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| Resource Name | Proper Citation | Abbreviations | Resource Type |
Description |
Keywords | Resource Relationships | |||||||||||||
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NIH MRI Study of Normal Brain Development Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
NIH MRI Study of Normal Brain Development (RRID:SCR_003394) | Pediatric MRI Study | data or information resource, narrative resource, experimental protocol, data set | Data sets of clinical / behavioral and image data are available for download by qualified researchers from a seven year, multi-site, longitudinal study using magnetic resonance technologies to study brain maturation in healthy, typically-developing infants, children, and adolescents and to correlate brain development with cognitive and behavioral development. The information obtained in this study is expected to provide essential data for understanding the course of normal brain development as a basis for understanding atypical brain development associated with a variety of developmental, neurological, and neuropsychiatric disorders affecting children and adults. This study enrolled over 500 children, ranging from infancy to young adulthood. The goal was to study each participant at least three times over the course of the project at one of six Pediatric Centers across the United States. Brain MR and clinical/behavioral data have been compiled and analyzed at a Data Coordinating Center and Clinical Coordinating Center. Additionally, MR spectroscopy and DTI data are being analyzed. The study was organized around two objectives corresponding to two age ranges at the time of enrollment, each with its own protocols. * Objective 1 enrolled children ages 4 years, 6 months through 18 years (total N = 433). This sample was recruited across the six Pediatric Study Centers using community based sampling to reflect the demographics of the United States in terms of income, race, and ethnicity. The subjects were studied with both imaging and clinical/behavioral measures at two year intervals for three time points. * Objective 2 enrolled newborns, infants, toddlers, and preschoolers from birth through 4 years, 5 months, who were studied three or more times at two Pediatric Study Centers at intervals ranging from three months for the youngest subjects to one year as the children approach the Objective 1 age range. Both imaging and clinical/behavioral measures were collected at each time point. Participant recruitment used community based sampling that included hospital venues (e.g., maternity wards and nurseries, satellite physician offices, and well-child clinics), community organizations (e.g., day-care centers, schools, and churches), and siblings of children participating in other research at the Pediatric Study Centers. At timepoint 1, of those enrolled, 114 children had T1 scans that passed quality control checks. Staged data release plan: The first data release included structural MR images and clinical/behavioral data from the first assessments, Visit 1, for Objective 1. A second data release included structural MRI and clinical/behavioral data from the second visit for Objective 1. A third data release included structural MRI data for both Objective 1 and 2 and all time points, as well as preliminary spectroscopy data. A fourth data release added cortical thickness, gyrification and cortical surface data. Yet to be released are longitudinally registered anatomic MRI data and diffusion tensor data. A collaborative effort among the participating centers and NIH resulted in age-appropriate MR protocols and clinical/behavioral batteries of instruments. A summary of this protocol is available as a Protocol release document. Details of the project, such as study design, rationale, recruitment, instrument battery, MRI acquisition details, and quality controls can be found in the study protocol. Also available are the MRI procedure manual and Clinical/Behavioral procedure manuals for Objective 1 and Objective 2. | young human, child, pediatric, experimental protocol, brain, brain development, development, mri, minc, clinical, behavior, anatomical mri, diffusion tensor imaging, mr spectroscopy, adolescent, clinical data, behavioral data, data visualization software, clinical measure, behavioral measure, physical neurological examination, behavioral rating, neuropsychological testing, structured psychiatric interview, hormonal measure, image collection, neonate, clinical neuroinformatics, dicom, minc2, magnetic resonance, nifti |
is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC) is listed by: Biositemaps is listed by: NIH Data Sharing Repositories is related to: NIH Data Sharing Repositories has parent organization: National Institutes of Health |
Healthy, Normal | NICHD ; NIDA ; NIMH ; NINDS ; NIH Blueprint for Neuroscience Research |
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-00201 | http://www.bic.mni.mcgill.ca/nihpd/info/, https://nihpd.crbs.ucsd.edu/nihpd/info/index.html | SCR_003394 | NIH Pediatric MRI Data Repository, Pediatric MRI Data Repository | 2026-02-12 09:43:36 | 6 | ||||
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Hippocampome.org Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
