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Biobank Graz
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
Biobank Graz (RRID:SCR_004245) Biobank Graz material resource, biomaterial supply resource Biobank Graz is a non-profit central Medical University of Graz (MUG) service facility that provides the logistics and infrastructure to optimally support MUG research teams in the collection, processing and storage of biological samples and their associated data. In the course of this, special attention is given to sample and data quality and to the protection of the individual rights of patients. Samples from selected patients at the Graz LKH-University Clinical Centre, who have signed an informed consent declaration, are deposited in Biobank Graz. This means that excess tissue and blood samples are collected and placed in storage. The samples are harvested in the course of routine interventions undertaken by the different departments and institutes of the Graz LKH-University Clinical Centre and approved for use in research projects only after the completion of all necessary laboratory and histopathological analyses. No additional material is removed: in other words, there are no associated drawbacks whatsoever for the patients involved. Biobank Graz operates a quality management system according to ISO 9001:2008 and offers the following services for the processing and storage of biological samples and the handling of data: * Consistently high sample quality through the processing of samples using standardized methods in accordance with written working instructions (SOPs) * Efficient use of resources through the building of shared infrastructure and the development of optimized processes * A high degree of reliability provided by the storage of samples in 24/7 - monitored storage systems. * Processing and storage of all data in accordance with data protection legislation. Biobank Graz comprises both population-based and disease-focused collections of biological materials. It currently contains approx. 3.8 mio samples from approx. 1.2 mio patients representing a nonselected patient group characteristic of central Europe. Because the Institute of Pathology was, until 2003, the exclusive pathology service provider for major parts of the province of Styria, including its capital Graz (population approx. 1.2 mio people), samples from all human diseases, treated by surgery or diagnosed by biopsy, are included in the collection at their natural frequency of occurrence and thus represent cancers and non-cancerous diseases from all organs, and from all age groups. The scientific value of the existing tissue collection is, thus, not only determined by its size and technical homogeneity (all samples have been processed in a single institute under constant conditions for more than 20 years), but also by its population-based character. These features provide ideal opportunities for epidemiological studies and allow the validation of biomarkers for the identification of specific diseases and determination of their response to treatment. Prospectively collected tissues, blood samples and clinical data comprise, on the one hand, randomly selected samples from all diseases and patient groups to provide sufficient numbers of samples for the evaluation of the disease-specificity of any gene or biomarker. On the other hand, Biobank Graz adopts a disease-focused approach for selected diseases (such as breast, colon and liver cancers as well as some metabolic diseases) through the collection of a range of different human biological samples of highest quality and detailed clinical follow-up data. Graz Medical University established the Biobank to provide improved and sustainable access to biological samples and related (clinical) data both for its own academic research and for external research projects of academic and industrial partners. It is a major interest of the university to initiate co-operative research projects. Biological samples and data are available to external institutions performing high-quality research projects which comply with the Biobank''s ethical and legal framework according to the access rules (Contact: COO Karine Sargsyan, MD, PhD). tissue, blood, dna, rna, serum, plasma, bodily fluid, urine, cryopreserved, formalin fixed paraffin embedded, csf, frozen, disease, population, patient, healthy, normal, clinical, patient, healthy, normal, disease, cancer, metabolic disease, breast cancer, colon cancer, liver cancer, clinical data, cerebral spinal fluid is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing
has parent organization: Medical University of Graz; Graz; Austria
All, Patient, Healthy, Normal, Disease, Cancer, Metabolic disease, Breast cancer, Colon cancer, Liver cancer Public: Graz Medical University established the Biobank to provide improved and sustainable access to biological samples and related (clinical) data both for its own academic research and for external research projects of academic and industrial partners. It is a major interest of the university to initiate co-operative research projects. Biological samples and data are available to external institutions performing high-quality research projects which comply with the Biobank''s ethical and legal framework according to the access rules. nlx_25894 SCR_004245 2026-02-12 09:43:47 0
