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Resource Name Proper Citation Abbreviations Resource Type Description Keywords Resource Relationships Related Condition Funding Defining Citation Availability Website Status Alternate IDs Alternate URLs Old URLs Parent Organization Resource ID Synonyms Record Last Update Mentions Count
Brodmann Areas in the Human Brain with an Emphasis on Vision and Language
 
Resource Report
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1+ mentions
Brodmann Areas in the Human Brain with an Emphasis on Vision and Language (RRID:SCR_004857) Brodmann Areas in the Human Brain atlas, data or information resource, reference atlas, data set Reference atlas of Brodmann Areas in the Human Brain with an Emphasis on Vision and Language. Other Pages include: Flat Brodmann Maps, Brodmann Area Names (with locational Descriptions), Flat Visual Area Maps, Language Areas, PopUp Gyri Maps brain, human, brodmann partition scheme region, vision, language, brodmann has parent organization: University of Colorado; Colorado; USA nlx_144391 SCR_004857 Brodmann Areas in the Human Brain with an Emphasis on Vision Language 2026-02-15 09:18:56 2
UMKC Neuroscience Brain Tissue Bank and Research Laboratory
 
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UMKC Neuroscience Brain Tissue Bank and Research Laboratory (RRID:SCR_005148) UMKC Brain Tissue Bank brain bank, material resource, tissue bank, biomaterial supply resource THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented August 31, 2016. The UMKC Neuroscience Brain Tissue Bank and Research Laboratory has been established to obtain, process, and distribute human brain tissue to qualified scientists and clinicians dedicated to neuroscience research. No other living organ approaches the human brain in complexity or capacity. Healthy, it astounds and inspires miracles. Diseased, it confounds and diminishes hope. The use of human brain tissue for research will provide insight into the anatomical and neurochemical aspects of diseased and non-diseased brains. While animal models are helpful and necessary in understanding disease, certain disorders can be more efficiently studied using human brain tissue. Also, modern research techniques are often best applied to human tissue. We also need samples of brain tissue that have not been affected by disease. They help us to compare a 'normal' brain with a diseased one. Also, we have a critical need for brain donations from relatives who have genetically inherited disorders. Tissue preparation consists of fresh quick-frozen tissue blocks or coronal slices (nitrogen vapor frozen; custom dissection of specific anatomic regions) or formalin-fixed coronal slices (custom dissection of specific anatomic regions). brain tissue, brain, tissue, fresh quick-frozen, block, nitrogen vapor frozen, frozen, formalin-fixed, disease, normal, genetically inherited disorder, normal control, matched control, neuroscience, post-mortem, coronal slice is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing
has parent organization: University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Medicine; Missouri; USA
Disease, Normal, Genetically inherited disorder, Normal control, Matched control THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE nlx_144161 SCR_005148 UMKC Neuroscience Brain Tissue Bank Research Laboratory, University of Missouri-Kansas City Neuroscience Brain Tissue Bank & Research Laboratory, UMKC Neuroscience Brain Tissue Bank & Research Laboratory 2026-02-15 09:18:54 0
University of Pittsburgh Brain Tissue Donation Program
 
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1+ mentions
University of Pittsburgh Brain Tissue Donation Program (RRID:SCR_005028) UPMC Brain Tissue Donation Program, CCNMD Brain Tissue Donation Program brain bank, material resource, tissue bank, biomaterial supply resource THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on March 19,2024. Brain tissue donation is a valuable contribution to mental health research. It enables scientists to investigate how the normal brain works, and how the brain is disturbed when it is affected by schizophrenia, depression, bipolar (manic depressive) disease or other related disorders. The Department of Psychiatry at the University of Pittsburgh has established a brain tissue bank to which brain tissue can be donated at no expense. The gift of brain tissue enables scientists to conduct research designed to understand causes, to develop new treatments, and ultimately to find cures for diseases that affect the brain. Brain tissue donation is a gift that makes it possible for researchers to study various types of mental disorders. Donations of brain tissue from individuals without these disorders are also needed to establish comparisons with brain samples from individuals who have these disorders. Any legally competent adult or guardian may indicate during life their interest in donating brain tissue after death. Next-of-kin either of healthy individuals or of those with psychiatric disorders may give consent to donate brain tissue following the death of a loved one. Brain tissue is removed during autopsy at a morgue or hospital and is transported to the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center for examination and study. brain tissue, brain, tissue, mental disease, normal control, schizophrenia, depressive disorder, bipolar disorder, post mortem, early adult, middle adult is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing
has parent organization: University of Pittsburgh Conte Center for the Neuroscience of Mental Disorders
Mental disease, Normal control, Schizophrenia, Depressive Disorder, Bipolar Disorder THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE nlx_144013 SCR_005028 Conte Center Brain Tissue Donation Program, UPMC TNP Brain Tissue Donation Program, Conte Center for the Neuroscience of Mental Disorders Brain Tissue Donation Program, UPMC Center for the Neuroscience of Mental Disorders and Translational Neuroscience Program Brain Tissue Donation Program, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Brain Tissue Donation Program 2026-02-15 09:19:00 1
Duke University Kathleen Price Bryan Brain Bank
 
