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/07439 * ICPSR 1968-1999: Supplemental Files: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/03202 * ICPSR 1989-1990: Latino Sample: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/03203 | longitudinal, minority, employment, income, wealth, expenditure, health, marriage, childbearing, child development, philanthropy, education, family income, attitude, economic behavior, economic change, economic condition, employment history, family, family history, fertility, food aid, household expenditure, household income, housing, population trend, poverty, social change, social indicator, socioeconomic status, african-american, survey, interview, questionnaire, census data, latino, economic status, demographic, intergeneration, individual, health condition, economic, income source, income amount, pension, family composition, childbirth, marriage history, residential location, emotional distress, hispanic, cuban, puerto rican, mexican |
is listed by: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR) has parent organization: University of Michigan; Ann Arbor; USA |
Aging | NIA ; U.S. Department of Health and Human Services ; APSE ; United States Department of Agriculture ; NICHD ; NSF |
Public, Acknowledgement requested | nlx_152067 | SCR_008976 | Panel Study of Income Dynamics - PSID, PSID - A national survey of socioeconomics and health over lifetimes and across generations, Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID) | 2026-02-16 09:47:19 | 17 | |||||
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New Immigrant Survey Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
New Immigrant Survey (RRID:SCR_008973) | NIS | data set, data or information resource | Public use data set on new legal immigrants to the U.S. that can address scientific and policy questions about migration behavior and the impacts of migration. A survey pilot project, the NIS-P, was carried out in 1996 to inform the fielding and design of the full NIS. Baseline interviews were ultimately conducted with 1,127 adult immigrants. Sample members were interviewed at baseline, 6 months, and 12 months, with half of the sample also interviewed at three months. The first full cohort, NIS-2003, is based on a nationally representative sample of the electronic administrative records compiled for new immigrants by the US government. NIS-2003 sampled immigrants in the period May-November 2003. The geographic sampling design takes advantage of the natural clustering of immigrants. It includes all top 85 Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs) and all top 38 counties, plus a random sample of other MSAs and counties. Interviews were conducted in respondents'' preferred languages. The baseline was multi-modal: 60% of adult interviews were administered by telephone; 40% were in-person. The baseline round was in the field from June 2003 to June 2004, and includes in the Adult Sample 8,573 respondents, 4,336 spouses, and 1,072 children aged 8-12. A follow-up was planned for 2007. Several modules of the NIS were designed to replicate sections of the continuing surveys of the US population that provide a natural comparison group. Questionnaire topics include Health (self-reports of conditions, symptoms, functional status, smoking and drinking history) and use/source/costs of health care services, depression, pain; background; (2) Background: Childhood history and living conditions, education, migration history, marital history, military history, fertility history, language skills, employment history in the US and foreign countries, social networks, religion; Family: Rosters of all children; for each, demographic attributes, education, current work status, migration, marital status and children; for some, summary indicators of childhood and current health, language ability; Economic: Sources and amounts of income, including wages, pensions, and government subsidies; type, value of assets and debts, financial assistance given/received to/from respondent from/to relatives, friends, employer, type of housing and ownership of consumable durables. * Dates of Study: 2003-2007 * Study Features: Longitudinal * Sample Size: 13,981 | longitudinal, immigrant, migration, behavior, adult human, spouse, child, questionnaire, health, family, economic, self-report, smoking, drinking, health care service, depression, pain, background, childhood history, living condition, education, migration history, marital history, military history, fertility history, language skill, employment history, social network, religion, education, work status, income, wage, pension, government subsidy, asset, debt, financial assistance, interview | has parent organization: Princeton University; New Jersey; USA | Aging | NIA ; NICHD ; Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research ; NSF ; US Citizenship and Immigration Services ; ASPE ; Pew Charitable Trusts |
