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| Resource Name | Proper Citation | Abbreviations | Resource Type |
Description |
Keywords | Resource Relationships | |||||||||||||
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Pediatric Brain Tumor Foundation Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Pediatric Brain Tumor Foundation (RRID:SCR_004755) | PBTF | data or information resource, topical portal, disease-related portal, funding resource, portal | The Pediatric Brain Tumor Foundation (PBTF) is a nonprofit organization dedicated to eradicating childhood brain tumors and providing support to families. It is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit charitable organization that seeks to * find the cause of and cure for childhood brain tumors by supporting medical research * increase public awareness about the severity and prevalence of childhood brain tumors * aid in the early detection and treatment of childhood brain tumors * support a national database on all primary brain tumors * provide educational and emotional support for children and families affected by this life-threatening disease. As the world''s largest non-governmental source of funding for childhood brain tumor research, we''re dedicated to not only eradicating this disease, but to providing support to families. Our educational resources deliver comfort and hope to families in need of information, and our college scholarship program gives brain tumor survivors a boost for the future. Through our efforts to raise public awareness, more attention has been focused on this deadly disease. Whether addressing congressional briefings or funding international conferences, the PBTF is an unwavering advocate. Together, we''re making a difference in the lives of children with brain tumors. And with your continued help, we will cure the kids! | pediatric, brain, tumor, cancer, child, human | nlx_143893 | SCR_004755 | 2026-02-17 10:00:40 | 3 | ||||||||||
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Oklahoma Brain Tumor Foundation Resource Report Resource Website |
Oklahoma Brain Tumor Foundation (RRID:SCR_004748) | OKBTF | data or information resource, topical portal, disease-related portal, portal, patient-support portal | The Oklahoma Brain Tumor Foundation (OKBTF) is a nonprofit organization that provides education, advocacy and support for Oklahomans with brain tumors and their families to improve their quality of life and help find a cure. Founded by Nancy Thomason after the death of her son Cade Thomason to a brain stem PNET tumor on February 17, 2000, she vowed to fight the disease in honor and memory of her son Cade. OKBTF is dedicated to meeting the needs of Oklahoma families, caregivers and patients affected by primary brain or central nervous system tumors. We work to provide for needs through education, advocacy, research and service. Whatever your needs, whether financial, physical, mental or spiritual, we will work with you to fight the battle. Here you will find many of the services we offer in support of families just like yours, who are confused, hurting and just wanting straight answers. Feel free to browse around, get to know us, see what we are doing to help and send us your comments or questions... We are here for you. | brain, central nervous system, tumor, cancer, human | nlx_143892 | SCR_004748 | 2026-02-17 10:00:49 | 0 | ||||||||||
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HMP Data Analysis and Coordination Center Resource Report Resource Website 100+ mentions |
HMP Data Analysis and Coordination Center (RRID:SCR_004919) | HMP DACC | storage service resource, data or information resource, database, service resource, data repository | Common repository for diverse human microbiome datsets and minimum reporting standards for Common Fund Human Microbiome Project. | Repository, diverse, human, microbiome, minimum, reporting, standard, common, fund, microbiome, project, dataset, FASEB list |
is recommended by: National Library of Medicine has parent organization: University of Maryland School of Medicine; Maryland; USA has parent organization: Human Microbiome Project |
NIH | nlx_88368 | SCR_004919 | Data Analysis and Coordination Center for the Human Microbiome Project, HMPDACC, Human Microbiome Project Data Analysis and Coordination Center | 2026-02-17 10:00:43 | 224 | |||||||
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UCSF Laboratory for Visual Neuroscience Resource Report Resource Website |
UCSF Laboratory for Visual Neuroscience (RRID:SCR_004913) | Laboratory for Visual Neuroscience | organization portal, data or information resource, video resource, image, portal, laboratory portal | Devise better ways to prevent and treat vision loss due to amblyopia and strabismus, and to advance medical science by understanding the human visual system. Various Images, Videos and Talks related to the research are available. In the Laboratory for Visual Neuroscience at the University of California, San Francisco, we are seeking to discover how visual perception occurs in the human brain. The function of the visual system is to guide our behavior by providing an efficient means for the rapid assimilation of information from the environment. As we navigate through our surroundings, a continuous stream of light images impinges on our eyes. In the back of each eye a light-sensitive tissue, the retina, converts patterns of light energy into electrical discharges known as action potentials. These signals are conveyed along the axons of retinal ganglion cells to the lateral geniculate body, a relay nucleus in the thalamus. Most of the output of the lateral geniculate body is relayed directly to the primary visual cortex (striate cortex, V1), and then to surrounding visual association areas. To understand the function of the visual pathways, our research is focused on 5 major themes: * Organization of Primary Visual Cortex * Mapping of Extrastriate Visual Cortex * Amblyopia and Visual Development * Strabismus and Visual Suppression * The Human Visual Cortex | amblyopia, strabismus, human, visual system, ophthalmology, monkey, eye, vision loss, patient, research, education, pediatric ophthalmology, neuro-ophthalmology, pediatric, primary visual cortex, vision |