Dynamics of Health Aging and Body Composition (Health ABC)
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
Dynamics of Health Aging and Body Composition (Health ABC) (RRID:SCR_008813) Health ABC material resource, biomaterial supply resource A study that characterizes the extent of change in body composition in older men and women, identifies clinical conditions accelerating these changes, and examines the health impact of these changes on strength, endurance, disability, and weight-related diseases of old age. The study population consists of 3,075 persons age 70-79 at baseline with about equal numbers of men and women. Thirty-three percent of the men are African-Americans as are 46% of the women. All persons in the study were selected to be free of disability in activities of daily living and free of functional limitation (defined as any difficulty walking a quarter of a mile or any difficulty walking up 10 steps without resting) at baseline. The core yearly examination for HEALTH ABC includes measurement of body composition by dual energy x-ray absorptio��������metry (DXA), walking ability, strength, an interview that includes self-report of limitations, a medication survey, and weight (Measurements in the Health ABC Study). Provision has been made for banking of blood specimens and extracted DNA (HealthABC repository). Study investigators are open to collaboration especially for measures focused on obesity and associated weight-related health conditions including osteoporosis, osteoarthritis, pulmonary function, cardiovascular disease, vascular disease, diabetes and glucose intolerance, and depression. The principal goals of the HEALTH ABC are: # To assess the association of baseline body weight, lean body mass, body fat, and bone mineral content, in relation to weight history, with: incident functional limitation; incidence and change in severity of weight-related health conditions; recovery of physical function after an acute event; baseline measures of strength, fitness and physical performance; gender, ethnicity and socioeconomic status # To access the contribution of episodes of severe acute illness in healthier older persons to changes in body weight, bone mineral content, lean body mass and body fat, and the relationship of these episodes to risk of functional limitation and recovery. # To assess the impact of weight-related co-morbid illness on the risk of functional limitation and recovery. # To assess the ways in which physiologic mediators of change in body composition influence and are influenced by changes in health in older adults and contribute to change in body composition; to understand how changes in body composition affect weight-related cardiovascular disease risk factors such as lipids, blood pressure and glucose tolerance. # To assess the interdependency of behavioral factors, such as nutrition and physical activity, co-morbid health conditions, and their association with change in body composition in old age. # To provide a firm scientific basis for understanding issues related to weight recommendations in old age through increased knowledge of the potential trade-offs between weight and risk of functional limitation, disability, morbidity and death; to provide information critical for developing effective strategies for the maintenance of health in older persons. african-american, man, woman, late adult human, obesity, osteoporosis, osteoarthritis, pulmonary function, cardiovascular disease, vascular disease, diabetes, glucose intolerance, depressive disorder, dna, serum, plasma, cell, urine, platelet, blood, citrated plasma, edta plasma, red blood cell, scat-1, buffy coat, frozen, healthy, body composition is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing
has parent organization: National Institute on Aging
Late adult human, Healthy, Aging NIA Collaborators: Study investigators are open to collaboration especially for measures focused on obesity and associated weight-related health conditions including osteoporosis, Osteoarthritis, Pulmonary function, Cardiovascular disease, Vascular disease, Diabetes and glucose intolerance, And depression. nlx_144412 SCR_008813 Dynamics of Health Aging and Body Composition, Health Aging and Body Composition (Health ABC) Study, Dynamics of Health Aging Body Composition, Health Aging and Body Composition Study, Health Aging Body Composition Study 2026-02-12 09:44:43 0
Laser Biomedical Research Center
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
1+ mentions
Laser Biomedical Research Center (RRID:SCR_000106) LBRC biomedical technology research center, access service resource, service resource THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on July 31,2025. Biomedical technology research center that develops basic scientific understanding and new techniques required for advancing clinical applications of lasers and spectroscopy. LBRC merges optical spectroscopy, imaging, scattering, and interferometry techniques to study biophysics and biochemistry of healthy and diseased biological structures from subcellular to entire-organ scale. spectroscopy, laser, biomedicine, optical spectroscopy, imaging, scattering, interferometry, optical probe, microscopy has parent organization: Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Massachusetts; USA; Pre-cancer, Cancer, Atherosclerosis, Healthy, Diseased NIBIB 4P41EB015871-30 THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE nlx_152645 SCR_000106 MIT Laser Biomedical Research Center, Laser Biomedical Research Center (LBRC) 2026-02-12 09:42:55 4