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Duke University Kathleen Price Bryan Brain Bank (RRID:SCR_005022) brain bank, material resource, tissue bank, biomaterial supply resource A research repository of human brains with neurological disorders and normal controls, recruited through the Autopsy and Brain Donation Program coordinator. The Kathleen Price Bryan Brain Bank contains brains from patients with Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, Huntington's disease, Muscular Dystrophy, and other neurological and dementing disorders. The brain tissue is subjected to a detailed neuropathological evaluation and then stored as fixed and frozen hemispheres, paraffin blocks and histological slides. After receipt of an IRB approved request, tissue is supplied to investigators at Duke University, major medical centers and pharmaceutical companies across the United States and worldwide. brain, tissue, brain bank, biospecimen repository, spinal cord, cerebral spinal fluid, dna, fixed hemisphere, frozen hemispheres, paraffin block, histological slide, neurological disorder, alzheimer's disease, parkinson's disease, huntington's disease, dementing disorder, muscular dystrophy is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing
has parent organization: Joseph and Kathleen Bryan Alzheimer's Disease Research Center
Neurological disorder, Normal control, Alzheimers disease, Dementing disorder, Parkinsons disease, Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, Huntingtons disease, Muscular Dystrophy NIA P30 AG028377 Public, Tissue must be requested, Available to the research community nlx_144011 SCR_005022 Bryan Brain Bank, Kathleen Price Bryan Brain Bank, DU Brain Bank 2026-02-15 09:18:53 0
Ivy Glioblastoma Atlas Project
 
Resource Report
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100+ mentions
Ivy Glioblastoma Atlas Project (RRID:SCR_005044) Ivy GAP image collection, atlas, data or information resource, database Platform for exploring the anatomic and genetic basis of glioblastoma at the cellular and molecular levels that includes two interactive databases linked together by de-identified tumor specimen numbers to facilitate comparisons across data modalities: * The open public image database, here, providing in situ hybridization data mapping gene expression across the anatomic structures inherent in glioblastoma, as well as associated histological data suitable for neuropathological examination * A companion database (Ivy GAP Clinical and Genomic Database) offering detailed clinical, genomic, and expression array data sets that are designed to elucidate the pathways involved in glioblastoma development and progression. This database requires registration for access. The hope is that researchers all over the world will mine these data and identify trends, correlations, and interesting leads for further studies with significant translational and clinical outcomes. The Ivy Glioblastoma Atlas Project is a collaborative partnership between the Ben and Catherine Ivy Foundation, the Allen Institute for Brain Science and the Ben and Catherine Ivy Center for Advanced Brain Tumor Treatment. glioblastoma, in situ hybridization, hematoxylin and eosin stain, brain, tumor, gene expression, anatomic structure, histology, clinical, genomic, expression array, gene, FASEB list has parent organization: Allen Institute for Brain Science Brain cancer, Cancer Ben and Catherine Ivy Foundation nlx_99161 SCR_005044 2026-02-15 09:18:53 126
UCSD Experimental Neuropath Laboratory
 
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UCSD Experimental Neuropath Laboratory (RRID:SCR_004906) brain bank, material resource, tissue bank, biomaterial supply resource THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented August 31, 2016. The Laboratory of Experimental Neuropathology is engaged in the study of neurodegenerative disease, including Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, and the dementia of HIV encephalitis. It contains a large bank of materials available to fellow investigators including images, publications, and lab safety. Fellow Investigators and Collaborators may request materials from the brain bank. Technologies employed by the laboratory include immunocytochemistry, neurochemistry, molecular genetics, transgenic models of disease, and imaging by scanning laser confocal microscopy. brain, tissue, neurodegenerative disease, alzheimer'disease, parkinson's disease, huntington's disease, hiv dementia, dementia, human immunodeficiency virus, encephalitis, neuronal degeneration, postmortem, brain bank is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing
has parent organization: University of California at San Diego; California; USA
Neurodegenerative disease, Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, Huntington's disease, HIV dementia THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE nlx_143937 http://neurosci.ucsd.edu/materials-request-form.aspx http://neurosci.ucsd.edu/faculty/eliezer_masliah.aspx SCR_004906 UCSD Experimental Neuropathology Laboratory, Laboratory of Experimental Neuropathology 2026-02-15 09:18:51 0
Brain Research Institute
 