is used by: NIF Data Federation is used by: Integrated Videos has parent organization: University of California at San Francisco; California; USA |
PMID:17898211 | nlx_143941 | SCR_004913 | University of California San Francisco Laboratory for Visual Neuroscience | 2026-02-17 10:00:50 | 0 | |||||||
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BrainEthics Resource Report Resource Website |
BrainEthics (RRID:SCR_005530) | BrainEthics | data or information resource, narrative resource, book, blog | 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 | 2026-02-17 10:00:54 | 0 | ||||||||
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1000 Functional Connectomes Project Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
1000 Functional Connectomes Project (RRID:SCR_005361) | INDI, 1000 FCP, FCP | storage service resource, data or information resource, catalog, project portal, image collection, database, service resource, portal, data repository, 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 | 2026-02-17 10:00:51 | 46 | ||||
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Whole Brain Atlas Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
Whole Brain Atlas (RRID:SCR_005390) | narrative resource, storage service resource, data or information resource, training material, atlas, service resource, data repository, 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 | 2026-02-17 10:00:45 | 23 | ||||||
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Science of Mental Illness: Grades 6- 8 Resource Report Resource Website |
Science of Mental Illness: Grades 6- 8 (RRID:SCR_005612) | narrative resource, video resource, data or information resource, training material | A set of lessons for students used to gain insight into the biological basis of mental illnesses and how scientific evidence and research can help us understand its causes and lead to treatments and, ultimately, cures. Both the Web version and the free supplement are available. It is a creative, inquiry-based instruction program designed to promote active learning and stimulate student interest in medical topics. This curriculum supplement aims to help students experience the process of scientific inquiry and develop an enhanced understanding of the nature and methods of science. | mental disease, treatment, human, curriculum, student, adolescent, teacher, teacher's guide, lesson plan, k-12, training resource | has parent organization: NIMH Educational Resources | National Institute of Mental Health | nlx_146230 | http://science.education.nih.gov/customers.nsf/MSMental | SCR_005612 | Science of Mental Illness | 2026-02-17 10:00:56 | 0 | |||||||
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NIH Office of Science Education Resource Report Resource Website |
NIH Office of Science Education (RRID:SCR_005603) | OSE | narrative resource, organization portal, data or information resource, training material, portal, knowledge environment | 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 | 2026-02-17 10:00:55 | 0 | |||||||
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MINC/Atlases Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
MINC/Atlases (RRID:SCR_005281) | MINC/Atlases | narrative resource, data or information resource, atlas, reference atlas, wiki | 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 | 2026-02-17 10:00:53 | 3 | |||||||
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The Hamner Institute for Health Sciences: BMDExpress and The multiple-path particle dosimetry Resource Report Resource Website |
The Hamner Institute for Health Sciences: BMDExpress and The multiple-path particle dosimetry (RRID:SCR_005511) | data analysis software, software application, data processing software, software resource | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on June 24, 2013. BMDExpress is a Java application used to analyze dose-response data from microarray experiments. The program was designed to perform a stepwise analysis on microarray data that combines bench mark dose (BMD) calculations with gene ontology (GO) classification analysis. The combination provides dose estimates at which different cellular processes are altered at a defined increase in risk based on expression levels in the untreated controls. The fitting of the data to the statistical models (linear, 2 polynomial models, 3 polynomial, and power models) is performed using source code borrowed from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency''''s BMDS software. The MPPD model is a computational model that can be used for estimating human and rat airway particle dosimetry. The model is applicable to risk assessment, research, and education. The MPPD model calculates the deposition and clearance of monodisperse and polydisperse aerosols in the respiratory tracts of rats and human adults and children (deposition only) for