Hippocampome.org (RRID:SCR_009023) | Hippocampome | data or information resource, database | A curated knowledge base of the circuitry of the hippocampus of normal adult, or adolescent, rodents at the mesoscopic level of neuronal types. Knowledge concerning dentate gyrus, CA3, CA2, CA1, subiculum, and entorhinal cortex is distilled from published evidence and is continuously updated as new information becomes available. Each reported neuronal property is documented with a pointer to, and excerpt from, relevant published evidence, such as citation quotes or illustrations. Please note: This is an alpha-testing site. The content is still being vetted for accuracy and has not yet undergone peer-review. As such, it may contain inaccuracies and should not (yet) be trusted as a scholarly resource. The content does not yet appear uniformly across all combinations of browsers and screen resolutions. | interneuron, classification, neuroinformatics, network, hippocampus, neuron, property, morphology, molecular marker, electrophysiology, adult, adolescent, dentate gyrus, ca3, ca2, ca1, subiculum, entorhinal cortex, bio.tools |
is used by: BICCN is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC) is listed by: Debian is listed by: bio.tools has parent organization: George Mason University; Virginia; USA |
Normal | Air Force Office of Scientific Research ; Office of Naval Research MURI N00014-10-1-0198; NINDS R01NS39600; NINDS R21NS58816 |
Except otherwise noted, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License | nlx_152892, biotools:Hippocampome.org | http://www.nitrc.org/projects/hippocampome https://bio.tools/Hippocampome.org |
SCR_009023 | Hippocampome Portal | 2026-02-11 10:58:04 | 32 | ||||
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Open Rotterdam Glaucoma Imaging Data Sets Resource Report Resource Website |
Open Rotterdam Glaucoma Imaging Data Sets (RRID:SCR_003540) | ORGIDS | data or information resource, data set | Data sets resulting from glaucoma research including visual fields, various imaging modalities and other data from both glaucomatous and normal subjects. The Longitudinal Glaucomatous Visual Fields data set contains IOP (Intraocular pressure) measurements and 24-2 Full Threshold visual fields obtained with a Humphrey Field Analyzer (Zeiss). Data of both eyes of 139 patients over a mean period of over 9 years is included, with on average more than 17 fields per eye. Local threshold and total deviation values are included. | visual field, eye, clinical, longitudinal, ophthalmology, adult human | has parent organization: Rotterdam Ophthalmic Institute; Rotterdam; Netherlands | Glaucoma, Normal | PMID:24644052 PMID:24030462 |
Free, Acknowledgement requested, License agreement, Non-commercial | nlx_157652 | SCR_003540 | 2026-02-11 10:56:44 | 0 | ||||||
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MRI Dataset for Hippocampus Segmentation Resource Report Resource Website |
MRI Dataset for Hippocampus Segmentation (RRID:SCR_009597) | Hippocampus Segmentation Dataset | data or information resource, data set | This dataset contains T1-weighted MR images of 50 subjects, 40 of whom are patients with temporal lobe epilepsy and 10 are nonepileptic subjects. Hippocampus labels are provided for 25 subjects for training. The users may submit their segmentation outcomes for the remaining 25 testing images to get a table of segmentation metrics. | hfh hippocampus segmentation, magnetic resonance, hippocampus, image collection, mri, segmentation | is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC) | Epilepsy, Normal | PMID:21286946 | Other/Commercial license License | nlx_155797 | http://www.nitrc.org/projects/hippseg_2011 | SCR_009597 | 2026-02-11 10:58:00 | 0 | |||||
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Project BCI - EEG motor activity data set Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Project BCI - EEG motor activity data set (RRID:SCR_001585) | Project BCI - EEG motor activity data set | data or information resource, data set | EEG motor activity data sets used for Brain Computer Interface research project in Matlab MAT format. * Dataset 1 - 1D motion: This subject is a 21 year old, right handed male with no known medical conditions. The EEG consists of actual random movements of left and right hand recorded with eyes closed. Each row represents one electrode. The order of the electrodes is FP1 FP2 F3 F4 C3 C4 P3 P4 O1 O2 F7 F8 T3 T4 T5 T6 FZ CZ PZ. The recording was done at 500Hz using Neurofax EEG System which uses a daisy chain montage. The data was exported with a common reference using Eemagine EEG. AC Lines in this country work at 50 Hz. This info is also included in the MAT file. * Dataset 2 - 2D motion: This subject is a 21 year old, right handed male with no known medical conditions. The EEG consists of actual random movements of left and right hand recorded with eyes closed. Each row represents one electrode. The order of the electrodes is FP1 FP2 F3 F4 C3 C4 P3 P4 O1 O2 F7 F8 T3 T4 T5 T6 FZ CZ PZ. The recording was done at 500Hz using Neurofax EEG System which uses a daisy chain montage. The data was exported with a common reference using Eemagine EEG. AC Lines in this country work at 50 Hz. This data consists of the following movements # Three trials left hand forward movement # Three trials left hand backward movement # Three trials left hand forward movement # Three trials left hand forward movement # 1 trial imagined left hand forward movement # 1 trial imagined left hand backward movement # 1 trial imagined right hand forward movement # 1 trial imagined right hand backward movement # 1 trial left leg movement # 1 trial right leg movement | eeg, early adult human, male, right handed, motor, leg, movement, imagery, brain computer interface, eyes closed, motion | has parent organization: National University of Sciences and Technology; Islamabad; Pakistan | Normal | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nlx_153822 | SCR_001585 | 2026-02-11 10:56:16 | 1 | |||||||
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McConnell Brain Imaging Center MNI Cynomolgus Macaque Atlas Resource Report Resource Website |