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Brain Research Institute (RRID:SCR_004988) BRI graduate program resource, postdoctoral program resource, portal, training resource, data or information resource, topical portal Portal touching on all aspects of neuroscience from molecules to the mind, from the laboratory bench to the patient's bedside. Members study the normal structure and workings of the nervous system, its development, its cognitive functions, its derangement by disease and injury, and the means of its repair and protection. Projects span traditional disciplinary boundaries, as do graduate and postdoctoral training programs. Its major achievement has been to foster and improve multidisciplinary collaborations which has increasingly permitted the identification of pathogenic mechanisms and the formulation of new therapeutic approaches. one mind tbi, one mind ptsd, neuroscience, nervous system, genomics, proteomics, magnetic resonance imaging assay, positron emission tomography, biosensor, microelectromechanical system, brain, spinal cord has parent organization: University of California at Los Angeles; California; USA
is parent organization of: Numerical Fibre Generator
is parent organization of: cortex
is parent organization of: SOCK
is parent organization of: Brain Research Institute Biobank Resources
Brain disorder, Parkinson's disease, Huntington's disease, Alzheimer's disease, Neurofibromatosis, Stroke, Spinal cord injury, Traumatic brain injury, Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder nlx_143995 http://www.bri.ucla.edu/index_02.asp SCR_004988 Brain Research Institute UCLA 2026-02-15 09:18:52 0
Neuron Navigator
 
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Neuron Navigator (RRID:SCR_005063) NNG data analysis service, database, d spatial image, service resource, production service resource, data or information resource, analysis service resource Neuron Navigator (NNG) integrates a 3D neuron image database into an easy-to-use visual interface. Via a flexible and user-friendly interface, NNG is designed to help researchers analyze and observe the connectivity within the neural maze and discover possible pathways. With NNG''s 3D neuron image database, researchers can perform volumetric searches using the location of neural terminals, or the occupation of neuron volumes within the 3D brain space. Also, the presence of the neurons under a combination of spatial restrictions can be shown as well. NNG is a result of a multi-discipline collaboration between neuroscientists and computer scientists, and NNG has now been implemented on a coordinated brain space for the Drosophila (fruit fly) brain. Account is required. image database, connectivity, drosophila, brain, neuron has parent organization: National Tsing Hua University; Hsinchu; Taiwan nlx_144057 SCR_005063 NNG: Neuron Navigator, NNG: Neuron Navigator - A Database of Drosophila Brain Neurons 2026-02-15 09:18:54 0
BrainEthics
 
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BrainEthics (RRID:SCR_005530) BrainEthics blog, data or information resource, narrative resource, book There are a lot of fine blogs out there covering the avalance of current neuroscience research. With this blog Thomas Rams��y & Martin Skov want to highlight the many consequences of this growing understanding of the human brain. We are especially interested in two types of consequences: Tinkering with the brain and What is it like to be a human being? * Tinkering with the brain: First and foremost, with an understanding of how the brain works comes the possibility of tinkering with it. We already use billions of dollars every year on psychopharmocologia trying to treat depression, schizophrenia, obsessive-compulsive disorder and other mental diseases. But should we also use our knowledge of the brain to treat undesirable mental traits such as pedophilia or sociopathy? And what about enhancing normal brains? Clearly, evolution hasn''t endowed us with the most efficient brain imaginable. Shouldn''t we do something about its many shortcomings? * What is it like to be a human being?: Secondly, our view of human behavior is sure to change with our improved understanding of the human brain. Our knowledge of core human faculties such as language, social reasoning, aesthetics, and economics is already being challenged by modern neuroscience, yielding multiple hard questions. Do we have a free will? Is the mind innate or plastic? If people are not responsible for their actions (since all actions are caused by blind molecular processes) does our legal system still make sense? In short, will modern neuroscience come to completely redefine human nature? We try to discuss contemporary research literature, not just news reports. Although we will occasionally also target popular science reports, since we believe they play an important role in dissemining lessons from the lab. And in the future we plan to also post interviews with interesting researchers, as well as link to our own publications in journals and books. Additionally, the latest and most important books in the multidisciplinary field of neuroscience, cognition, psychology, ethics and economics are presented. brain, science, ethics, neuroethics, human, behavior is parent organization of: BrainEthics Podcast nlx_144626 SCR_005530 Brain Ethics, BrainEthics - Consequences of Brain Science 2026-02-15 09:18:59 0
HIV Neurobehavioral Research Center
 
