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http://cvrl.ioo.ucl.ac.uk/index.htm

The Colour & Vision Research laboratory and database are based at the Institute of Ophthalmology, which is part of University College London. The Institute and CVRL are both closely associated with Moorfields Eye Hospital. The Institute is next door to Moorfields Eye Hospital near Old Street tube station (see directions). At the Colour & Vision Research laboratory, we investigate normal and clinical human visual perception. Our research focuses on questions about colour perception, light and dark adaptation, night-time vision, and the temporal and spatial properties of vision. Our primary goal is to understand the nature of the mechanisms that underlie visual perception, and to understand how those mechanism malfunction in clinical cases. More details about our research can be found by looking at the publications of members of the laboratory. The CVRL database, first set up in 1995, provides an annotated library of downloadable standard data sets relevant to colour and vision research. The focus of this site is primarily scientific and technical, but some introductory background information is also provided. A consistent set of functions for modeling colour vision based on the Stockman & Sharpe cone fundamentals and on our more recent luminous efficiency measurements are summarized under the category CVRL functions. These functions are tabulated in 0.1, 1 and 5 nm steps and can be returned as csv, xml, or tabular data or as dynamic plots. The Stockman & Sharpe cone fundamentals are the basis of a CIE proposal for physiologically-relevant colour matching functions. These functions, which are indentical to the CVRL functions, are summarized under the category CIE 2007 functions. The CIE functions are also tabulated in 0.1, 1 and 5 nm steps, and can also be returned as csv, xml, or tabular data or as dynamic plots. Significant additions to the database are the individual colour matching measurements made by Stiles & Burch. These have been compiled and cross-checked with the help of Boris Oicherman, Alexander Logvinenko, and Abhijit Sarkar from hard copies of the original data provided by Pat Trezona and Mike Webster. They can be obtained as Excel files and are available for both 2 and 10 colour matches. Other data sets, which are provided as csv files, include cone fundamentals, colour matching functions, chromaticity coordinates, prereceptoral filter density spectra, photopigment spectra, and CIE standards. Many of these data sets can also be viewed as dynamic plots. Sponsors: CVRL is funded by BBSRC The Wellcome Trust, Fight for Sight, National Eye Institute, and NIH.

Proper citation: Colour and Vision Research Laboratory (RRID:SCR_000770) Copy   


http://www.sciencemedicine-edu.org

SUPREP MODEL LEARNING is a standardized credit earning academic exchange program that enables a student from any third world countries or technologically deficient institutions around the world, to attend and earn credits from the best traditional recognized accredited institutions globally, in which the credits earned are transferred to the home institution or SUPREP agency for aggregation towards successful graduation. :The goal of this program is to facilitate bringing students from the third world to reputable undergraduate and graduate neuroscience programs. Additionally, this program also aims t o grant Third World Neuroscience students Academic exchange programs worldwide.

Proper citation: Syndicated Universities Preparatory Research Educational Program (RRID:SCR_000768) Copy   


https://nei.nih.gov/health/clinicalstudies/

An archived portal of clinical studies, both ongoing and completed, that have been conducted and supported by the National Eye Institute (NEI) since 1970. The portal covers corneal diseases, glaucoma, epidemiology, lens and cataract, retinal diseases, strabismus, amblyopia and visual processing.

Proper citation: NEI Clinical Studies (RRID:SCR_000546) Copy   


http://www.genome.jp/kegg/expression/

Database for mapping gene expression profiles to pathways and genomes. Repository of microarray gene expression profile data for Synechocystis PCC6803 (syn), Bacillus subtilis (bsu), Escherichia coli W3110 (ecj), Anabaena PCC7120 (ana), and other species contributed by the Japanese research community.

Proper citation: Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes Expression Database (RRID:SCR_001120) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_000624

http://neuroamer.wordpress.com/

Neuroamer is a researcher-oriented blog about neuroscience, psychiatry, and psychology. It is an attempt to fill the space between journal articles and pop science journalism.