McConnell Brain Imaging Center MNI Cynomolgus Macaque Atlas (RRID:SCR_008793) | MNI Cynomolgus Macaque Atlas | data or information resource, atlas, reference atlas | A reference atlas of cynomolgus macaque monkey magnetic resonance images. The template brain volume that offers a common stereotaxic reference frame to localize anatomical and functional information in an organized and reliable way for comparison across individual cynomolgus monkeys and studies. We have used MRI volumes from a group of 18 normal adult cynomulgus monkeys (Macaca fascicularis) to create the individual atlas. Thus, the atlas does not rely on the anatomy of a single subject, but instead depends on nonlinear normalization of numerous cynomolgus monkey brains mapped to an average template image that is faithful to the location of anatomical structures. Tools for registering a native MRI to the cynomolgus macaque atlas can be found in the Software section. Viewing the atlas and associated volumes online requires Java browser support. Additionally, you may download the atlas and associated files in your chosen format. | long-tailed macaque, brain, early adult, mri, neuroanatomy | has parent organization: McConnell Brain Imaging Center | Normal | PMID:21256229 | nlx_144294 | SCR_008793 | BIC MNI Cynomolgus Macaque Atlas | 2026-02-12 09:44:44 | 0 | ||||||
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3D DTI Atlas of the Rat Brain In Postnatal Day 5 14 and Adulthood Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
3D DTI Atlas of the Rat Brain In Postnatal Day 5 14 and Adulthood (RRID:SCR_009437) | 3D DTI Atlas of the Rat Brain | data or information resource, atlas, reference atlas | 3D DTI anatomical rat brain atlases have been created by the UNC- Chapel Hill Department of Psychiatry and the CAMID research collaboration. There are three age groups, postnatal day 5, postnatal day 14, and postnatal day 72. The subjects were Sprague-Dawley rats that were controls in a study on cocaine abuse and development. The P5 and P14 templates were made from scans of twenty rats each (ten female, ten male); the P72, from six females. The individual cases have been resampled to isotropic resolution, manually skull-stripped, and deformably registered via an unbiased atlas building method to create a template for each age group. Each template was then manually segmented using itk-SNAP software. Each atlas is made up of 3 files, a template image, a segmentation, and a label file. | magnetic resonance, adult rat, newborn rat, infant rat, young rat, sprague dawley, male, female |
is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC) has parent organization: University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; North Carolina; USA |
Control, Normal | UNC Neurodevelopment Disorders Research Center ; NICHD HD 03110; NINDS R41 NS059095; NIDA IP01DA022446-02 |
nlx_155577 | SCR_009437 | 3-Dimensional Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI) Atlas of the Rat Brain In Postnatal Day 5 14 and Adulthood | 2026-02-12 09:44:54 | 2 | ||||||
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UCL/UCLH Biobank for Studying Health and Disease Resource Report Resource Website |
UCL/UCLH Biobank for Studying Health and Disease (RRID:SCR_004610) | UCL Biobank for studying Health and Disease | tissue bank, material resource, biomaterial supply resource | The UCL/UCLH Biobank for Studying Health and Disease has been primarily established to support the Research Programme and scientific needs, of the Pathology Department UCLH & the UCL Cancer Institute. The establishment of the core programme enables a centralised approach to the management and integration of all research groups working within these institutions, providing appropriate structure and support. The biobank has policies and guidelines to guarantee compliance with HTA legislation and to ensure quality standards will be maintained. The biobank stores normal and pathological specimens, surplus to diagnostic requirements, from relevant tissues and bodily fluids, as well as human tissue used in xenograft experiments. Stored tissues include; snap-frozen or cryopreserved tissue, formalin-fixed tissue, paraffin-embedded tissues, and slides prepared for histological examination. Tissues include resection specimens obtained surgically or by needle core biopsy. Bodily fluids include; whole blood, serum, plasma, urine, cerebrospinal fluid, milk, saliva and buccal smears and cytological specimens such as sputum and cervical smears. Fine needle aspirates obtained from tissues and bodily cavities (eg. pleura and peritoneum) are also collected. Where appropriate the biobank also stores separated cells, protein, DNA and RNA isolated from collected tissues and bodily fluids described above. Some of the tissue and aspirated samples are stored in the diagnostic archive. | specimen, pathology, tissue, bodily fluid, human tissue, xenograft, tissue, blood, serum, plasma, urine, cerebral spinal fluid, milk, saliva, buccal smear, sputum, cervical smear, pleura, peritoneum, cell, protein, dna, rna, snap-frozen, cryopreserved, formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded, slide, normal, disease, cancer, frozen |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing has parent organization: University College London; London; United Kingdom |
Normal, Disease, Cancer | Private / Partners: The aim is to support primarily, Research in the Pathology Department, UCLH and the UCL-Cancer Institute but it will also support other UCLH partners. | nlx_143838 | SCR_004610 | UCL/UCLH Biobank for Studying Health Disease, UCL Biobank for studying Health Disease, UCL / UCLH Biobank for Studying Health Disease | 2026-02-12 09:43:54 | 0 | ||||||
