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SciCrunch Registry is a curated repository of scientific resources, with a focus on biomedical resources, including tools, databases, and core facilities - visit SciCrunch to register your resource.
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented June 5, 2017. It has been merged with Cell Image Library. Database for sharing and mining cellular and subcellular high resolution 2D, 3D and 4D data from light and electron microscopy, including correlated imaging that makes unique and valuable datasets available to the scientific community for visualization, reuse and reanalysis. Techniques range from wide field mosaics taken with multiphoton microscopy to 3D reconstructions of cellular ultrastructure using electron tomography. Contributions from the community are welcome. The CCDB was designed around the process of reconstruction from 2D micrographs, capturing key steps in the process from experiment to analysis. The CCDB refers to the set of images taken from microscope the as the Microscopy Product. The microscopy product refers to a set of related 2D images taken by light (epifluorescence, transmitted light, confocal or multiphoton) or electron microscopy (conventional or high voltage transmission electron microscopy). These image sets may comprise a tilt series, optical section series, through focus series, serial sections, mosaics, time series or a set of survey sections taken in a single microscopy session that are not related in any systematic way. A given set of data may be more than one product, for example, it is possible for a set of images to be both a mosaic and a tilt series. The Microscopy Product ID serves as the accession number for the CCDB. All microscopy products must belong to a project and be stored along with key specimen preparation details. Each project receives a unique Project ID that groups together related microscopy products. Many of the datasets come from published literature, but publication is not a prerequisite for inclusion in the CCDB. Any datasets that are of high quality and interest to the scientific community can be included in the CCDB.
Proper citation: Cell Centered Database (RRID:SCR_002168) Copy
Non-profit plasmid repository dedicated to helping scientists around the world share high-quality plasmids. Facilitates archiving and distributing DNA-based research reagents and associated data to scientists worldwide. Repository contains over 65,000 plasmids, including special collections on CRISPR, fluorescent proteins, and ready-to-use viral preparations. There is no cost for scientists to deposit plasmids, which saves time and money associated with shipping plasmids themselves. All plasmids are fully sequenced for validation and sequencing data is openly available. We handle the appropriate Material Transfer Agreements (MTA) with institutions, facilitating open exchange and offering intellectual property and liability protection for depositing scientists. Furthermore, we curate free educational resources for the scientific community including a blog, eBooks, video protocols, and detailed molecular biology resources.
Proper citation: Addgene (RRID:SCR_002037) Copy
National data center / repository for snow and ice data including snow, ice, glaciers, frozen ground, and climate interactions that make up Earth's cryosphere. The center manages and distributes scientific data, creates tools for data access, supports data users, performs scientific research, and educates the public about the cryosphere. Users may explore the Earth's frozen places in the collection of photographs and images. Photographs from field research trips, images captured by satellites of the changing cryosphere, and photos and images are available. Data sets are organized into the following groups: sea ice, frozen ground, snow cover, snow hydrology, glaciers and ice sheets, arctic people.
Proper citation: National Snow and Ice Data Center (RRID:SCR_002220) Copy
http://www.opentopography.org/
Accepts and provides access to high-resolution (meter to sub-meter scale) Earth science-oriented topography data (e.g. LiDAR) and bathymetric data, and related tools and resources. The OpenTopography Tool Registry provides a community populated clearinghouse of software, utilities, and tools oriented towards high-resolution topography data (e.g. collected with LiDAR technology) handling, processing, and analysis. Tools registered range from source code to full-featured software applications. Contributions to the registry via the Contribute a Tool page are welcome. OpenTopography also hosts a dataset catalog to which users can register datasets hosted elsewhere; these entries are discoverable by users alongside OpenTopography hosted datasets. Lidar point cloud data are available in LAS, LAZ and ASCII formats. Raster datasets and derived products can be downloaded in Arc ASCII, IMG, and GeoTIFF formats. Derived products and visualizations are available in Google Earth KML format. The OpenTopography user community and advisory committee provides feedback to define the scope of collaborations on data hosting and cyberinfrastructure development
Proper citation: OpenTopography (RRID:SCR_002204) Copy
https://datashare.nida.nih.gov
Website which allows data from completed clinical trials to be distributed to investigators and public. Researchers can download de-identified data from completed NIDA clinical trial studies to conduct analyses that improve quality of drug abuse treatment. Incorporates data from Division of Therapeutics and Medical Consequences and Center for Clinical Trials Network.