Trinity Biobank
 
Resource Report
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1+ mentions
Trinity Biobank (RRID:SCR_013279) Trinity Biobank material resource, biomaterial supply resource The Trinity Biobank was established in 2005 to serve the needs of researchers in the area of genetic epidemiology, population genetics and pharmacogenomics. Its services are available to researchers not only in Trinity College but to other institutions at home and abroad. We provide an automated DNA extraction service purifying large volumes blood (up to 10mL whole blood) and tissue DNA for archival and other purposes. In addition it makes available purified DNA and associated GWAS data from 2000 healthy donors for research use. A key requirement for reliable downstream use of DNA is purity and strand size. The quality of DNA in blood and tissue deteriorates upon storage without purification even at -80 degrees C. We ensure rapid turnaround of biological samples through automated extraction using the Qiagen Autopure system based on optimized ''salting out'' chemistry. The purified DNA sample may then be stored safely at -20 degrees C without deterioration thus freeing up valuable -80 degree C freezer space and the associated capital and maintenance cost as well as security and lab space provision. Automated DNA extraction is particularly suitable for high-throughput sample processing called for in epidemiological studies or simply for clearing sample inventory backlogs. The Trinity Biobank distributes control DNA to researchers as part of its remit to enhance the level of research activity and to synergize molecular medicine research nationally and internationally. The buffy coat collection has been made possible with the cooperation of the Irish Blood Transfusion Service (IBTS). An important requirement to access the collection is that the use of the samples relates only to ethically-approved research and to specifically-nominated research projects. The DNA collection consists of high quality human genomic DNA. Each of the available 2,000 samples is from a single individual and each sample comes with the age and gender data of the donor. The buffy coat sample is derived from the total white cell compliment (50mL buffy coat) of a blood donation (c 400mL). We will endeavor to fulfill samples number requests based on age and gender as best as possible. This collection has also been genotyped using the Affymetrix Genome-Wide Human SNP Array 6.0, featuring 1.8 million genetic markers, including more than 906,600 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and more than 946,000 probes for the detection of copy number variation (CNV). The DNA comes available as a 100ng/uL in 100uL of TE Buffer, ie in 10ug amounts in a separate screw-cap ampoule. The ampoules are shipped in 100-tube boxes (Sarstedt). Corresponding plasma (ACD) is also available on request. Genotype data is supplied in PLINK binary PED files format (http://pngu.mgh.harvard.edu/~purcell/plink/ ). dna, blood, tissue, buffy coat, cell, packed cell, cultured cell, buccal cell, whole blood, bodily fluid, fresh, frozen, healthy, normal, genetic epidemiology, population genetics, pharmacogenomics, gene, genetics, genome-wide association study, genome-wide association study data, genotype, dna extraction, non-mammalian, bacteria, gram-positive bacteria, gram-negative bacteria is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing
has parent organization: Trinity College Dublin; Dublin; Ireland
has parent organization: St. James Hospital; Dublin; Ireland
Healthy, Normal Public: Its services are available to researchers not only in Trinity College but to other institutions at home and abroad. The Trinity Biobank distributes control DNA to researchers as part of its remit to enhance the level of research activity and to synergize molecular medicine research nationally and internationally. It makes available purified DNA and associated GWAS data from 2000 healthy donors for research use. nlx_25068 http://www.tcd.ie/IMM/research_biobank.php SCR_013279 2026-02-12 09:45:47 3
Mount Sinai Alzheimer's Disease Research Center
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
Mount Sinai Alzheimer's Disease Research Center (RRID:SCR_008780) Mount Sinai ADRC biomaterial supply resource, tissue bank, material resource, brain bank A research facility and clinical program that is dedicated to the study and the treatment of both normal aging and Alzheimer's disease. This facility will accommodate requests for its resources (for example, data or tissue) from investigators that are not funded by the ADRC. Their team is composed of experts in geriatrics, geriatric psychiatry and psychology, neurology, pathology, and radiology. All team members work to provide services to those with memory disorders. This center sponsors educational programs for healthcare professionals and community groups. Data from the ADRC cores are available to all ADRC investigators after approval from the PI who collected the data. Data generated by the ADRC cores are communicated to the National Alzheimer's Coordinating Center (NACC) and can be available through them. Tissue can be distributed after approval of the Tissue Allocation Committee, and can be used for further research. normal aging, alzheimer's disease, late adult human, memory disorder, memory, dementia, healthy, brain tissue, brain, tissue, paraffin embedded, block, stain, clinical is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing