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Minnesota Liver Tissue Cell Distribution System Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Minnesota Liver Tissue Cell Distribution System (RRID:SCR_004840) | LTCDS | tissue bank, material resource, biomaterial supply resource | Tissue bank that provides human liver tissue from regional centers for distribution to scientific investigators throughout the United States. These USA regional centers have active liver transplant programs with human subjects approval to provide portions of the resected pathologic liver for which the transplant is performed. | liver, cirrhosis, fulminate, failure, chronic, rejection, inborn, error, metabolism, normal, cell, culture, isolated, hepatocyte, culture |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing is listed by: NIDDK Information Network (dkNET) is listed by: NIDDK Research Resources is related to: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing has parent organization: University of Minnesota Medical School; Minnesota; USA |
Childhood cirrhosis, Adult cirrhosis, Fulminate liver failure, Chronic rejection, Inborn error of metabolism, Normal, Cirrhosis | NIH | Public, USA | nlx_82318 | http://www.med.umn.edu/peds/gi/ltcds/, http://www.med.umn.edu/peds/ltcds/home.html, http://www.med.umn.edu/peds/ltpads/ | SCR_004840 | University of Minnesota Liver Tissue Cell Distribution System, Liver Tissue Procurement and Distribution System, Liver Tissue Cell Distribution System, Liver Tissue Cell Distribution System (LTCDS), LTPADS | 2026-02-12 09:43:56 | 2 | ||||
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NDRI Dorsal Root Ganglia Program Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
NDRI Dorsal Root Ganglia Program (RRID:SCR_005043) | NDRI DRG Program | tissue bank, material resource, biomaterial supply resource | NDRI actively recovers a diverse range of normal and diseased human tissues for biomedical researchers. We have recently implemented a new program to make human dorsal root ganglia (DRG) available for your research studies. The dorsal root ganglia contain cell bodies of afferent (inbound) neurons, and transmit pain and temperature sensations from the body. DRGs from C5 through L5 regions will be available. DRGs will be recovered under operating room conditions with a low post mortem interval to preservation and can be shipped at 4 degrees C, snap-frozen or fixed. Detailed medical-social history information is provided for each donor. If you are interested in obtaining these specimens, please contact me at your earliest convenience. Current NDRI researchers can immediately request these samples. Non-NDRI researchers need to submit a researcher application. * The program provides a reliable source of human DRG neurons that can be utilized for: Electrophysiology analysis, Live cell imaging studies * Low PMI yields high quality samples that are suitable for rigorous molecular applications: Deep sequencing analysis, In situ hybridization, Micro-array analysis * DRGs from C5 through L5 regions will be available. * The tissue fee for this program is 500 dollars per DRG * Customizable-- the researcher determines the DRG location and quantity that is needed for their research. | dorsal root ganglion, clinical data, neuron, post-mortem, dorsal root ganglion, nerve tissue, fresh, snap-frozen, fixed |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing has parent organization: University of Oklahoma College of Medicine; Oklahoma; USA has parent organization: National Disease Research Interchange |
Normal, Diseased | Public (Research): Current NDRI researchers can immediately request these samples. Non-NDRI researchers need to submit a researcher application. | nlx_144060 | http://www.oumedicine.com/body.cfm?id=6189 | SCR_005043 | Dorsal Root Ganglia Program | 2026-02-12 09:44:01 | 1 | |||||
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3D MRI Atlas of Mouse Development Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
3D MRI Atlas of Mouse Development (RRID:SCR_008090) | MRI Atlas of Mouse Development, | data or information resource, atlas |
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented May 10, 2017. A pilot effort that has developed a centralized, web-based biospecimen locator that presents biospecimens collected and stored at participating Arizona hospitals and biospecimen banks, which are available for acquisition and use by researchers. Researchers may use this site to browse, search and request biospecimens to use in qualified studies. The development of the ABL was guided by the Arizona Biospecimen Consortium (ABC), a consortium of hospitals and medical centers in the Phoenix area, and is now being piloted by this Consortium under the direction of ABRC. You may browse by type (cells, fluid, molecular, tissue) or disease. Common data elements decided by the ABC Standards Committee, based on data elements on the National Cancer Institute''s (NCI''s) Common Biorepository Model (CBM), are displayed. These describe the minimum set of data elements that the NCI determined were most important for a researcher to see about a biospecimen. The ABL currently does not display information on whether or not clinical data is available to accompany the biospecimens. However, a requester has the ability to solicit clinical data in the request. Once a request is approved, the biospecimen provider will contact the requester to discuss the request (and the requester''s questions) before finalizing the invoice and shipment. The ABL is available to the public to browse. In order to request biospecimens from the ABL, the researcher will be required to submit the requested required information. Upon submission of the information, shipment of the requested biospecimen(s) will be dependent on the scientific and institutional review approval. Account required. Registration is open to everyone.. Documented on October, 01, 2019. 