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HIV Neurobehavioral Research Center (RRID:SCR_005370) topical portal, data or information resource, portal The mission of the HIV Neurobehavioral Research Center (HNRC) is to increase our understanding of how HIV and other diseases affect the human nervous system. The HNRC conducts local, national, and international research devoted to advancing our knowledge of the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of HIV-related diseases as they affect the brain and nervous system, and result in impairment of everyday functioning. Research areas of the Center include: - The incidence, prevalence, and features of neurocognitive impairment caused by HIV - The attributes of the virus, host, and host-virus interactions that determine the presentation of HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders - Possible molecular and cellular mechanisms of nervous system impairment, including the mechanisms by which host-virus factors generate neural injury and neurobehavioral disorders - The cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) as a window on CNS events * The role of co-pathogens and comorbidities in neuroAIDS (e.g., hepatitis C infection, methamphetamine abuse) - Real life implications of neurocognitive impairment in terms of work, daily life, and survival - The effects of HIV disease and neurocognitive impairment on family and social adaptation - NeuroAIDS in resource limited settings - Treatments for neurocognitive impairment and behavioral interventions HNRC also has a Developmental Grants Program (DGP), the primary goal of which is the initiation of innovative studies by junior faculty and trainees at UCSD or affiliated institutions with the following objectives: 1. Recruitment to neuroAIDS research of new investigators or established investigators without prior experience in the field; 2. Generation and pilot testing of new research initiatives; 3. Fostering collaboration among investigators from throughout Southern California. The program provides to qualified investigators and trainees any appropriate combination of the following forms of support: 1. Small, 1-2 year grants to support pilot studies; 2. Access to HNRC core resources such as data, specimens, participants, equipment, administrative support, or expert consultation and technical assistance. Lastly, The the NHRC Mentored Investigator Program recruits, supports, and follows the progress of graduate students, postdoctoral (Ph.D. or M.D.) fellows, and junior faculty in disciplines relevant to HNRC research. The HNRC is committed to tailoring our training opportunities to the backgrounds and interests of candidates from a variety of disciplines who join us with various levels of training and experience in research. We have and will continue to provide training and mentoring of medical students, doctoral students in clinical psychology, and postdoctoral fellows in Medicine, Psychiatry, Neurology, and Psychology. Sponsors: The Center is supported by public funding from the National Institutes of Health, the State of California, and other sources. abuse, brain, cellular, cerbrospinal fluid (csf), clinical psychology, comorbidity, co-pathogen, diagnosis, disease, disorder, hepatitis c, hiv, host-virus factor, host-virus interaction, human, impairment, infection, mechanism, medicine, methamphetamine, molecular, nervous system, neural, neurobehavioral, neurocognitive, neurology, prevention, psychiatry, psychology, social adaption, virus has parent organization: University of California at San Diego; California; USA nif-0000-10508 SCR_005370 HNRC 2026-02-15 09:18:57 33
NeuroLex
 
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10+ mentions
NeuroLex (RRID:SCR_005402) NeuroLex data or information resource, narrative resource, wiki A freely editable semantic wiki for community-based curation of the terms used in Neuroscience. Entries are curated and eventually incorporated into the formal NIFSTD ontology. NeuroLex also includes a Resource branch for community members to freely add neuroscience relevant resources that do not become part of NIFSTD ontology but rather make up the NIF Registry. As part of the NIF, we provide a simple search interface to many different sources of neuroscience information and data. To make this search more effective, we are constructing ontologies to help organize neuroscience concepts into category hierarchies, e.g., neuron is a cell. These categories provide the means to perform more effective searches and also to organize and understand the information that is returned. But an important adjunct to this activity is to clearly define all of the terms that we use to describe our data, e.g., anatomical terms, techniques, organism names. Because wikis provide an easy interface for communities to contribute their knowledge, we started the NeuroLex. behavioral activity, behavioral paradigm, brain region, cell, neuron, disease, molecule, nervous system function, subcellular part, resource type, quality, brain, neuroscience, biological process, cellular anatomy, anatomy, subcellular, subcellular anatomy, organism, neurological disorder, neurologic disease, dysfunction, atlas application, knowledge environment, php, web service, rdf, knowledge management, neuroanatomy, ontology, semantics, lexicon is used by: MicroDraw
is listed by: OMICtools
is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC)
is related to: Program on Ontologies of Neural Structures
is related to: NIFSTD
is related to: neuroelectro
is related to: Whole Brain Catalog
is related to: Linked Neuron Data
is related to: SciCrunch Registry
is related to: InterLex
has parent organization: Neuroscience Information Framework
has parent organization: International Neuroinformatics Coordinating Facility
is parent organization of: Integrated
is parent organization of: Common Upper Mammalian Brain Ontology
is parent organization of: SciCrunch Registry
Neuroscience Information Framework PMID:24009581 Creative Commons Attribution License, v3 Unported OMICS_01703, nlx_144511 http://www.nitrc.org/projects/incf_neurolex-w SCR_005402 NeuroLex.org 2026-02-15 09:19:05 17
1000 Functional Connectomes Project
 