has parent organization: Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai; New York; USA
Alzheimer's disease, Aging, Healthy NIA Public / Collaborator: The ADRC at Mount Sinai School of Medicine is receptive to requests of ADRC resources (data, Tissue, And so on). The ADRC welcomes requests for tissue from Investigators not currently funded by the ADRC. Tissues needed for conduct of ADRC projects are distributed directly to PIs. Distribution of tissue will be made on a collaborative basis only and determined on a case by case basis by the Tissue Allocation Committee. nlx_144162 SCR_008780 Mount Sinai School of Medicine ADRC, Mount Sinai School of Medicine Alzheimer's Disease Research Center, Mount Sinai Alzheimer's Disease Research Center 2026-02-11 10:58:02 0
RLS Foundation Brain Bank
 
Resource Report
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RLS Foundation Brain Bank (RRID:SCR_005089) RLS Foundation Brain Bank biomaterial supply resource, tissue bank, material resource, brain bank The Restless Legs Syndrome Foundation established the RLS Foundation Brain Bank at the Harvard Brain Tissue Resource Center in 2000. A part of the Harvard University medical system, the Center (housed at McLean Hospital and commonly referred to as The Brain Bank) began in 1978 as a centralized resource for the collection and distribution of human brain specimens for research and diagnostic studies. Over the years, hundreds of scientists from the nation''s top research and medical centers have requested tissue from The Brain Bank for their investigations. Because most of these studies can be carried out on a very small amount of tissue, each donated brain provides a large number of samples for many researchers. For comparative purposes, brain tissue is needed from healthy individuals, as well as from those who had RLS. When possible, a small portion of frozen tissue taken from each brain donated to the RLS Foundation Collection will be kept available to serve as a resource for future genetic testing. The process of donating your brain to RLS research is broken down into 5 steps. To view these steps, please read our Process Steps in RLS Brain Tissue Collection. To read about the process of donating brain tissue for research, visit our Brain Bank Tissue Donation page. restless legs syndrome, healthy, normal control, brain tissue, brain, tissue, frozen, quick frozen, passive frozen, formalin fixed, paraffin embedded, post-mortem is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing
has parent organization: RLS Foundation
has parent organization: Harvard Brain Tissue Resource Center
has parent organization: Harvard Medical School; Massachusetts; USA
Restless Legs Syndrome, Healthy, Normal control Public (non-commercial?): Over the years, Hundreds of scientists from the nation''s top research and medical centers have requested tissue from The Brain Bank for their investigations. nlx_144146 SCR_005089 RLS Foundation Brain Bank Tissue Collection, Restless Legs Syndrome Foundation Brain Bank, RLS Foundation Research Brain Bank 2026-02-11 10:57:02 0
Arredondo ANT fNIRS dataset1
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
Arredondo ANT fNIRS dataset1 (RRID:SCR_002653) AAF Data, AAF Data1, AF Data, AF Data1 data or information resource, data set THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented September 12, 2017.

Dataset in Bilingual exposure optimizes left-hemisphere dominance for selective attention processes in the developing brain by Arredondo, Su, Satterfield, & Kovelman (XX) Does early bilingual exposure alter the representations of cognitive processes in the developing brain? Theories of bilingual development have suggested that bilingual language switching might improve children''s executive function and foster the maturation of prefrontal brain regions that support higher cognition. To test this hypothesis, we used functional Near Infrared Spectroscopy to measure brain activity in Spanish-English bilingual and English-monolingual children during a visuo-spatial executive function task of attentional control (N=27, ages 7-13). Prior findings suggest that while young children start with bilateral activation for the task, it becomes right-lateralized with age (Konrad et al., 2005). Indeed monolinguals showed bilateral frontal activation, however young bilinguals showed greater activation in left language areas relative to right hemisphere and relative to monolinguals. The findings suggest that bilingual experience optimizes attention mechanisms in the language hemisphere, and highlight the importance of early experiences for neurodevelopmental plasticity of higher cognition. These data are made available from Ioulia Kovelman''s Language and Literacy Lab at University of Michigan and may be exported through the NIF Data Federation. To cite these data please use this text Data were published by Arredondo et al. (XX) and made available via the NIF at XX