3D digital atlas of normal mouse development constructed from magnetic resonance image data. The download is a zipped file containing the six atlases Theiler Stages (ts) 13, 21,23, 24, 25 and 26 and MRI data for an unlabeled ts19 embryo. To view the atlases, download and install MBAT from: http://mbat.loni.ucla.edu Specimens were prepared in aqueous, isotonic solutions to avoid tissue shrinkage. Limited specimen handling minimized physical perturbation of the embryos to ensure accurate geometric representations of developing mouse anatomy. Currently, the atlas contains orthogonal sections through MRI volumes, three stages of embryos that have annotated anatomy, photographs of several stages of development, lineage trees for annotated embryos and a gallery of images and movies derived from the annotations. Anatomical annotations can be viewed by selecting a transverse section and selecting a pixel on the displayed slice. |
embryo, embryogenesis, development, magnetic resonance imaging, mouse, developing, c57bl/6, development, anatomy, embryonic mouse | is related to: Mouse BIRN Atlasing Toolkit | Normal | Human Brain Project ; Biomedical Informatics Research Network ; Beckman Institute at Caltech ; NCRR ; NIBIB |
PMID:10091864 | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-10989 | SCR_008090 | Caltech micro MRI Atlas of Mouse Development, microMRI Atlas of Mouse Development, Caltech MRI Atlas of Mouse Development, micro MRI Atlas of Mouse Development | 2026-02-12 09:44:32 | 1 | ||||
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Synapse Resource Report Resource Website 1000+ mentions |
Synapse (RRID:SCR_006307) | Synapse | data repository, service resource, storage service resource, database, data or information resource | A cloud-based collaborative platform which co-locates data, code, and computing resources for analyzing genome-scale data and seamlessly integrates these services allowing scientists to share and analyze data together. Synapse consists of a web portal integrated with the R/Bioconductor statistical package and will be integrated with additional tools. The web portal is organized around the concept of a Project which is an environment where you can interact, share data, and analysis methods with a specific group of users or broadly across open collaborations. Projects provide an organizational structure to interact with data, code and analyses, and to track data provenance. A project can be created by anyone with a Synapse account and can be shared among all Synapse users or restricted to a specific team. Public data projects include the Synapse Commons Repository (SCR) (syn150935) and the metaGenomics project (syn275039). The SCR provides access to raw data and phenotypic information for publicly available genomic data sets, such as GEO and TCGA. The metaGenomics project provides standardized preprocessed data and precomputed analysis of the public SCR data. | data sharing, collaboration, data management, analysis, genome, phenotype, crowd sourcing, open data, provenance, resource management, annotation, authoring, markup, r, python, java, command-line, cloud, FASEB list |
is used by: NF Data Portal is listed by: FORCE11 is listed by: DataCite is listed by: re3data.org is related to: clearScience is related to: Exemplar Microscopy Images of Tissues has parent organization: Sage Bionetworks |
Cancer, Normal, Cardiovascular disease, Floppy hat syndrome | Life Sciences Discovery Fund ; NCI ; NHLBI ; Alfred P. Sloan Foundation |
The community can contribute to this resource | nlx_151983, DOI:10.17616/R3B934, r3d100011894, DOI:10.7303 | https://doi.org/10.17616/R3B934 https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1506.00272 https://doi.org/10.7303/ https://dx.doi.org/10.7303 https://doi.org/10.17616/R3B934 |
SCR_006307 | 2026-02-12 09:44:19 | 1002 | |||||
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Cell Line Ontology by Mahadevan Resource Report Resource Website |
Cell Line Ontology by Mahadevan (RRID:SCR_010281) | MCCL | data or information resource, ontology, controlled vocabulary | A comprehensive ontology on primary and established cell lines-both normal and pathologic. It covers around 400 cell lines. This ontology has been built to include the major domains in the field of biology like anatomy, bio-molecules, chemicals and drugs, pathological conditions and genetic variations around the cell lines. An extensive network of relations has been built across these concepts to enable different combinations of queries. The ontology covers all cell lines from major sources like ATCC, DSMZ, ECACC, ICLC etc. and is built in OWL format. | owl, cell line | is listed by: BioPortal | Normal, Pathologic | nlx_157356 | SCR_010281 | Cell Line Ontology (by Mahadevan) | 2026-02-12 09:45:11 | 0 | |||||||
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Braineac Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
Braineac (RRID:SCR_015888) | data or information resource, database, web application, software resource | Database for the UK Brain Expression Consortium (UKBEC) dataset that comprises of brains from individuals free of neurodegenerative disorders. The aim of Braineac is to release to the scientific community a valid instrument to investigate the genes and SNPs associated with neurological disorders. | neurodegenerative, brain, disorder, mrna, dna, eqtl, snp, gene, visualization, expression | has parent organization: UK Brain Expression Consortium | Normal | PMID:25174004 | Public, Free, Available for download | SCR_015888 | 2026-02-12 09:46:14 | 49 | ||||||||