Public: Users must complete a short registration process the first time they access the data. | nlx_152061 | SCR_008973 | 2026-02-16 09:47:19 | 2 | ||||||
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National Survey of Midlife Development in the United States Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
National Survey of Midlife Development in the United States (RRID:SCR_008972) | MIDUS | data set, data or information resource | Data set from a collaborative, interdisciplinary investigation of patterns, predictors, and consequences of midlife development in the areas of physical health, psychological well-being, and social responsibility. Respondents were asked to provide extensive information on their physical and mental health throughout their adult lives, and to assess the ways in which their lifestyles, including relationships and work-related demands, contributed to the conditions experienced. An additional series of questions focusing on childhood queried respondents regarding the presence/absence of their parents, religion, rules/punishments, love/affection, physical/verbal abuse, and the quality of their relationships with their parents and siblings. Respondents were drawn from a nationally representative random-digit-dial sample of non-institutionalized, English-speaking adults, aged 25-74, selected from working telephone banks in the coterminous United States. Those queried participated in an initial telephone interview and responded to a mail questionnaire. MIDUS 2 carried forward MIDUS 1 and enlisted a new sample of African Americans. MIDUS2 also expanded the focus by incorporating detailed neurophysiological assessments on a large subsample in three geographic regions. Data collection largely repeats T1 assessments (45 minute phone interview, 100 page self-administered questionnaire) plus additions in select areas (e.g., cognitive functioning, optimism and coping, life events, caregiving). In addition, MIDUS 2 is using diary techniques to assess daily stressors in a subsample of respondents; conducting cognitive testing through telephone interviews; collecting biological data on a subsample of respondents, including baseline biomarkers as well as laboratory challenge studies, with assessments of salivary cortisol, blood pressure, and heart rate variability; and collecting EEG measures to focus on the central circuitry of emotion, related to affect and depression. Siblings and Twins: Similar data were collected from a survey of 951 siblings of a respondent in the main survey. MIDUS also contains twins data, from a separate national survey unrelated to the main MIDUS survey. From this separate national survey, a total of 1,996 twins agreed to participate. The Twins respondents were given the same assessments as the Main and Siblings samples. Additionally, the Twins sample was asked a series of questions about their birth, shared physical characteristics, childhood and adult relationships with their twin, whether they were dressed alike as children, and whether others experienced difficulty identifying them correctly. Data and comprehensive documentation for MIDUS 1 and 2 are available via ICPSR. * Dates of Study: 1995-2008 * Study Features: Longitudinal, Minority Oversampling, Anthropometric Measures * Sample Size: ** 1995-6: 4,242 (MIDUS 1) ** 2004-6: 7,108 (MIDUS 2) Links: * ICPSR ����?? MIDUS 1: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/02760 * ICPSR ����?? MIDUS 2: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/04652 | adult, middle adult human, longitudinal, minority, anthropometric measure, midlife development, physical health, psychological well-being, social responsibility, sibling, twin, family relationship, family, health status, life satisfaction, lifestyle, mental health, midlife, social indicator, work attitude, behavior, psychology, social, late adult human, interview, cognitive functioning, optimism, coping, stressful life event, caregiving, questionnaire, african american, relationship, psychological factor, personality trait, positive affect, negative affect, sense of control, goal commitment, neurophysiological assessment |
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: Harvard Medical School; Massachusetts; USA has parent organization: University of Wisconsin-Madison; Wisconsin; USA |
Aging | MacArthur Foundation ; NIA |
Public | nlx_152055 | http://midmac.med.harvard.edu/ | SCR_008972 | Midlife Development in the U.S. | 2026-02-16 09:47:19 | 25 | ||||
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National Survey of the Japanese Elderly Resource Report Resource Website |