attention, functional near infrared spectroscopy, fnirs, bilingualism, language, child, ant, developing, brain is used by: NIF Data Federation
has parent organization: University of Michigan; Ann Arbor; USA
Healthy THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE nlx_156086 SCR_002653 ANT fNIRS Dataset1, ANT fNIRS Data Set1, Arredondo ANT fNIRS Data Set 1, Arredondo ANT fNIRS Data Set1, ANT fNIRS Data Set 1 2026-02-11 10:56:30 0
WU-Minn HCP 500 Subjects MR and MEG Release
 
Resource Report
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10+ mentions
WU-Minn HCP 500 Subjects MR and MEG Release (RRID:SCR_003922) WU-Minn S500, HCP S500 data or information resource, data set Behavioral and 3T MR imaging data from over 500 healthy adult participants with 14 subjects also scanned in resting-state MEG (rMEG) and task MEG (tMEG). Highlights: * Behavioral and demographic data on 550 subjects. * MR imaging data preprocessed using updated pipelines (structural pipeline v3.1, functional pipeline v3.1, diffusion pipeline v3.1, task analysis pipeline v3.3). * Updates to pipelines include a new intersubject registration method called MSMSulc. All MR data from Q1-Q3 releases have been reprocessed. HCP strongly advises against mixing data from this release with previously-released data. * Individual task fMRI grayordinate-based analysis results (available at 2mm, 4mm, 8mm, and 12mm smoothing levels) and volume-based analysis results (4mm smoothing) are available for all complete 500 Subjects tfMRI data, using an updated task analysis pipeline v3.3. * New extensively processed 100- and 400+-subject group-average functional MR data. * Updates to MEG data and access in ConnectomeDB. Structural MRI-based MEG anatomical models and MR data for the 14 MEG1 Release subjects. * Improvements to behavioral data organization and data dictionary, including the addition of previously unreleased restricted behavioral and demographic data. * All imaging data soon to be available on the cloud through Amazon S3. (More information to come!) meg, mri, early adult human, behavioral, demographic, neuroimaging, resting state, task, multimodal, behavioral measure, fmri, image is used by: NIF Data Federation
has parent organization: Human Connectome Coordination Facility
Healthy Account required, Open Access Data Use Terms, Open unspecified license nlx_158287 SCR_003922 HCP 500 Subjects Release, HCP 500 Subjects, WU-Minn HCP 500 Subjects Release, WU-Minn HCP 500 Subjects, HCP 500 Subjects MR + MEG Release, HCP 500 Subjects MR and MEG Release, WU-Minn HCP 500 Subjects MR + MEG Release 2026-02-11 10:56:46 14
Noise Enhancement of Sensorimotor Function
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
Noise Enhancement of Sensorimotor Function (RRID:SCR_006913) Noise Enhancement of Sensorimotor Function data or information resource, data set 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 2026-02-11 10:57:28 0
CANDI Share: Schizophrenia Bulletin 2008
 
Resource Report
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1+ mentions
CANDI Share: Schizophrenia Bulletin 2008 (RRID:SCR_009451) CANDI Share: Schizophrenia Bulletin 2008 data or information resource, data set This project hosts data for CANDI Share Schizophrenia Bulletin 2008 (reference below) as part of the CANDI Neuroimaging Access Point. This set includes preprocessed MRI images and segmentation results of all 4 diagnostic groups (Healthy Controls, N=29; Schizophrenia Spectrum, N=20; Bipolar Disorder with Psychosis, N=19; and Bipolar Disorder without Psychosis, N=35). Frazier JA, Hodge SM, Breeze JL, Giuliano AJ, Terry JE, Moore CM, Kennedy DN, Lopez-Larson MP, Caviness VS, Seidman LJ, Zablotsky B, Makris N. Diagnostic and sex effects on limbic volumes in early-onset bipolar disorder and schizophrenia. Schizophr Bull. 2008 Jan;34(1):37-46. magnetic resonance, mri, segmentation, image collection is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC)
has parent organization: CANDI Neuroimaging Access Point
Bipolar Disorder, Schizophrenia, Healthy, Bipolar Disorder without psychosis, Bipolar Disorder with psychosis, Psychosis PMID:18003631 Creative Commons Attribution License nlx_155595 SCR_009451 2026-02-11 10:58:01 2
Database of Genomic Variants
 
Resource Report
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100+ mentions
Database of Genomic Variants (RRID:SCR_007000) DGV data or information resource, database Collection of curated structural variation in the human genome. Catalogue of human genomic structural variation identified in healthy control samples for studies aiming to correlate genomic variation with phenotypic data. It is continuously updated with new data from peer reviewed research studies. The Database is no longer accepting direct submission of data as they are currently part of a collaboration with two new archival CNV databases at EBI and NCBI, called DGVa and dbVAR, respectively. One of the changes to DGV as part of this collaborative effort is that they will no longer be accepting direct submissions, but rather obtain the datasets from DGVa (short for DGV archive). This will ensure that the three databases are synchronized, and will allow for an official accessioning of variants. genome, chromosome, control, deletion, structure, insertion, inversion, segmental duplication, structural variation, genomic variation, phenotype, copy number variation, indel, genetics, gene expression, chromosome abnormality, human genome, variation, dna, statistics, chromosome, FASEB list is used by: MARRVEL