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Southampton Tumour Bank Resource Report Resource Website |
Southampton Tumour Bank (RRID:SCR_000673) | Southampton Tumour Bank | tissue bank, material resource, biomaterial supply resource | Collects and distributes human tissue for ethically approved studies to aid the study of cancer biology and other associated research. All tissue is collected with patient consent and tissue is distributed only to ethically approved studies. The purpose of the Tissue Bank is to source, organize, collect, prepare, store and distribute a diverse collection of human tissues and biological products. This valuable core resource is available to all local academics and researchers. The on-site bank allows for rapid access to a plethora of biological materials supported by an informatics system of databases acting as an inventory management system. In addition, the Tissue Bank provides a licensed facility to store surplus tissue when studies close. Tissues currently available include normal and malignant snap frozen blocks, freshly prepared spleen and lymph nodes, fresh biopsy tissues, blood products and biological fluids. Collections can be organized by bank staff or ran in parallel with current research activities and include a wide variety of cancer classifications. We currently hold over 38,000 vials. Tissue Availability: Lymphoma - solid tissue and cells - 843; Breast - solid tissue and cells - 540; Colon - solid tissue and cells - 238; Lung - solid tissue and cells - 43; Upper Gi - BIOPSY tissue - 114; Pleural fluid and cells - 14 | cancer biology, cancer, tumor, blood product, biological fluid, tissue, spleen, lymph node, biopsy tissue, blood product, bodily fluid, blood, lymphoma, solid tissue, cell, breast, colon, lung, upper gastrointestinal, pleural fluid, gastrointestinal |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing has parent organization: University of Southampton; Southampton; United Kingdom |
Cancer, Tumor, Normal, Malignant | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nlx_14010 | http://www.som.soton.ac.uk/research/facilities/cruk/infrastructure/tumour_bank/default.htm | SCR_000673 | University of Southampton Tumour Bank, University of Southampton Tumor Bank, University of Southampton Cancer Research UK Centre Tumour Bank, Southampton Tumor Bank, Cancer Research UK Centre Tumour Bank, Cancer Research UK Center Tumor Bank | 2026-02-12 09:43:01 | 0 | |||||
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Cancer Research Network of the FRSQ Resource Report Resource Website |
Cancer Research Network of the FRSQ (RRID:SCR_004225) | RRCancer | tissue bank, material resource, biomaterial supply resource | An infrastructure to allow Quebec researchers to have at their disposal tumor banks and the services that support large scale research in genomics and proteomics. The database and the tissue bank of the research network was created to allow rapid access to biological samples and their clinical data. It is spread out over many hospital institutions (in Montreal, Quebec and Sherbrooke). The members of the RRCancer-BTD supply normal, benign and malignant samples from routine surgeries and blood tests. Blood and tissue samples are collected by the provincial biobanks on a regular basis and are coded, classified and stored. The samples can be supplied to a researcher either fresh or frozen or blocks of paraffin or on slices. The sharing of information and biological material is managed according to ethical rules and contributes to increasing the value of research in Quebec. The network has mobilized a significant number of researchers in the area of cancer that unite their efforts to pursue high caliber multidisciplinary research. They are a group of researchers from many different Qu��bec Universities all working in the branch of cancer research. They are located in four hospital centers in Quebec, namely the University of Montreal Hospital Centre (CHUM), the University of Quebec Hospital Centre (CHUQ), the University of Sherbrooke Hospital Centre (CHUS) and the McGill University Hospital Centre (CUSM), as well as in the affiliated research and university centers (Sacr��-Coeur, Maisonneuve-Rosemont and the Montreal Jewish Hospital). The collaborative efforts created and maintained in this network have allowed transfer of knowledge and the sharing of cutting edge technologies. RRCancer favors multidisciplinary cancer research in both fundamental and clinical scopes. The network is based on the desire researchers to work together to prevent cancer and improve therapeutic strategies, all the while continuing the very important task of raining new specialists and graduate students. | genomics, proteomics, benign, malignant, clinical |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing is related to: University of Montreal Hospital Centre; Quebec; Canada is related to: Canadian Tumour Repository Network is related to: University of Quebec Hospital Centre; Quebec; Canada is related to: University of Sherbrooke Hospital Centre; Quebec; Canada is related to: Sacred Heart Hospital of Montreal; Quebec; Canada is related to: Maisonneuve-Rosemont Hospital; Quebec; Canada is related to: Jewish General Hospital; Quebec; Canada is related to: McGill University Health Centre; Quebec; Canada has parent organization: FRQS |
Cancer, Normal | FRQS | PMID:16980224 | nlx_143641 | SCR_004225 | R��seau de recherche en cancer, R��seau de recherche sur le cancer du FRSQ, RRCancer-BTD, R��seau de recherche sur le cancer, FRSQ Cancer Research Network | 2026-02-12 09:43:47 | 0 | |||||
