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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.
http://bioimaging.dbi.udel.edu
Microscopy facility that houses equipment including confocal microscopes: LSM780 confocal microscope (Located at CBBI),LSM880 confocal microscope (Located at DBI 117),electron microscopes and their accessory instrumentation:Thermo Scientific Apreo VS SEM microscope,Hitachi S-4700, Leica EM ACE600 and Tousimis Autosamdri-815B,CX7 high content analysis system. Our staff has technical expertise across different microscopy platforms and methodologies.
Proper citation: University of Delaware BioImaging Center Core Facility (RRID:SCR_017814) Copy
http://www.udel.edu/chem/beebe/surface.htm
Core provides consulting and services in X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy (XPS or ESCA), Time-of-Flight Secondary-Ion Mass Spectrometry (TOF-SIMS), X-ray Photoelectron Imaging, Auger Electron Spectroscopy (AES), Scanning Auger Microscopy or Imaging (SAM), Secondary-Electron Microscopy (SEM), Ion-Scattering Spectroscopy (ISS or LEIS), Scanning Probe Microscopy (STM and AFM).
Proper citation: Delaware University Surface Analysis Core Facility (RRID:SCR_017796) Copy
https://github.com/nlm-irp-jianglab/SpikeHunter
Software deep learning tool for identifying phage tailspike proteins. Used to identify phage tailspike proteins.
Proper citation: SpikeHunter (RRID:SCR_024831) Copy
https://www.mccormick.northwestern.edu/materials-science/clammp/
Core provides mechanical testing machines and accessories for conducting educational, research, and outreach experiments on most solid materials.
Proper citation: Northwestern University Central Laboratory for Materials Mechanical Properties Core Facility (RRID:SCR_017877) Copy
https://www.danforthcenter.org/our-work/core-facilities/advanced-bioimaging-laboratory/
Core provides instruments for live cell imaging including Leica SP8-X confocal microscope and other fluorescence microscopes. Facility provides workstation for confocal image processing, ancillary equipment required for transmission electron microscopy. Services are provided as self services after user training by IMF staff or as full services done by core facility staff.
Proper citation: Donald Danforth Plant Science Center Advanced Bioimaging Laboratory Core Facility (RRID:SCR_018951) Copy
https://www.colorado.edu/rc/resources/petalibrary
Provides service to support storage, archival, and sharing of research data. Available at subsidized cost to any researcher affiliated with University of Colorado Boulder.
Proper citation: University of Colorado Boulder High Performance Computing PetaLibrary Core Facility (RRID:SCR_019299) Copy
https://www.jmu.edu/microscopy/index.shtml
Core provides instrumentation, resources, training, and consultation. Facility offers access to diverse range of light microscope and imaging systems,image analysis software and solutions, practical and theoretical training for faculty, students and classes,consultation on data acquisition, analysis, and presentation.
Proper citation: James Madison University Light Microscopy and Imaging Core Facility (RRID:SCR_021904) Copy
https://venomsbase-dashboard.shinyapps.io/VenomLanding/
Open-access, browser-based visualization and summary tool for venom transcriptomic and proteomic data. R Shiny–based interactive application designed as visualization and reporting interface for venom transcriptomic and proteomic data. It enables users to explore annotation metrics, toxin gene families, and quality-control summaries generated by analysis pipelines. While it will eventually serve as part of the VenomsBase front end, VenomView currently operates as standalone prototype. Provides interactive dashboards showing assembly quality, annotation scores, toxin gene families, and functional domains generated by the VenomFlow analysis pipeline. Connected to VenomLanding, VenomView currently features Doryteuthis pealeii (Squid), linking metadata with detailed annotation summaries. The expanded version will include Sepia bandensis (Cuttlefish), Octopus bimaculoides, and arachnid species.
Proper citation: VenomView (RRID:SCR_027588) Copy
https://github.com/pyranges/ncls
Software library for nested containment list data structure for interval overlap queries, like interval tree. It is a static interval-tree that is fast for both construction and lookups.