particles ranging in size from ultrafine (0.01 m) to coarse (20 m). The models are based on single-path and multiple-path methods for tracking air flow and calculating aerosol deposition in the lung. The single-path method calculates deposition in a typical path per airway generation, while the multiple-path method calculates particle deposition in all airways of the lung and provides lobar-specific and airway-specific information. Within each airway, deposition is calculated using theoretically derived efficiencies for deposition by diffusion, sedimentation, and impaction within the airway or airway bifurcation. Filtration of aerosols by the head is determined using empirical efficiency functions. The MPPD model includes calculations of particle clearance in the lung following deposition. Eight tutorials are provided so that the user can learn to interact with the software. | aerosol, airway, children, dose-response, human, lung, microarray, rat, respiratory tract, risk assessment |
is related to: BMDExpress is related to: Multiple-Path Particle Dosimetry Model |
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-10456 | SCR_005511 | BMDExpress & MPPD | 2026-02-17 10:00:46 | 0 | ||||||||
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ADHD-200 Sample Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
ADHD-200 Sample (RRID:SCR_005358) | ADHD-200, | data or information resource, topical portal, disease-related portal, portal, data set | 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 | 2026-02-17 10:00:53 | 20 | ||||||
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Latin American Brain Mapping Network (LABMAN) Resource Report Resource Website |
Latin American Brain Mapping Network (LABMAN) (RRID:SCR_005509) | LABMAN | training service resource, community building portal, data or information resource, service resource, portal | On March 8, 2008 in Havana, the Latin American Network for Brain Mapping (LABMAN) was created with participants from Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Cuba and Mexico. The focus of LABMAN is to promote neuroimaging and systems neuroscience in the region through the implementation of training and exchange programs, and to increase public awareness of the Latin American potential to contribute both to basic and applied research in human brain mapping. The immediate LABMAN goals are to: * Train specialists in all major imaging techniques. * Expedite the transfer of new scientific and technical knowledge from abroad. * Increase the scientific productivity of the region. * Drastically increase the awareness of local governments, international organizations and of the general public of brain mapping results on potential. * Organize multinational projects in areas of special relevance to the region, e.g. nutrition, pediatric development, neurodegeneration. Latin American Brain Mapping Network (LABMAN) participants : * Cuban Neuroscience Center * University of Buenos Aires * University of Sao Paulo * Universidad del Valle, Cal��, Colombia * UAM Iztapalapa, Mexico City, Mexico | neuroimaging, systems neuroscience, human, neuroscience, brain mapping |
has parent organization: Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics; Tubingen; Germany has parent organization: CBRAIN |
PMID:19324094 | nlx_144610 | http://ijbem.k.hosei.ac.jp/2006-/volume10/number4/100407.pdf | SCR_005509 | Latin American Brain Mapping Network | 2026-02-17 10:00:54 | 0 | ||||||
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Sequence Tag Alignment and Consensus Knowledgebase Database Resource Report Resource Website |
Sequence Tag Alignment and Consensus Knowledgebase Database (RRID:SCR_002156) | software application, data or information resource, data processing software, database, software resource, data visualization software | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented August 23, 2016. The STACKdb is knowledgebase generated by processing EST and mRNA sequences obtained from GenBank through a pipeline consisting of masking, clustering, alignment and variation analysis steps. The STACK project aims to generate a comprehensive representation of the sequence of each of the expressed genes in the human genome by extensive processing of gene fragments to make accurate alignments, highlight diversity and provide a carefully joined set of consensus sequences for each gene. The STACK project is comprised of the STACKdb human gene index, a database of virtual human transcripts, as well as stackPACK, the tools used to create the database. STACKdb is organized into 15 tissue-based categories and one disease category. STACK is a tool for detection and visualization of expressed transcript variation in the context of developmental and pathological states. The data system organizes and reconstructs human transcripts from available public data in the context of expression state. The expression state of a transcript can include developmental state, pathological association, site of expression and isoform of expressed transcript. STACK consensus transcripts are reconstructed from clusters that capture and reflect the growing evidence of transcript diversity. The comprehensive capture of transcript variants is achieved by the use of a novel clustering approach that is tolerant of sub-sequence diversity and does not rely on pairwise alignment. This is in contrast with other gene indexing projects. STACK is generated at least four times a year and represents the exhaustive processing of all publicly available human EST data extracted from GenBank. This processed information can be explored through 15 tissue-specific categories, a disease-related category and a whole-body index | exonic, expressed, expressed sequence tag (est), expression, fragment, gene, alignment, alternative gene, cdna, clone, cluster, developmental, disease, diversity, genome, homo sapiens, human, isoform, knowledgebase, meta-cluster, mrna, pathological, sequence, tissue, transcript, variant, visualization | PMID:11125101 | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-20946 | SCR_002156 | STACKdb | 2026-02-17 09:59:51 | 0 | ||||||||