is listed by: OMICtools
is related to: Database of Genomic Variants Archive (DGVa)
is related to: dbVar
Healthy, Control Genome Canada ;
Ontario Genomics Institute ;
McLaughlin Centre ;
Canadian Institutes of Health Research
PMID:24174537 Acknowledgement requested nif-0000-02721, OMICS_00266, r3d100010346 http://projects.tcag.ca/variation/
https://doi.org/10.17616/R3NC8H
SCR_007000 DGV, Database of Genomic Variants 2026-02-11 10:57:30 380
Beijing: Eyes Open Eyes Closed Study
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
Beijing: Eyes Open Eyes Closed Study (RRID:SCR_001507) Beijing EOEC data or information resource, data set Data set of 48 healthy controls from a community (student) sample from Beijing Normal University in China with 3 resting state fMRI scans each. During the first scan participants were instructed to rest with their eyes closed. The second and third resting state scan were randomized between resting with eyes open versus eyes closed. In addition this dataset contains a 64-direction DTI scan for every participant. The following data are released for every participant: * 6-minute resting state fMRI scan (R-fMRI) * MPRAGE anatomical scan, defaced to protect patient confidentiality * 64-direction diffusion tensor imaging scan (2mm isotropic) * Demographic information and information on the counterbalancing of eyes open versus eyes closed. early adult human, resting state, fmri, diffusion tensor imaging, resting state fmri, eyes open, eyes closed, neuroimaging, mprage, image collection, brain is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC)
has parent organization: Beijing Normal University; Beijing; China
has parent organization: 1000 Functional Connectomes Project
Healthy National Natural Science Foundation of China 30770594;
National High Technology Program of China (863) 2008AA02Z405
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License nlx_152810 SCR_001507 Beijing Eyes Open Eyes Closed Study, Beijing Normal University State Key Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience and Learning Eyes Open Eyes Closed Sample, Eyes Open Eyes Closed Sample, BNU Eyes Open Eyes Closed Sample 2026-02-11 10:56:14 0
Chinese Longitudinal Healthy Longevity Survey (CLHLS)
 
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1+ mentions
Chinese Longitudinal Healthy Longevity Survey (CLHLS) (RRID:SCR_008904) CLHLS data or information resource, database The project has been collecting detailed panel data about the health, disability, demographic, family, socioeconomic, and behavioral risk-factors for mortality and healthy longevity of the oldest old, with a comparative sub-sample of younger elders, to examine the factors in healthy longevity. The baseline survey was conducted in 1998 and the follow-up surveys with replacement to compensate for deceased elders were conducted in 2000, 2002, 2005, and 2008, For each centenarian, one near-by octogenarian (aged 80-89) and one near-by nonagenarian (aged 90-99) of pre-designated age and sex were interviewed. Near-by is loosely defined it could be in the same village or street if available, or in the same town or in the same county or city. The idea was to have comparable numbers of male and female octogenarians and nonagenarians at each age from 80 to 99. In 2002, the study added a refresher sub-sample of 4,845 interviewees aged 65-79, and a sub-sample of 4,478 adult children (aged 35-65) of the elderly interviewees aged 65-110 in eight provinces Comparative study of intergenerational relationships in the context of rapid aging and healthy longevity between Mainland China and Taiwan is possible. At each wave, the longitudinal survivors were re-interviewed, and the deceased interviewees were replaced by additional participants. Data on mortality and health status before dying for the 12,136 elders aged 65-112 who died between the waves were collected in interviews with a close family member of the deceased. The study also included interviews and follow-ups with 4,478 elderly interviewees'''' children aged 35-65. * Dates of Study: 1998-2005 * Study Features: Longitudinal, International * Sample Size: ** 1998: 8,993 ** 2000: 11,199 ** 2002: 16,064 ** 2005: 14,923 Links * Data Archive, http://www.geri.duke.edu/china_study/CLHLS6.htm * ICPSR, http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/NACDA/studies/03891 health, longevity, chinese, male, female, late adult human, interview, adult, middle adult human, longitudinal, international, disability, demographic, family, socioeconomic, behavior, risk-factor 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: Peking University; Beijing; China
has parent organization: Duke University; North Carolina; USA
Aging, Healthy NIA ;
UNFPA ;
China National Foundation for Social Sciences