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10+ mentions
1000 Functional Connectomes Project (RRID:SCR_005361) INDI, 1000 FCP, FCP portal, catalog, database, service resource, storage service resource, data repository, project portal, data or information resource, image collection, image repository Collection of resting state fMRI (R-fMRI) datasets from sites around world. It demonstrates open sharing of R-fMRI data and aims to emphasize aggregation and sharing of well-phenotyped datasets. resting state functional mri, fmri, brain, neuroimaging, phenotype, function, data sharing, human, mri, r-fmri, rs-fmri, fc-fmri, rs--fcmri, resting-state, dicom, dti, child, adolescent, brain imaging, neuroinformatics, adult human, phenotype, data set, FASEB list is used by: NIF Data Federation
is used by: DataLad
is used by: Integrated Datasets
is used by: MetaSearch
is listed by: NITRC-IR
is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC)
is listed by: NIH Data Sharing Repositories
is affiliated with: Preprocessed Connectomes Project
is related to: Spanish Resting State Network
is related to: NITRC-IR
is related to: NIH Data Sharing Repositories
is related to: BASH4RfMRI
is related to: 1000 Functional Connectomes Project
has parent organization: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC)
is parent organization of: C-PAC
is parent organization of: Neuro Bureau - Berlin Mind and Brain Sample
is parent organization of: Quiron-Valencia Sample
is parent organization of: ABIDE
is parent organization of: Consortium for Reliability and Reproducibility
is parent organization of: ADHD-200 Sample
is parent organization of: FCP Classic Data Sharing Samples
is parent organization of: NKI/Rockland Sample
is parent organization of: NYU Institute for Pediatric Neuroscience Sample
is parent organization of: Virginia Tech Carilion Research Institute Sample
is parent organization of: NKI-RS Multiband Imaging Test-Retest Pilot Dataset
is parent organization of: Beijing: Eyes Open Eyes Closed Study
is parent organization of: Beijing: Short TR Study
is parent organization of: COBRE
NITRIC PMID:23133413
PMID:23123682
Restricted SCR_015771, nlx_144428, r3d100011565, r3d100011555 http://www.nitrc.org/projects/fcon_1000/
https://doi.org/10.17616/R3W05R
https://doi.org/10.17616/R35H0H
SCR_005361 INDI, International Neuroimaging Data-Sharing Initiative, fcon_1000, Functional Connectomes Project International Neuroimaging Data-Sharing Initiative (FCP/INDI), 1000 Functional Connectomes Project, FCP/INDI 2026-02-15 09:18:57 46
Whole Brain Atlas
 
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10+ mentions
Whole Brain Atlas (RRID:SCR_005390) training material, atlas, service resource, storage service resource, data repository, data or information resource, narrative resource, image repository An atlas of normal and abnormal brain images intended as an introduction to basic neuroanatomy, with emphasis on the pathoanatomy of several leading central nervous system diseases that integrates clinical information with magnetic resonance (MR), x-ray computed tomography (CT), and nuclear medicine images. A range of brain abnormalities are presented including examples of certain brain disease presented with various combinations of image type and imaging frequency. Submissions of concise, exemplary, clinically driven examples of neuroimaging are welcome. atlas, brain, human, abnormal brain image, neuroanatomy, imaging is listed by: re3data.org
has parent organization: Harvard Medical School; Massachusetts; USA
Inflammatory disease, Infectious disease, Degenerative disease, Neoplastic disease, Brain tumor, Cerebrovascular disease, Stroke American Academy of Neurology ;
Brigham and Womens Hospital; Massachusetts; USA ;
Departments of Radiology and Neurology ;
Countway Library of Medicine
Copyrighted, Acknowledgement required, Non-commercial, The community can contribute to this resource r3d100010274, nif-0000-00079 https://doi.org/10.17616/R34P4F SCR_005390 2026-02-15 09:18:58 23
NIH Office of Science Education
 