Proper citation: Neuroamer (RRID:SCR_000624) Copy   


http://www.nsfgrfp.org/

The National Science Foundation's Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP) helps ensure the vitality of the human resource base of science and engineering in the United States and reinforces its diversity. The program recognizes and supports outstanding graduate students in NSF-supported science, technology, engineering, and mathematics disciplines who are pursuing research-based master's and doctoral degrees in the U.S. and abroad. The NSF welcomes applications from all qualified students and strongly encourages under-represented populations, including women, under-represented racial and ethnic minorities, and persons with disabilities, to apply for this fellowship. Fellows share in the prestige and opportunities that become available when they are selected. Fellows benefit from a three-year annual stipend of $30,000 along with a $10,500 cost of education allowance for tuition and fees, a one-time $1,000 international travel allowance and the freedom to conduct their own research at any accredited U.S., or foreign institution of graduate education they choose. NSF Fellows are anticipated to become knowledge experts who can contribute significantly to research, teaching, and innovations in science and engineering. So that the nation can build fully upon the strength and creativity of a diverse society, the Foundation welcomes applications from all qualified individuals. Women, under-represented minorites and people with disabilities are encouraged to apply. Those with disabilities are additionally accommodated by the Foundation to provide for the most successful graduate experience possible. Sponsors: This program is supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF).

Proper citation: National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program (RRID:SCR_001487) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_000701

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://www.spinal-research.org/

Spinal Research committed to funding international research into cure for spinal cord paralysis. Charity that funds medical research for treating and curing spinal cord paralysis. Supports basic science, clinical research and funds PhD students. ISRT also hosts Annual Network Meetings.

Proper citation: Spinal Research (RRID:SCR_000701) Copy   


http://www.genetics.med.ed.ac.uk/blog/

This resource aims to provide information for the general public on the background and current progress of scientific research into the role of genetics in these disorders. Additionally, it also aims to provide a forum for the discussion of aspects of psychiatric genetics open to members of the research community.

Proper citation: Schizophrenia and Bipolar Disorder Genetics Blog (RRID:SCR_001541) Copy   


https://ndriresource.org/for-researchers/services-capabilities-sample/htorr

NDRI’s Human Tissue and Organs for Research Resource (HTORR) Program has been funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) for over 30 consecutive years to support research programs across multiple disciplines. It is through the HTORR program that NDRI provides academic biomedical investigators with donated normal and diseased human tissues and organs recovered from a diverse donor pool using customized procurement, processing, and preservation and distribution protocols. Our HTORR Program supports academic biomedical research investigators needs by providing: Access to a wide array of human biospecimens from any body system * Customized procurement in a variety of preservation formats including fresh, frozen, and fixed suitable for various analytical techniques * Reduced costs for tissue procurement * Technical support to design your studies utilizing human biospecimens * Letters of support and budgetary information for grant applications

Proper citation: Human Tissue and Organ for Research Resource (HTORR) (RRID:SCR_002859) Copy   


http://www.lerner.ccf.org/gmi/gmb/

A biorepository is a place where investigators can deposit and store biological material, in this case samples derived from patients. Moreover, the Genomic Medicine Institute (GMI) takes this basic concept and elevates it to make the Genomic Medicine Biorepository (GMB) a full-service processing and banking laboratory that serves as the foundation for evidence-based research for the GMI, the Cleveland Clinic, and our collaborators. The process relies on a team of multi-disciplinary professionals coordinating their efforts in order to streamline medical research. This begins with dedicated physicians and genetic counselors identifying individuals with specific medical conditions indicating the possibility of genetic involvement. Once identified, biological material (e.g. blood, tissue, or saliva) is collected under the care of the patient''s doctor or by our clinicians and sent to the GMB. Once in the lab, the patient and their samples are assigned a unique identifier (to protect the patient''s personal information) and logged into a central database. This unique identifier accompanies all samples processed and banked for that individual. The specimens are then processed into research-relevant samples using proven laboratory techniques and state-of-the-art quality control practices. These samples include the isolation of DNA and RNA from white blood cells for genetic studies; collection of plasma for proteomic studies; and initiated immortalized cell lines from lymphocytes for in-vitro studies and biochemical research. These cell lines are able to be indefinitely stored in cryogenic suspension and are invaluable as a renewable resource for genetic and biochemical research. The GMB also processes genetic material from various tissues (both fresh and archived). Charis Eng, MD, PhD, Chair and Director of the GMI, has been the faculty oversight person of a human biorepository for the last eight years. Since then, our biorepository has received, cataloged, processed, and banked, in excess of 25,000 specimens. These samples are of numerous tissue types from patients and their family members located all over the world. Our biorepository has managed samples that have resulted in more than 150 original peer reviewed articles and greater than $25 million total direct costs in extramural funding over the last four years alone.