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UCL Biobank Resource Report Resource Website |
UCL Biobank (RRID:SCR_000517) | UCL Biobank | material resource, biomaterial supply resource | Two University College London (UCL) biobanks, one based at the Royal Free Hospital (RFH) Campus and the other based at Bloomsbury supporting Pathology and the Cancer Institute, will act as physical repositories for collections of biological samples and data from patients consented at UCLH, Partners Hospitals and external sources. This will incorporate collections of existing stored samples and new collections. UCL-RFH BioBank, the physical repository at the Royal Free, presents a unique opportunity to advance medical research through making access to research tissue easier, faster and much more efficient. The BioBank is both a physical repository, with capacity for up to 1 million cryogenically stored samples and a virtual repository for all tissue, cell, plasma, serum, DNA and RNA samples stored throughout UCLP. In particular, samples considered "relevant material", such as tissues and cells, that are licensed by the Human Tissue Authority, can be stored long term. Existing holdings of tissues and cells where appropriate can be transferred to the Physical BioBank at the Royal Free. UCL - Royal Free BioBank provides a flexible approach to banking, allowing the Depositor to pick and choose services that are tailored to fit their requirements. Collaborations arising from publicizing of the existence of the holdings are entirely at the discretion of the depositor, as the facility ensures that access to the deposits remains at the decision of the Depositor/User. UCL Biobank for studying Health and Disease (based at Pathology-Rockefeller building and the UCL-Cancer Institute will support projects principally involved in the study of human disease. The aim is to support primarily, research in the Pathology Department, UCLH and the UCL-Cancer Institute but it will also support other UCLH partners. The biobank will store normal and pathological specimens, surplus to diagnostic requirements, from relevant tissues and bodily fluids. Stored tissues will include; snap-frozen or cryopreserved tissue, formalin-fixed tissue, paraffin-embedded tissues, and slides prepared for histological examination. Tissues will include resection specimens obtained surgically or by needle core biopsy. Bodily fluids will include; whole blood, serum, plasma, urine, cerebrospinal fluid, milk, saliva and buccal smears and cytological specimens such as sputum and cervical smears. Fine needle aspirates obtained from tissues and bodily cavities (e.g. pleura and peritoneum) will also be collected. Where appropriate the biobank will also store separated cells, protein, DNA and RNA isolated from collected tissues and bodily fluids described above. Some of the tissue and aspirated samples will be stored in the diagnostic archive. | tissue, cell, plasma, serum, dna, rna, blood, serum, plasma, urine, cerebral spinal fluid, milk, saliva, buccal smear, sputum, cervical smear, pleura, peritoneum, protein, body fluid, cryopreserved, frozen, snap-frozen, formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded, slide, cancer, disease, normal |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing has parent organization: University College London; London; United Kingdom |
Cancer, Disease, Normal | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nlx_36620 | SCR_000517 | Biobanking at UCL | 2026-02-12 09:42:59 | 0 | ||||||
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The Cancer Genome Atlas Resource Report Resource Website 5000+ mentions |
The Cancer Genome Atlas (RRID:SCR_003193) | TCGA | material resource, biomaterial supply resource | Project exploring the spectrum of genomic changes involved in more than 20 types of human cancer that provides a platform for researchers to search, download, and analyze data sets generated. As a pilot project it confirmed that an atlas of changes could be created for specific cancer types. It also showed that a national network of research and technology teams working on distinct but related projects could pool the results of their efforts, create an economy of scale and develop an infrastructure for making the data publicly accessible. Its success committed resources to collect and characterize more than 20 additional tumor types. Components of the TCGA Research Network: * Biospecimen Core Resource (BCR); Tissue samples are carefully cataloged, processed, checked for quality and stored, complete with important medical information about the patient. * Genome Characterization Centers (GCCs); Several technologies will be used to analyze genomic changes involved in cancer. The genomic changes that are identified will be further studied by the Genome Sequencing Centers. * Genome Sequencing Centers (GSCs); High-throughput Genome Sequencing Centers will identify the changes in DNA sequences that are associated with specific types of cancer. * Proteome Characterization Centers (PCCs); The centers, a component of NCI's Clinical Proteomic Tumor Analysis Consortium, will ascertain and analyze the total proteomic content of a subset of TCGA samples. * Data Coordinating Center (DCC); The information that is generated by TCGA will be centrally managed at the DCC and entered into the TCGA Data Portal and Cancer Genomics Hub as it becomes available. Centralization of data facilitates data transfer between the network and the research community, and makes data analysis more efficient. The DCC manages the TCGA Data Portal. * Cancer Genomics Hub (CGHub); Lower level sequence data will be deposited into a secure repository. This