Proper citation: NIDA Data Share (RRID:SCR_002002) Copy
Tools for researchers to connect their data, code and computational methods to their published or soon to be published research in a convenient and easily citeable form. ResearchCompendia provides the tools to publish digital scholarly objects by hosting data, code, and methods in a form that is accessible, trackable, and persistent. They provide hosting and computational cloud resources for all researchers. Data and code should be citable and linked to the original publication.
Proper citation: ResearchCompendia (RRID:SCR_003223) Copy
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/dbvar/
Structural variation database designed to store data on variant DNA > / = 1 bp in size from all organisms. Associations of defined variants with phenotype information is also provided. Users can browse data containing number of variant cells from each study, and filter studies by organism, study type, method and genomic variant. Organisms include human, mouse, cattle and several additional animals.
Proper citation: dbVar (RRID:SCR_003219) Copy
Central online repository for microRNA nomenclature, sequence data, annotation and target prediction.Collection of published miRNA sequences and annotation.
Proper citation: miRBase (RRID:SCR_003152) Copy
Archive and access films from the field of Ophthalmology for free on highly secure servers for permanent access and citeability. A citeable identification number (specific addressing using DOI), allows for citation of individual films in journal publications. Films may be commented by the author either in speech, or in text. Key wording provided by the authors at the time of submission, make each film recognizable to internet search machines.
Proper citation: eyeMoviePedia (RRID:SCR_003541) Copy
http://www.metabolomicsworkbench.org
Repository for metabolomics data and metadata which provides analysis tools and access to various resources. NIH grantees may upload data and general users can search metabolomics database. Provides protocols for sample preparation and analysis, information about NIH Metabolomics Program, data sharing guidelines, funding opportunities, services offered by its Regional Comprehensive Metabolomics Resource Cores (RCMRC)s, and training workshops.
Proper citation: Metabolomics Workbench (RRID:SCR_013794) Copy
http://www.cancerimagingarchive.net/
Archive of medical images of cancer accessible for public download. All images are stored in DICOM file format and organized as Collections, typically patients related by common disease (e.g. lung cancer), image modality (MRI, CT, etc) or research focus. Neuroimaging data sets include clinical outcomes, pathology, and genomics in addition to DICOM images. Submitting Data Proposals are welcomed.
Proper citation: Cancer Imaging Archive (TCIA) (RRID:SCR_008927) Copy
http://biodiversitylibrary.org/
Collection of legacy literature in biodiversity assembled by an international consortium of natural history and botanical libraries. It also serves as the foundational literature component of the Encyclopedia of Life. Browse by author, title, subject, collection, map, year, language, and contributor. Taxonomic search using UBio. Also supports data export and a variety of machine interfaces.
Proper citation: Biodiversity Heritage Library (RRID:SCR_008969) Copy
A repository and data management services for Arctic research data. Data include long-term observational timeseries, local, regional, and system-scale research from many diverse domains.
Proper citation: ACADIS Gateway (RRID:SCR_010473) Copy
http://www.crystallography.net/
Database of crystal structures of organic, inorganic, metal-organic compounds and minerals, excluding biopolymers. It currently contains ~291204 entries (July 2014) in crystallographic information file format, with nearly full coverage of the International Union of Crystallography publications, and is growing in size and quality. Deposit your data: An interface allows you to upload, validate and edit CIF files before submitting them for deposition.
Proper citation: Crystallography Open Database (COD) (RRID:SCR_005874) Copy
http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/NACDA/
Archive of data relevant to gerontological and aging research. Used to advance research on aging. Subjects include demographic, social, economic, and psychological characteristics of older adults, physical health and functioning of older adults, and health care needs of older adults. NACDA staff represents team of professional researchers, archivists and technicians who work together to obtain, process, distribute, and promote data relevant to aging research.