Proper citation: Cleveland Clinic Genomic Medicine Biorepository (RRID:SCR_004136) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_015868

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

https://imacel.net/en/

Artificial intelligence image analysis platform that facilitates life science research. It offers data analysis, processing functions, and security features to accelerate research productivity.

Proper citation: IMACEL (RRID:SCR_015868) Copy   


https://cega.berkeley.edu/

Network of world class researchers and innovators to improve lives of people living in poverty by generating insights and tools for decision makers backed by rigorous, inclusive, and transparent research. Hub for research, training and innovation headquartered at University of California, Berkeley.

Proper citation: Center for Effective Global Action (RRID:SCR_024639) Copy   


https://med.stanford.edu/compmed/TrainingforPre-DVM-T35-and-DVMs-T32/summer.html

The program seeks to help veterinary students become biomedical researchers. A secondary goal is to provide research experience to veterinary students interested in careers in laboratory animal medicine and/or pathology. Previous participants were veterinary students at Colorado State University, Cornell University, Kansas State University, Michigan State University, North Carolina State University, Ohio State University, Purdue University, Tufts University, Tuskegee University, University of California, University of Illinois, University of Tennessee, Washington State University, and Western University. The Program consists of workshops on research-related topics, a veterinary student journal club, sessions on research career development for veterinarians, an individual research project, and a veterinary student research symposium. The research project is the most important part of the Program. The goals of the research project are to have students address a significant experimental question, work independently and with other researchers, and produce and publish results. Students are matched with a preceptor (see list of faculty below) according to research interests. The preceptor outlines a focused project for the student to perform in their laboratory. Students become completely involved in their assigned laboratory participating in laboratory meetings and social events, attending seminars with other members of their laboratory, and working on their research project at least 40 hours/week.

Proper citation: Summer Fellowships - Comparative Medicine (RRID:SCR_008306) Copy   


https://www.vet.k-state.edu/research/docs/BRITE-application.pdf

The BRITE Veterinary Student Program provides DVM students interested in research with a subsidized, in-depth mentored research experience. The opportunity can be used to gain research experience, to obtain an MS, or to jump-start a DVM/PhD program. The BRITE veterinary student program is designed to expose DVM students to hypothesis-driven research activities, methodologies involved in design and execution of laboratory experiments and ethical issues pertinent to biomedical research, at a formative stage of their veterinary education. BRITE veterinary students are given a unique opportunity to utilize the rigorous didactic basic science training obtained during the first two years of the professional curriculum in pursuit of a research problem relevant to human and animal health. Sponsors: The program is funded by Kansas State University.

Proper citation: Basic Research Immersion Training Experience Veterinary Student Program (RRID:SCR_008305) Copy   


http://www.vetmed.lsu.edu/Summer_Scholars_Program.htm

The aim of the Summer Scholars Program is to provide veterinary medical students the opportunity to explore the world of biomedical research, develop and complete a biomedical research project during the summer. The intent is to engage students in a creative, problem-solving research activity and to provide a learning experience that will lead to the discovery of new knowledge in an area of their choosing and identify potential pathways to a career in biomedical research. Research plans will be developed by students with faculty mentor input, on any topic of interest to the student and likely to lead to the discovery of new information. Example topics are: immunology and infectious diseases, cancer biology, molecular epidemiology, experimental studies focused on nutrition and obesity, pharmacology, environmental toxicology, mechanisms of pathogenesis, zoonoses, biomechanics, cardiovascular pathophysiology, and others. The mentor and other advisors will provide guidance to students and an assessment of progress. Students will provide at completion of the study, an oral presentation of their results to their colleagues and all mentors and a presentation of results via posters at the annual Merial NIH National Veterinary Scholars Symposium, to be held in 2010 at the University of Georgia, and at the LSU Phi Zeta Research Emphasis Day. It is noteworthy that one Summer Scholar won an award at the 2008 LSU Phi Zeta Research Emphasis Day. LSU Students will receive elective credit in the curriculum (VMED 5010 or VMED 5463) for successful completion of the program. Students will be strongly encouraged to work with their mentors to publish their findings in peer-reviewed journals separately or as a smaller piece of work with their mentors. Sponsors: The program is funded by a Merial Foundation grant and an NIH T35 training grant.