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Neal's DNA Mutation Site Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Neal's DNA Mutation Site (RRID:SCR_002947) | Neal's DNA Mutation Site | software application, data or information resource, topical portal, data processing software, data analysis software, database, software resource, portal | This site provides access to mutation databases and software including the human hprt database, Human p53 database, Transgenic lacZ database, and Transgenic lacI database. Other avaialble programs include Mutational spectra comparison and relational database data entry. The most recent hprt database contains information on over 2,300 mutations found in vivo and in vitro in the human hprt gene and runs under Windows. The version for evaluation on this homepage has fewer mutations and is a DOS program. The database contains information on the mutagen, dose, spontaneous and induced mutant fraction, base position, amino acid position, amino acid change, local DNA sequence, cell type, citation, and other items. In addition, information regarding the cause and effect of mutations affecting splicing is given. Routines have been developed for the analysis of single base substitutions. The p53 database contains information on nearly 5,867 mutations found in the human p53 gene. The database itself has been updated in April of 1997. The database contains information on the cancer type, loss of heterozygosity, base position, amino acid position, amino acid change, local DNA sequence,citation, and other items. Routines have been developed for the analysis of single base substitutions. The Transgenic lacZ database contains information on 405 mutations found in vivo in the transgenic lacZ gene. It has last been updated in January of 1998. It provides information on the mutagen, dose, organ, mutant fraction, base position, amino acid position, amino acid change, local DNA sequence, citation, and other items. The Transgenic lacI database contains information on over 1700 mutations found in vivo in the transgenic lacI gene and on nearly 8000 mutations in the lacI gene in native E. coli. The database was updated in January 1998. The database contains information on the mutagen, dose, organ, mutant fraction, base position, amino acid position, amino acid change, local DNA sequence, citation, and other items. Routines have been developed for the analysis of single base substitutions for each of the databases. The software runs only on IBM-compatible PCs. | human, mouse | has parent organization: University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; North Carolina; USA | Free, Available for download, Freely available | nif-0000-02995 | SCR_002947 | Human p53 Human hprt Rodent lacI and Rodent lacZ Databases and Software, Human p53 Human hprt Rodent lacI and Rodent lacZ Databases, Human p53 Human hprt Rodent lacI Rodent lacZ Databases | 2026-02-17 09:59:53 | 4 | |||||||
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Pathway Analysis Tool for Integration and Knowledge Acquisition Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Pathway Analysis Tool for Integration and Knowledge Acquisition (RRID:SCR_002100) | PATIKA | data or information resource, database, pathway analysis software | The human pathway database which contains different biological entities and reactions and software tools for analysis. PATIKA Database integrates data from several sources, including Entrez Gene, UniProt, PubChem, GO, IntAct, HPRD, and Reactome. Users can query and access this data using the PATIKAweb query interface. Users can also save their results in XML or export to common picture formats. The BioPAX and SBML exporters can be used as part of this Web service. | human, pathway, reaction, database, pathway analysis software, web service, biological entity, biological reaction |
uses: Entrez Gene uses: UniProt uses: PubChem uses: Gene Ontology uses: IntAct uses: HPRD - Human Protein Reference Database uses: Reactome |
PMID:12117798 PMID:14960461 |
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IS SERVICE. | nif-0000-20882 | http://www.cs.bilkent.edu.tr/~patikaweb/ | SCR_002100 | Pathway Analysis Tool for Integration and Knowledge Acquisition (PATIKA), PATIKA - Pathway Analysis Tools for Integration and Knowledge Acquisition | 2026-02-17 09:59:50 | 2 | |||||
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University of California at Los Angeles, School of Medicine: Neuro Imaging Lab of Thompson Resource Report Resource Website |