Proper citation: Nested containment list (RRID:SCR_027849) Copy
https://github.com/McGranahanLab/TcellExTRECT
Software R package to calculate T cell fractions from WES data from hg19 or hg38 aligned genomes.
Proper citation: T Cell ExTRECT (RRID:SCR_027742) Copy
https://github.com/vanallenlab/comut
Software Python library for creating comutation plots to visualize genomic and phenotypic information. Used for visualizing genomic and phenotypic information via comutation plots.
Proper citation: CoMUT (RRID:SCR_027745) Copy
Curated, open-source, integrated data resource for comparative functional genomics in crops and model plant species to facilitate the study of cross-species comparisons using information generated from projects supported by public funds. It currently hosts annotated whole genomes in over two dozen plant species and partial assemblies for almost a dozen wild rice species in the Ensembl browser, genetic and physical maps with genes, ESTs and QTLs locations, genetic diversity data sets, structure-function analysis of proteins, plant pathways databases (BioCyc and Plant Reactome platforms), and descriptions of phenotypic traits and mutations. The web-based displays for phenotypes include the Genes and Quantitative Trait Loci (QTL) modules. Sequence based relationships are displayed in the Genomes module using the genome browser adapted from Ensembl, in the Maps module using the comparative map viewer (CMap) from GMOD, and in the Proteins module displays. BLAST is used to search for similar sequences. Literature supporting all the above data is organized in the Literature database. In addition, Gramene now hosts a variety of web services including a Distributed Annotation Server (DAS), BLAST and a public MySQL database. Twice a year, Gramene releases a major build of the database and makes interim releases to correct errors or to make important updates to software and/or data. Additionally you can access Gramene through an FTP site.
Proper citation: Gramene (RRID:SCR_002829) Copy
Digital repository software written in C# / ASP.net for powering digital libraries in a Windows server environment. Standards-based repository keeps all files in METS/MODS packages. Several related applications are available as well and the libraries can work independently as great digital library resources. SobekCM allows users to discover online resources via semantic and full-text searches, as well as a variety of different browse mechanisms. For each digital resource in the repository there are a plethora of display options, which may be selected by an appropriately authenticated use. This repository includes online metadata editing and online submissions in support of institutional repositories.
Proper citation: SobekCM (RRID:SCR_003225) Copy
http://compgen.bscb.cornell.edu/phast/
A freely available software package for comparative and evolutionary genomics that consists of about half a dozen major programs, plus more than a dozen utilities for manipulating sequence alignments, phylogenetic trees, and genomic annotations. For the most part, PHAST focuses on two kinds of applications: the identification of novel functional elements, including protein-coding exons and evolutionarily conserved sequences; and statistical phylogenetic modeling, including estimation of model parameters, detection of signatures of selection, and reconstruction of ancestral sequences. It consists of over 60,000 lines of C code.
Proper citation: PHAST (RRID:SCR_003204) Copy
Independent international facilitator catalyzing and coordinating global development of neuroinformatics aiming to advance data reuse and reproducibility in global brain research. Integrates and analyzes diverse data across scales, techniques, and species to understand brain function and positively impact the health and well being of society.
Proper citation: International Neuroinformatics Coordinating Facility (RRID:SCR_002282) Copy
http://lamp.icsi.berkeley.edu/lamp/
A software package for the inference of locus-specific ancestry in recently admixed populations. LAMP-LD takes the genotypes of admixed individuals as well as reference haplotype panels approximating the mixing ancestral populations, and outputs the estimated number of alleles from each ancestry in each locus for each individual. The LAMP-LD package also includes the program LAMP-HAP, which processes haplotype data when high-quality phasing is available, and utilizes trio nuclear family designs to improve estimation accuracy. LAMP-LD is based on a window-based processing combined within a hierarchical Hidden Markov Model. It can process 2,3 or 5 mixing populations, and its short per-sample processing time makes it suitable for analyzing large datasets of dense SNP panels. The original program LAMP does not use the LD and therefore is not as accurate, but it is useful in cases where the SNP density is not high enough or when the ancestral haplotypes are unkown.