The 1998 baseline and 2000, 2002, 2005 follow-up healthy longevity survey data are now available here pending signature of a data use agreement: http://www.geri.duke.edu/china_study/CLHLS6.htm. nlx_151432 SCR_008904 Chinese Longitudinal Healthy Longevity Survey 2026-02-11 10:57:58 1
NIMH Brain Tissue Collection
 
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1+ mentions
NIMH Brain Tissue Collection (RRID:SCR_008726) NIMH Brain Bank biomaterial supply resource, tissue bank, material resource, brain bank A collection of brain tissue from individuals suffering from schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, depression, anxiety disorders, and substance abuse, as well as healthy individuals. The research mission of the NIMH Brain Bank is to better understand the underlying biological mechanisms and pathways that contribute to schizophrenia and other neuropsychiatric disorders, as well as to study normal human brain development. schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, depressive disorder, anxiety disorder, substance abuse, healthy, neurological disorder, mental disease, suicide, tourette's syndrome, dementia, brain development, brain, brain tissue, tissue, post-mortem, normal control, ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00001260 is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing
has parent organization: NIMH Intramural Research Program Clinical Brain Disorders Branch
Schizophrenia, Bipolar Disorder, Depressiive Disorder, Anxiety Disorder, Drug Abuse, Healthy, Neurological disorder, Mental disease, Suicide, Tourette's Syndrome, Dementia, Normal control, Aging NIMH Samples available to investigators approved by an NIMH Oversight Committee, Molecular and genetic data available to the scientific community nlx_143684 http://cbdb.nimh.nih.gov/neuropath.htm SCR_008726 2026-02-11 10:57:51 1
anage
 
Resource Report
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100+ mentions
anage (RRID:SCR_001470) AnAge data or information resource, database Curated database of aging and life history in animals, including extensive longevity records and complementary traits for > 4000 vertebrate species. AnAge was primarily developed for comparative biology studies, in particular studies of longevity and aging, but can also be useful for ecological and conservation studies and as a reference for zoos and field biologists. senescence, comparative biology, longevity is used by: Aging Portal
is used by: NIF Data Federation
has parent organization: Human Ageing Genomic Resources
Healthy aging, Aging, Healthy PMID:23193293 Free, Freely Available nlx_152700 SCR_001470 Animal Ageing and Longevity Database, AnAge Database of Animal Ageing and Longevity, AnAge: The Animal Ageing and Longevity Database 2026-02-11 10:56:14 144
BraVa
 
Resource Report
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1+ mentions
BraVa (RRID:SCR_001407) BraVa data or information resource, database A database of digital reconstructions of the human brain arterial arborizations from 61 healthy adult subjects along with extracted morphological measurements. The arterial arborizations include the six major trees stemming from the circle of Willis, namely: the left and right Anterior Cerebral Arteries (ACAs), Middle Cerebral Arteries (MCAs), and Posterior Cerebral Arteries (PCAs). digital reconstruction, morphometric analysis, cerebrum, arterial vasculature, magnetic resonance angiography, adult human, morphology, artery, arborization, circle of willis, cerebral artery, male, female, magnetic resonance is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC)
is related to: Bravissima
has parent organization: George Mason University: Krasnow Institute for Advanced Study
Healthy NINDS NS39600;
NIBIB EB001955;
NINDS NS061770;
NIMH P20 MH52176
PMID:23727319 Free, Freely Available nlx_152630 http://www.nitrc.org/projects/breva SCR_001407 2026-02-11 10:56:13 8
MIRIAD
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
50+ mentions
MIRIAD (RRID:SCR_002422) MIRIAD data or information resource, database A database of volumetric MRI brain-scans of 46 Alzheimer's sufferers and 23 healthy elderly people. Many scans were collected of each participant at intervals from 2 weeks to 2 years, the study was designed to investigate the feasibility of using MRI as an outcome measure for clinical trials of Alzheimer's treatments. It includes a total of 708 scans and should be of particular interest for work on longitudinal biomarkers and image analysis. magnetic resonance, late adult human, longitudinal, mri, mini mental state examination, FASEB list is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC)
is related to: XNAT - The Extensible Neuroimaging Archive Toolkit
has parent organization: University College London; London; United Kingdom
Alzheimer's disease, Healthy, Late adult human UK Alzheimers Society ;
GlaxoSmithKline ;
MRC MR/J014257/1;
EPSRC EP/H046410/1 ;
Comprehensive Biomedical Research Centre Strategic Investment Award Ref. 168 ;
National Institute for Health Research
PMID:23274184 Free, Available for download, Freely available nlx_155795 http://www.nitrc.org/projects/miriad SCR_002422 MIRIAD dataset, MIRIAD XNAT database, MIRIAD database, Minimal Interval Resonance Imaging in Alzheimer's Disease, Minimal Interval Resonance Imaging in Alzheimer's Disease - public dataset 2026-02-11 10:56:32 50
Physiobank
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