database stores cancer genome sequences and alignments. * Genome Data Analysis Centers (GDACs) - Immense amounts of data from array and second-generation sequencing technologies must be integrated across thousands of samples. These centers will provide novel informatics tools to the entire research community to facilitate broader use of TCGA data. TCGA is actively developing a network of collaborators who are able to provide samples that are collected retrospectively (tissues that had already been collected and stored) or prospectively (tissues that will be collected in the future). | genome, genome sequencing, breast, central nervous system, endocrine, gastrointestinal, gynecologic, head, neck, hematologic, skin, soft tissue, thoracic, urologic, clinical, genomic characterization, analysis, tumor genome, demographic, gene expression, copy number alteration, epigenetic, dna sequence, exome, snp, methylation, mrna, mirna, FASEB list |
is used by: Mutation Annotation and Genomic Interpretation is used by: BioXpress is used by: cancerRxTissue is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing is related to: Cancer3D is related to: Cancer Research Data Commons is related to: CancerMIRNome has parent organization: National Cancer Institute works with: FireBrowse |
Cancer, Tumor, Normal, Breast cancer, Central Nervous System cancer, Endocrine cancer, Gastrointestinal cancer, Gynecologic cancer, Head cancer, Neck cancer, Hematologic cancer, Skin cancer, Soft tissue cancer, Thoracic cancer, Urologic cancer | NCI 261200800001E-12-0-1 | nlx_156913 | SCR_003193 | Cancer Genome Atlas | 2026-02-12 09:43:32 | 6292 | ||||||
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Vervet Probabilistic Atlas Resource Report Resource Website |
Vervet Probabilistic Atlas (RRID:SCR_000426) | Vervet Probabilistic Atlas | data or information resource, atlas, reference atlas | Vervet (Chlorocebus aethiops sabaeus) probabilistic atlas that defines an anatomical space (template) with associated tissue and regional prior probability maps. The atlas was produced from whole head MRI of 10 normal adult animal subjects. The package consists of two atlases. The Biased directory contains the average template and probabilistic atlases for selected tissue classes constructed by registering the training population to one subject. The Unbiased directory contains the atlas constructed using unbiased estimation. The atlas is suitable for use in any segmentation tool using a probabilistic atlas, for example those in Slicer. | atlas data, magnetic resonance, adult, mri | is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC) | Normal | Free, Available for download, Freely available | nlx_156015 | SCR_000426 | 2026-02-12 09:42:58 | 0 | |||||||
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Zebrafish Atlas Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Zebrafish Atlas (RRID:SCR_006722) | Zebrafish Atlas | data or information resource, atlas, reference atlas | Atlas containing 2- and 3-dimensional, anatomical reference slides of the lifespan of the zebrafish to support research and education worldwide. Hematoxylin and eosin histological slides, at various points in the lifespan of the zebrafish, have been scanned at 40x resolution and are available through a virtual slide viewer. 3D models of the organs are reconstructed from plastic tissue sections of embryo and larvae. The size of the zebrafish, which allows sections to fall conveniently within the dimensions of the common 1 x 3 glass slide, makes it possible for this anatomical atlas to become as high resolution as for any vertebrate. That resolution, together with the integration of histology and organ anatomy, will create unique opportunities for comparisons with both smaller and larger model systems that each have their own strengths in research and educational value. The atlas team is working to allow the site to function as a scaffold for collaborative research and educational activity across disciplines and model organisms. The Zebrafish Atlas was created to answer a community call for a comprehensive, web-based, anatomical and pathological atlas of the zebrafish, which has become one of the most widely used vertebrate animal models globally. The experimental strengths of zebrafish as a model system have made it useful for a wide range of investigations addressing the missions of the NIH and NSF. The Zebrafish Atlas provides reference slides for virtual microscopic viewing of the zebrafish using an Internet browser. Virtual slide technology allows the user to choose their own field of view and magnification, and to consult labeled histological sections of zebrafish. We are planning to include a complete set of embryos, larvae, juveniles, and adults from approximately 25 different ages. Future work will also include a variety of comparisons (e.g. normal vs. mutant, normal vs. diseased, multiple stages of development, zebrafish with other organisms, and different types of cancer)., THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 16,2025. | embryo, eosin, expression, genetic, adult, anatomical, anatomy, cancer, development, hematoxylin, histological, histology, juvenile, larvae, lifespan, model, slide, sagittal, coronal, transverse, stage, embryonic zebrafish, juvenile zebrafish, immature zebrafish, larval zebrafish, young zebrafish, adult zebrafish | has parent organization: Pennsylvania State University | Normal, Mutant, Cancer | NCRR | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-24352 | SCR_006722 | Penn State Zebrafish Atlas, Zebrafish Atlas - A Lifespan Atlas of the Zebrafish, PSU Zebrafish Atlas | 2026-02-12 09:44:24 | 3 |
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