Proper citation: Local Ancestry in adMixed Populations (RRID:SCR_001258) Copy
Database of genetic and molecular biology data for the model higher plant Arabidopsis thaliana. Data available includes the complete genome sequence along with gene structure, gene product information, metabolism, gene expression, DNA and seed stocks, genome maps, genetic and physical markers, publications, and information about the Arabidopsis research community. Gene product function data is updated every two weeks from the latest published research literature and community data submissions. Gene structures are updated 1-2 times per year using computational and manual methods as well as community submissions of new and updated genes. TAIR also provides extensive linkouts from data pages to other Arabidopsis resources. The data can be searched, viewed and analyzed. Datasets can also be downloaded. Pages on news, job postings, conference announcements, Arabidopsis lab protocols, and useful links are provided.
Proper citation: TAIR (RRID:SCR_004618) Copy
http://www.stanford.edu/group/brainsinsilicon/neurogrid.html
A specialized hardware platform that will perform cortex-scale emulations while offering software-like flexibility. With sixteen 12x14 sq-mm chips (Neurocores) assembled on a 6.5x7.5 sq-in circuit board that can model a slab of cortex with up to 16x256x256 neurons - over a million! The chips are interconnected in a binary tree by 80M spike/sec links. An on-chip RAM (in each Neurocore) and an off-chip RAM (on a daughterboard, not shown) softwire vertical and horizontcal cortical connections, respectively. It provides an affordable option for brain simulations that uses analog computation to emulate ion-channel activity and uses digital communication to softwire synaptic connections. These technologies impose different constraints, because they operate in parallel and in serial, respectively. Analog computation constrains the number of distinct ion-channel populations that can be simulatedunlike digital computation, which simply takes longer to run bigger simulations. Digital communication constrains the number of synaptic connections that can be activated per secondunlike analog communication, which simply sums additional inputs onto the same wire. Working within these constraints, Neurogrid achieves its goal of simulating multiple cortical areas in real-time by making judicious choices.
Proper citation: Neurogrid (RRID:SCR_005024) Copy
The National Evolutionary Synthesis Center (NESCent) is a nonprofit science center dedicated to cross-disciplinary research in evolution. NESCent promotes the synthesis of information, concepts and knowledge to address significant, emerging, or novel questions in evolutionary science and its applications. NESCent achieves this by supporting research and education across disciplinary, institutional, geographic, and demographic boundaries. Synthetic research in evolutionary science takes many forms but includes integrating novel data sets and models to address important problems within a discipline, developing new analytical approaches and tools, and combining methods and perspectives from multiple disciplines to answer and even create new fundamental scientific questions. NESCent facilitates such synthetic research by providing an environment for fertile interactions among scientists. Our Science and Synthesis program sponsors postdoctoral fellows and sabbatical scholars as resident scientists, and two kinds of meetings, working groups and catalysis meetings. Catalysis meetings provide a novel mechanism for bringing together diverse research communities and cultures to identify common interests, while working groups provide an opportunity for scientists to work together intensively on fundamental synthetic questions over a several-year period. These activities are community driven through our application process and evaluated by an external advisory board. Our Informatics program provides state of the art informatics tools to visiting and in-house scientists and aims to take the lead in assembling novel databases and developing new analytical tools for evolutionary biology. Finally it is sponsoring a major initiative to provide a digital data repository for work in evolutionary biology. NESCent''s Education and Outreach group communicates the results of evolutionary biology research to the general public and scientific community, provides outreach to groups who are underrepresented in evolutionary biology and works to improve evolution education.
Proper citation: NESCent - National Evolutionary Synthesis Center (RRID:SCR_005911) Copy
http://www.agcol.arizona.edu/software/tcw/
Software package for assembling, annotating, querying, and comparing transcript and expression level data that consists of two parts: * singleTCW (sTCW): Single transcript sets or assemblies; annotation; differential expression (EdgeR, DEGSeq, DESeq, GoSeq) * multiTCW (mTCW): Comparison of multiple transcript sets; ortholog grouping (e.g., OrthoMCL) It has been tested on Linux and uses Java, mySQL and optionally R.
Proper citation: TCW (RRID:SCR_001875) Copy
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