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NIH Office of Science Education (RRID:SCR_005603) OSE organization portal, portal, training material, knowledge environment, data or information resource, narrative resource The NIH Office of Science Education (OSE) coordinates science education activities at the NIH and develops and sponsors science education projects in house. These programs serve elementary, secondary, and college students and teachers and the public. Activities * Develop curriculum supplements and other educational materials related to medicine and research through collaborations with scientific experts at NIH * Maintain a website as a central source of information about NIH science education resources * Establish national model programs in public science education, such as the NIH Mini-Med School and Science in the Cinema * Promote science education reform as outlined in the National Science Education Standards and related guidelines The OSE was established in 1991 within the Office of Science Policy of the Office of the Director of the National Institutes of Health. The NIH is the world''s foremost biomedical research center and the U.S. federal government''s focal point for such research. It is one of the components of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). The Office of Science Education (OSE) plans, develops, and coordinates a comprehensive science education program to strengthen and enhance efforts of the NIH to attract young people to biomedical and behavioral science careers and to improve science literacy in both adults and children. The function of the Office is as follows: (1) develops, supports, and directs new program initiatives at all levels with special emphasis on targeting students in grades kindergarten to 16, their educators and parents, and the general public; (2) advises NIH leadership on science education issues; (3) examines and evaluates research and emerging trends in science education and literacy for policy making; (4) works closely with the NIH extramural, intramural, women''s health, laboratory animal research, and minority program offices on science education special issues and programs to ensure coordination of NIH efforts; (5) works with NIH institutes, centers, and divisions to enhance communication of science education activities; and (6) works cooperatively with other public- and private-sector organizations to develop and coordinate activities. science, education, high school, middle school, elementary school, animal, research, bioethics, blood, lymphatic system, bones, joints, muscle, brain, nervous system, cell biology, cancer, child, adolescent, complementary medicine, alternative medicine, digestive system, ears, nose, throat, endocrine system, environmental, toxicology, evolution, eye, vision, food, nutrition, metabolism, genomics, genetics, heart, circulation, history, immune system, injury, wound, kidney, urinary system, medical research, man, mental health, behavior, microbiology, infectious disease, mouth, teeth, therapy, reproductive system, respiratory system, safety, late adult human, sexual health, skin, hair, nail, sleep, social, family, substance abuse, technology, wellness, lifestyle, woman, health, human, lesson plan, supplemental curricula, book, image, multimedia, poster, k-12, adult, non-human animal has parent organization: National Institutes of Health
is parent organization of: NIH SciEd Blog
NIH nlx_146222 SCR_005603 NIH OSE, National Institutes of Health Office of Science Education 2026-02-15 09:19:00 0
Brain Basics
 
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Brain Basics (RRID:SCR_005606) Brain Basics training material, data or information resource, narrative resource, video resource Brain Basics provides information on how the brain works, how mental illnesses are disorders of the brain, and ongoing research that helps us better understand and treat disorders. Mental disorders are common. You may have a friend, colleague, or relative with a mental disorder, or perhaps you have experienced one yourself at some point. Such disorders include depression, anxiety disorders, bipolar disorder, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), and many others. Some people who develop a mental illness may recover completely; others may have repeated episodes of illness with relatively stable periods in between. Still others live with symptoms of mental illness every day. They can be moderate, or serious and cause severe disability. Through research, we know that mental disorders are brain disorders. Evidence shows that they can be related to changes in the anatomy, physiology, and chemistry of the nervous system. When the brain cannot effectively coordinate the billions of cells in the body, the results can affect many aspects of life. Scientists are continually learning more about how the brain grows and works in healthy people, and how normal brain development and function can go awry, leading to mental illnesses. Brain Basics will introduce you to some of this science, such as: * How the brain develops * How genes and the environment affect the brain * The basic structure of the brain * How different parts of the brain communicate and work with each other * How changes in the brain can lead to mental disorders, such as depression. brain, depression, anxiety disorder, bipolar disorder, attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder, depressive disorder, mental disease, gene, environment has parent organization: NIMH Educational Resources NIMH nlx_146226 SCR_005606 NIMH Brain Basics 2026-02-15 09:18:59 0
MINC/Atlases
 