Proper citation: National Archive of Computerized Data on Aging (NACDA) (RRID:SCR_005876) Copy
International, curated, digital repository that makes the data underlying scientific publications discoverable, freely reusable, and citable. Particularly data for which no specialized repository exists. Provides the infrastructure for, and promotes the re-use of, data underlying the scholarly literature. Governed by a nonprofit membership organization. Membership is open to any stakeholder organization, including but not limited to journals, scientific societies, publishers, research institutions, libraries, and funding organizations. Most data are associated with peer-reviewed articles, although data associated with non-peer reviewed publications from reputable academic sources, such as dissertations, are also accepted. Used to validate published findings, explore new analysis methodologies, repurpose data for research questions unanticipated by the original authors, and perform synthetic studies.UC system is member organization of Dryad general subject data repository.
Proper citation: Dryad Digital Repository (RRID:SCR_005910) Copy
Comprehensive lists of plant and animal species, with a rarity rank and legal status for each. It has has over 635,000 geo-located records of species occurrences and over 40,000 records of extremely rare to uncommon species in the Atlantic region, including New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, Newfoundland, and Labrador. The Atlantic CDC also maintains biological and other types of data in a variety of linked databases. The CDC welcomes inquiries from those who would like to contribute data about plant or animal species at risk or rare communities in Atlantic Canada. Its mission is to assemble and provide objective and understandable data and expertise about species and ecological communities of conservation concern, including those at risk, and undertake field biological inventories to support decision-making, research, and education in Atlantic Canada. The Atlantic CDC develops species location data, known as element occurrence records. Occurrence precision (accuracy) ranges from quite precise (within meters) to less precise (within counties) but most commonly it is within 1 5 km. Element occurrence (EO) refers to one or more locations considered important to the continued existence of a species or ecological community. For species, over 30 types of data: taxonomy, biology, etc. are typically examined when identifying EOs. An EO is generally the habitat occupied by a local population. However, occurrence varies among species and some species have more than one type of occurrence (e.g., breeding and winter occurrences). Breeding colonies, breeding ponds, denning sites, and hibernacula are general examples of different types of animal EOs. For an ecological community, an EO may be the area containing a patch of that community type.
Proper citation: Atlantic Canada Conservation Data Centre (RRID:SCR_006061) Copy
Publicly available database of summary level findings from genetic association studies in humans, including genome wide association studies (GWAS). Previously named HGBASE, HGVbase and HGVbaseG2P.
Proper citation: GWAS Central (RRID:SCR_006170) Copy
https://phenome.jax.org/centers/QTLA
Raw data from various QTL (quantitative trait loci) studies using rodent inbred line crosses. Data are available in the .csv format used by R/qtl and pseudomarker programs. In some cases analysis scripts and/or results are posted to accompany the data. These data are provided as a courtesy to the genetic mapping community and may be used for purposes of developing or testing new analysis methods or software and for meta-analysis of quantitative traits. The authors of the datasets retain individual ownership of the data. As a courtesy to the authors, please alert them in advance of any publications that result from reanalysis of these data or obtain permission prior to redistribution of data or results. In all data sets and files, the marker locations have been translated to Cox build 37 coordinates unless otherwise stated. Please consider contributing your data to the QTL Archive.
Proper citation: QTL Archive (RRID:SCR_006213) Copy
http://researchdata.4tu.nl/en/home/
Multidisciplinary data repository for a consortium of universities in the Netherlands housing over datasets with a focus on scientific and technical data. Most data were produced by Dutch researchers including datasets from doctoral research. Users can deposit up to 1G by completing an upload form. Collection development foci include applied sciences, biomedical technology, earth sciences, and technology and construction. 4TU.Datacentrum is a collaboration of the libraries of the three leading technical universities - Delft University of Technology, Eindhoven University of Technology and the University of Twente.
Proper citation: 4TU.Datacentrum (RRID:SCR_006295) Copy
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