10+ mentions
Physiobank (RRID:SCR_006949) PhysioBank data repository, service resource, storage service resource, database, data or information resource, catalog Archive of well-characterized digital recordings of physiologic signals and related data for use by the biomedical research community. PhysioBank currently includes databases of multi-parameter cardiopulmonary, neural, and other biomedical signals from healthy subjects and patients with a variety of conditions with major public health implications, including sudden cardiac death, congestive heart failure, epilepsy, gait disorders, sleep apnea, and aging. The PhysioBank Archives now contain over 700 gigabytes of data that may be freely downloaded. PhysioNet is seeking contributions of data sets that can be made freely available in PhysioBank. Contributions of digitized and anonymized (deidentified) physiologic signals and time series of all types are welcome. If you have a data set that may be suitable, please review PhysioNet''s guidelines for contributors and contact them. physiologic, signal, data, biomedical, research, community, cardiopulmonary, neural, biomedical, health, cardiac, death, congestive heart failure, epilepsy, gait, disorder, sleep apnea, bibliographic, normal, physiologic signal, time series, FASEB list is used by: NIF Data Federation
is used by: Integrated Datasets
is related to: PhysioToolkit
is parent organization of: Gait in Aging and Disease Database
is parent organization of: Gait in Parkinson's Disease
is parent organization of: Gait Dynamics in Neuro-Degenerative Disease Data Base
is parent organization of: Noise Enhancement of Sensorimotor Function
Healthy, Sudden cardiac death, Congestive heart failure, Epilepsy, Gait disorder, Sleep apnea, Aging NIGMS ;
NIBIB U01-EB-008577
PMID:10851218 Free, The community can contribute to this resource, Acknowledgement requested nlx_48903, r3d100011236 https://doi.org/10.17616/R3J048 SCR_006949 2026-02-12 09:44:26 39
HUPO Brain Proteome Project
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
1+ mentions
HUPO Brain Proteome Project (RRID:SCR_007302) HBPP data or information resource, portal, topical portal An open international project under the patronage of the Human Proteome Organisation (HUPO) that aims: To analyze the brain proteome of human as well as mouse models in healthy, neurodiseased and aged status with focus on Alzheimer's and Parkinson's Disease; To perform quantitative proteomics as well as complementary gene expression profiling on disease-related brain areas and bodily fluids; To advance knowledge of neurodiseases and aging in order to push new diagnostic approaches and medications; To exchange knowledge and data with other HUPO projects and national / international initiatives in the neuroproteomic field; To make neuroproteomic research and its results available in the scientific community and society. Recent work has shown that standards in proteomics and especially in bioinformatics are mandatory to allow comparable analyses, but still missing. To address this challenge, the HUPO BPP is closely working together with the HUPO Proteome Standards Initiative (HUPO PSI). molecular neuroanatomy resource, brain, proteome, gene expression, expression profiling, proteomics, standard has parent organization: HUPO - Human Proteome Organisation Healthy, Neurodiseased, Aged, Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, Aging BMBF nif-0000-00173 SCR_007302 Human Brain Proteom Project, HUPO BPP 2026-02-12 09:44:40 1
Harvard - Oxford Cortical Structural Atlas
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
100+ mentions
Harvard - Oxford Cortical Structural Atlas (RRID:SCR_001476) Atlases data or information resource, atlas, reference atlas Probabilistic atlases covering 48 cortical and 21 subcortical structural areas, derived from structural data and segmentations kindly provided by the Harvard Center for Morphometric Analysis. T1-weighted images of 21 healthy male and 16 healthy female subjects (ages 18-50) were individually segmented by the CMA using semi-automated tools developed in-house. The T1-weighted images were affine-registered to MNI152 space using FLIRT (FSL), and the transforms then applied to the individual labels. Finally, these were combined across subjects to form population probability maps for each label. Segmentations used to create these atlases were provided by: David Kennedy and Christian Haselgrove, Centre for Morphometric Analysis, Harvard; Bruce Fischl, the Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, MGH; Janis Breeze and Jean Frazier from the Child and Adolescent Neuropsychiatric Research Program, Cambridge Health Alliance; Larry Seidman and Jill Goldstein from the Department of Psychiatry of Harvard Medical School. male, female, t1-weighted image, cortical, subcortical, neuroanatomy, cortex has parent organization: Harvard University; Cambridge; United States
is a plug in for: FSL
Healthy NCRR R01 RR16594-01A1;
NIMH K01 MH01798;
NINDS R01 NS052585-01;
NIMH K08 MH01573
Free, Freely available nlx_152707 SCR_001476 , Harvard Oxford Cortical Structural Atlas, Harvard-Oxford cortical and subcortical structural atlases, Harvard Oxford Atlas 2026-02-12 09:43:10 144

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