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1+ mentions
MINC/Atlases (RRID:SCR_005281) MINC/Atlases wiki, atlas, reference atlas, data or information resource, narrative resource A linear average model atlas produced by the International Consortium for Brain Mapping (ICBM) project. A set of full- brain volumetric images from a normative population specifically for the purposes of generating a model were collected by the Montreal Neurological Institute (MNI), UCLA, and University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio Research Imaging Center (RIC). 152 new subjects were scanned using T1, T2 and PD sequences using a specific protocol. These images were acquired at a higher resolution than the original average 305 data and exhibit improved contrast due predominately to advances in imaging technology. Each individual was linearly registered to the average 305 and a new model was formed. In total, three models were created at the MNI, the ICBM152_T1, ICBM152_T2 and ICBM152_PD from 152 normal subjects. This resulting model is now known as the ICBM152 (although the model itself has not been published). One advantage of this model is that it exhibits better contrast and better definition of the top of the brain and the bottom of the cerebellum due to the increased coverage during acquisition. The entirely automatic analysis pipeline of this data also included grey/white matter segmentation via spatial priors. The averaged results of these segmentations formed the first MNI parametric maps of grey and white matter. The maps were never made publicly available in isolation but have formed parts of other packages for some time including SPM, FSL AIR and as models of grey matter for EEG source location in VARETTA and BRAINWAVE. Again, as these models are an approximation of Talairach space, there are differences in varying areas, to continue our use of origin shift as an example, the ICBM models are approximately 152: +3.5mm in Z and +-co-ordinate -3.5mm and 2.0mm in Y as compared to the original Talairach origin. In addition to the standard analysis performed on the ICBM data, 64 of the subjects data were segmented using model based segmentation. 64 of the original 305 were manually outlined and a resulting parametric VOI atlas built. The native data from these acquisitions was 256x256 with 1mm slices. The final image resolution of this data was 181x217x181 with 1mm isotropic voxels. Refer to the ICBM152 NonLinear if you are fitting an individual to model and do not care about left/right comparisons. A short history of the various atlases that have been produced at the BIC (McConnell Brain Imaging Center, Montreal Neurological Institute) is provided. atlas, brain, template, human, magnetic resonance imaging is related to: ICBM 152 Nonlinear atlases version 2009
is related to: McConnell Brain Imaging Center
is related to: International Consortium for Brain Mapping
is related to: Laboratory of Neuro Imaging
is related to: International Consortium for Brain Mapping
has parent organization: Wikibooks
Normal nlx_144315 SCR_005281 MINC / Atlases 2026-02-15 09:18:56 3
ADHD-200 Sample
 