National Survey of the Japanese Elderly (RRID:SCR_008971) | NSJE | data set, data or information resource | A panel data set for use in cross-cultural analyses of aging, health, and well-being between the U.S. and Japan. The questionnaires were designed to be partially comparable to many surveys of the aged, including Americans'' Changing Lives; 1984 National Health Interview Survey Supplement on Aging; Health and Retirement Study (HRS), and Well-Being Among the Aged: Personal Control and Self-Esteem (WBA). NSJE questionnaire topics include: * Demographics (age, sex, marital status, education, employment) * Social Integration (interpersonal contacts, social supports) * Health Limitations on daily life and activities * Health Conditions * Health Status (ratings of present health) * Level of physical activity * Subjective Well-Being and Mental Health Status (life satisfaction, morale), * Psychological Indicators (life events, locus of control, self-esteem) * Financial situation (financial status) * Memory (measures of cognitive functioning) * Interviewer observations (assessments of respondents) The NSJE was based on a national sample of 2,200 noninstitutionalized elderly aged 60+ in Japan. This cohort has been interviewed once every 3 years since 1987. To ensure that the data are representative of the 60+ population, the samples in 1990 and 1996 were refreshed to add individuals aged 60-62. In 1999, a new cohort of Japanese adults aged 70+ was added to the surviving members of previous cohorts to form a database of 3,990 respondents 63+, of which some 3,000 were 70+. Currently a 6-wave longitudinal database (1987, 1990, 1993, 1996, 1999, & 2002) is in place; wave 7 began in 2006. Data Availability: Data from the first three waves of the National Survey of the Japanese Elderly are currently in the public domain and can be obtained from ICPSR. Additional data are being prepared for future public release. * Dates of Study: 1987-2006 * Study Features: Longitudinal, International * Sample Size: ** 1987: 2,200 ** 1990: 2,780 ** 1993: 2,780 ** 1996: ** 1999: 3,990 ** 2002: ** 2006: Links: * 1987 (ICPSR): http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/06842 * 1990 (ICPSR): http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/03407 * 1993 (ICPSR): http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/04145 * 1996 (ICPSR): http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/26621 | longitudinal, international, japan, demographic, health status, mental health, late adult human, psychological wellbeing, social integration, survey, age, sex, marital status, education, employment, interpersonal contact, social support, health, physical activity, life satisfaction, morale, financial status, memory, cognitive functioning, interview, questionnaire |
is listed by: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR) has parent organization: National Archive of Computerized Data on Aging (NACDA) has parent organization: University of Michigan; Ann Arbor; USA |
Aging, Noninstitutionalized, Late adult human | Japanese Ministry of Health Labor and Welfare ; Longevity Foundation ; NIA AG06643-08 |
Public | nlx_152040 | SCR_008971 | 2026-02-16 09:47:19 | 0 | ||||||
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Layton Alzheimers Disease Center Biomarkers and Genetics Core Lab Resource Report Resource Website |
Layton Alzheimers Disease Center Biomarkers and Genetics Core Lab (RRID:SCR_009911) | service resource, core facility, access service resource | In cooperation with the Data and Clinical Cores at the Layton Center, the Biomarkers and Genetics Core generates and maintains biomarker data for select biomarkers which have established roles in the characterization of subjects with or at risk of dementia. Biological markers of brain aging, dementia risk, and neurodegeneration have the potential to accelerate the identification of disease mechanisms and treatment strategies. Biomarkers may include genes, proteins, or other metabolites, and may be identified in DNA, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), or plasma. Apolipoprotein E (APOE) genotype is generated for all research subjects. Sub-groups of subjects have other types of biomarker data. Many subjects have had genome-wide SNP data generated. In order to foster collaborative research as well as expand resources and expertise, samples (DNA, CSF, and plasma) and data are distributed to qualified investigators worldwide. Most of these researchers are pursuing the causes and modifiers of dementia. Data and samples are collected from well characterized research subjects including the healthy elderly and dementia patients. |
is listed by: Eagle I has parent organization: OHSU Layton Aging and Alzheimer's Disease Center |
Aging | NCRR 5U24RR029825-02 | nlx_156376 | SCR_009911 | Layton Alzheimer''s Disease Center Biomarkers & Genetics Core Lab | 2026-02-16 09:47:34 | 0 |
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