Proper citation: Merial/NIH Veterinary Scholars Program (RRID:SCR_008301) Copy   


http://www.phenote.org/

Phenote is both a complete piece of software and a software toolkit designed to facilitate the annotation of biological phenotypes using ontologies. It provides an interface and infrastructure to record genotype-phenotype pairs, together with the provenance for the annotation. Typical users of Phenote include literature curators, laboratory researchers, and clinicians looking for a method to record data in a user-friendly and computable way. Features of Phenote include the use of any OBO-format ontology, ontology navigation and term information display, bulk sort, copy, edit, and delete of phenotype-genotype character entries, and a variety of export formats. Phenote is a project of the Berkeley Bioinformatics Open-Source Projects (BBOP).

Proper citation: Phenote: A Phenotype Annotation Tool using Ontologies (RRID:SCR_008334) Copy   


http://med.stanford.edu/compmed/education/phd_training.html

THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on January 27,2022.This program helps address the shortage of veterinarians who are trained for independent research. It supports veterinarians during the first 3 years of their PhD training. Trainees can participate in any graduate program involved in biomedical research at Stanford University: Biochemistry, Biological Sciences, Biophysics, Cancer Biology, Developmental Biology, Genetics, Immunology, Microbiology & Immunology, Molecular & Cellular Physiology, Molecular Pharmacology, Neurosciences, Structural Biology, Bioengineering, and Biomedical Informatics (graduate programs in biomedical research). All share common features: :1. Year 1 focuses on a limited group of courses and laboratory rotations. :2. Subsequent years focus on developing critical thinking via seminars and journal clubs and on independent research. :3. Annual retreats to present and learn about ongoing research in the graduate program. :4. Emphasis on mastering communications skills essential for success in science: oral presentation, writing manuscripts and grant proposals. :5. Developing an appreciation of the role of scientists in the context of society with emphasis on ethical and professional responsibility. Sponsors: It is funded by a T32 training grant from the NIH.

Proper citation: Postdoctoral Program for Veterinarians (RRID:SCR_008296) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_011176

    This resource has 100+ mentions.

http://www.cancer.gov/researchandfunding

Federal government agency for cancer research and training established in 1937. National Cancer Program is responsibility of NCI to coordinate, conduct and support research, training, health information dissemination with respect to cause, diagnosis, prevention, and treatment of cancer, rehabilitation from cancer, and continuing care of cancer patients and families of cancer patients. Supports construction of laboratories, clinics, and related facilities necessary for cancer research through award of grants.

Proper citation: National Cancer Institute (RRID:SCR_011176) Copy   


http://faculty.washington.edu/anath/

THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on April 15,2024. University of Washington - affiliated research lab focused on understanding the roles of protein dynamics in health and human disease. They focus on developing methods to characterize and control protein dynamics through utilizing methods like single-molecule fluorescence, computational modeling, and protein engineering. There is an emphasis on proteins involved in degenerative disorders such as Alzheimer's disease, stress responses and drug metabolism.

Proper citation: University of Washington Nath Research Group (RRID:SCR_000180) Copy   


http://www.juntadeandalucia.es/fundacionprogresoysalud/es/home

An organization that supports the public health system in Andalusia, Spain through three main activities: research and innovation in health, technologies line information and communication, and training and evaluation of professional skills. It also provides management support to the Health Quality Agency of Andalusia, which is the driving entity of the Andalusian Quality Model. Resource is in Spanish.

Proper citation: Progress and Health Foundation; Seville; Spain (RRID:SCR_000276) Copy   



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