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Resource Website
10+ mentions
ADHD-200 Sample (RRID:SCR_005358) ADHD-200, portal, data set, data or information resource, topical portal, disease-related portal A grassroots initiative dedicated to accelerating the scientific community''''s understanding of the neural basis of ADHD through the implementation of open data-sharing and discovery-based science. They believe that a community-wide effort focused on advancing functional and structural imaging examinations of the developing brain will accelerate the rate at which neuroscience can inform clinical practice. The ADHD-200 Global Competition invited participants to develop diagnostic classification tools for ADHD diagnosis based on functional and structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain. Applying their tools, participants provided diagnostic labels for previously unlabeled datasets. The competition assessed diagnostic accuracy of each submission and invited research papers describing novel, neuroscientific ideas related to ADHD diagnosis. Twenty-one international teams, from a mix of disciplines, including statistics, mathematics, and computer science, submitted diagnostic labels, with some trying their hand at imaging analysis and psychiatric diagnosis for the first time. The data for the competition was provided by the ADHD-200 Consortium. Consortium members from institutions around the world provided de-identified, HIPAA compliant imaging datasets from almost 800 children with and without ADHD. A phenotypic file including all of the test set subjects and their diagnostic codes can be downloaded. Winner is presented. The ADHD-200 consortium included: * Brown University, Providence, RI, USA (Brown) * The Kennedy Krieger Institute, Baltimore, MD, USA (KKI) * The Donders Institute, Nijmegen, The Netherlands (NeuroImage) * New York University Medical Center, New York, NY, USA (NYU) * Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, OR, USA (OHSU) * Peking University, Beijing, P.R.China (Peking 1-3) * The University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA (Pittsburgh) * Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, USA (WashU) mri, fmri, brain, neuroimaging, attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder, anatomical, resting state functional mri, child, adolescent, human, young, early adult human, functional imaging, structural imaging, normal, normal control is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC)
is related to: Neuro Bureau
has parent organization: 1000 Functional Connectomes Project
is parent organization of: ADHD-200 Preprocessed Data
Attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder Account required, Acknowledgement requested, Non-commercial nlx_144426 SCR_005358 ADHD-200 Consortium 2026-02-15 09:18:57 20
CBRAIN
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
10+ mentions
CBRAIN (RRID:SCR_005513) CBRAIN data analysis service, software resource, service resource, storage service resource, production service resource, analysis service resource A flexible software platform for distributed processing, analysis, exchange and visualization of brain imaging data. The expected result is a middleware platform that will render the processing environment (hardware, operating systems, storage servers, etc...) transparent to a remote user. Interaction with a standard web browser allows application of complex algorithm pipelines to large datasets stored at remote locations using a mixture of network available resources such as small clusters, neuroimaging tools and databases as well as Compute Canada's High Performance Computing Centers (HPC). Though the focus of CBRAIN is providing tools for use by brain imaging researchers, the platform is generalizable to other imaging domains, such as radiology, surgical planning and heart imaging, with profound consequences for Canadian medical research. CBRAIN expanded its concept to include international partners in the US, Germany and Korea. As of December 2010, GBRAIN has made significant progress with the original three partners and has developed new partners in Singapore, China, India, and Latin America. CBRAIN is currently deployed on 6 Compute Canada HPC clusters, one German HPC cluster and 3 clusters local to McGill University Campus, totaling more than 80,000 potential CPU cores. brain, neuroimaging, imaging, middleware, platform, network, data sharing, web application, visualization is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC)
has parent organization: McGill University; Montreal; Canada
is parent organization of: Latin American Brain Mapping Network (LABMAN)
Free nlx_144612 http://www.nitrc.org/projects/cbrain SCR_005513 2026-02-15 09:18:59 30
BrainStars
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
10+ mentions
BrainStars (RRID:SCR_005810) B* database, software resource, data access protocol, web service, data or information resource BrainStars (or B*) is a quantitative expression database of the adult mouse brain. The database has genome-wide expression profile at 51 adult mouse CNS regions. For 51 CNS regions, slices (0.5-mm thick) of mouse brain were cut on a Mouse Brain Matrix, frozen, and the specific regions were punched out bilaterally with a microdissecting needle (gauge 0.5 mm) under a stereomicroscope. For each region, we took samples every 4 hours, starting at ZT0 (Zeitgaber time 0; the time of lights on), for 24 hours (6 time-point samples for each region), and we pooled the samples from the different time points. We independently sampled each region twice (n=2). These samples were purified their RNA, and measured with Affymetrix GeneChip Mouse Genome 430 2.0 arrays. Expression values were then summarized with the RMA method. After several analysis with the expression data, the data and analysis results were stored in the BrainStars database. The database has a REST-like Web API interface for accessing from your Web applications. This document shows how to access the database via our Web API. mouse, brain, adult, expression profile, affymetrix genechip mouse genome 430 2.0 array, rna, central nervous system, gene expression, gene is related to: Allen Mouse Brain Reference Atlas
is related to: Allen Institute for Brain Science
has parent organization: RIKEN
has parent organization: Kindai University School of Medicine; Osaka; Japan
Japanese Ministry of Education Culture Sports Science and Technology MEXT PMID:21858037 BrainStars data, Images and texts (excluding ABA data and images) are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 2.1 Japan License. nlx_149301 SCR_005810 BrainStars Database, BrainStars (B*) 2026-02-15 09:19:04 14
ViBE-Z
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
1+ mentions
ViBE-Z (RRID:SCR_005895) ViBE-Z software application, image processing software, data processing software, database, software resource, atlas, data or information resource An imaging and image analysis framework for virtual colocalization studies in larval zebrafish brains, currently available for 72hpf, 48hpf and 96hpf old larvae. ViBE-Z contains a database with precisely aligned gene expression patterns (1����m^3 resolution), an anatomical atlas, and a software. This software creates high-quality data sets by fusing multiple confocal microscopic image stacks, and aligns these data sets to the standard larva. The ViBE-Z database and atlas are stored in HDF5 file format. They are freely available for download. ViBE-Z provides a software that automatically maps gene expression data with cellular resolution to a 3D standard larval zebrafish (Danio rerio) brain. ViBE-Z enhances the data quality through fusion and attenuation correction of multiple confocal microscope stacks per specimen and uses a fluorescent stain of cell nuclei for image registration. It automatically detects 14 predefined anatomical landmarks for aligning new data with the reference brain. ViBE-Z performs colocalization analysis in expression databases for anatomical domains or subdomains defined by any specific pattern. The ViBE-Z database, atlas and software are provided via a web interface. brain, larval zebrafish, gene expression, confocal microscopy has parent organization: University of Freiburg; Baden-Wurttemberg; Germany Excellence Initiative of the German Federal and State Governments ;
European Union
PMID:22706672 nlx_149465 SCR_005895 Virtual Brain Explorer for Zebrafish, Virtual Brain Explorer, ViBE-Z: The Virtual Brain Explorer for Zebrafish 2026-02-15 09:19:04 4

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