University of California at Los Angeles, School of Medicine: Neuro Imaging Lab of Thompson (RRID:SCR_001924) | narrative resource, data or information resource, video resource, training material, slide, curriculum material | The UCLA laboratory of neuroimaging is working in several areas to enhance knowledge of anatomy, including brain mapping in large human populations, HIV, Schizophrenia, methamphetamine, tumor growth and 4d brain mapping, genetics and detection of abnormalities. | engineer, genetics, abnormality, alzheimer's, anatomy, atlas, brain, computational, cortical, dementia, disease, growth, histologic, hiv, human, image, knowledge, mapping, mathematical, mathematician, medical doctor, methamphetamine, model, mri, neuroscientist, pet, polymorphism, population, schizophrenia, spect, structure, tumor, neuroimaging | has parent organization: University of California at Los Angeles; California; USA | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-10496 | SCR_001924 | UCLA, Thompson Lab | 2026-02-17 09:59:44 | 0 | ||||||||
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ConnectomeDB Resource Report Resource Website 50+ mentions |
ConnectomeDB (RRID:SCR_004830) | ConnectomeDB | storage service resource, data or information resource, image collection, database, service resource, data repository, image repository | Data management platform that houses all data generated by the Human Connectome Project - image data, clinical evaluations, behavioral data and more. ConnectomeDB stores raw image data, as well as results of analysis and processing pipelines. Using the ConnectomeDB infrastructure, research centers will be also able to manage Connectome-like projects, including data upload and entry, quality control, processing pipelines, and data distribution. ConnectomeDB is designed to be a data-mining tool, that allows users to generate and test hypotheses based on groups of subjects. Using the ConnectomeDB interface, users can easily search, browse and filter large amounts of subject data, and download necessary files for many kinds of analysis. ConnectomeDB is designed to work seamlessly with Connectome Workbench, an interactive, multidimensional visualization platform designed specifically for handling connectivity data. De-identified data within ConnectomeDB is publicly accessible. Access to additional data may be available to qualified research investigators. ConnectomeDB is being hosted on a BlueArc storage platform housed at Washington University through the year 2020. This data platform is based on XNAT, an open-source image informatics software toolkit developed by the NRG at Washington University. ConnectomeDB itself is fully open source. | brain, connectivity, human, adult human, evaluation, clinical, behavior, data set, diffusion imaging, resting-state fmri, task-evoked fmri, t1-weighted mri, t2-weighted mri, structural mapping, myelin mapping, magnetoencephalography, electroencephalography, fmri, twin |
is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC) is related to: XNAT - The Extensible Neuroimaging Archive Toolkit has parent organization: Washington University in St. Louis; Missouri; USA works with: Connectome Workbench |
Healthy, Twin, Non-twin sibling | NIH Blueprint for Neuroscience Research ; Washington University in St. Louis; Missouri; USA ; McDonnell Center for Systems Neuroscience ; NIMH 1U54MH091657 |
PMID:22366334 | Account required, Open unspecified license, Acknowledgement required, See Data Use Terms, The community can contribute to this resource | nlx_143923 | SCR_004830 | 2026-02-17 10:00:41 | 56 | |||||
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NIMH Multimedia Resource Report Resource Website |
NIMH Multimedia (RRID:SCR_005467) | data or information resource, narrative resource, podcast, video resource | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented August 22, 2016. Audio and video available from the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH). | human, mental health, audio, video, multimedia, podcast | has parent organization: National Institute of Mental Health | National Institute of Mental Health | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nlx_146219 | SCR_005467 | National Institute of Mental Health Multimedia | 2026-02-17 10:00:53 | 0 | |||||||
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Institute for Laboratory Animal Research Resource Report Resource Website 50+ mentions |
Institute for Laboratory Animal Research (RRID:SCR_006872) | data or information resource, narrative resource, standard specification | The mission of ILAR is to evaluate and disseminate information on issues related to the scientific, technological, and ethical use of animals and related biological resources in research, testing, and education. Using the principles of refinement, reduction, and replacement (3Rs) as a foundation, ILAR promotes high-quality science through the humane care and use of animals and the implementation of alternatives. Through the reports of expert committees, the ILAR Journal, web-based resources, and other means of communication, ILAR functions as a component of the National Academies to provide independent, objective advice to the federal government, the international biomedical research community, and the public. ILAR supports the responsible use of animals in research, testing, and education as a key component to advancing the health and quality of life of humans and animals. It promotes high-quality science and humane care and use of research animals based upon the principles of refinement, replacement, and reduction (the 3Rs) and high ethical standards. It fosters best practices that enhance human and animal welfare by organizing and disseminating information and by facilitating dialogue among interested parties. It has developed a unique Search Engine to search for animal models and strains. This search engine surveys all the websites of vendors and repositories of laboratory animals and biological material on our Links page. The ILAR develops guidelines on laboratory animal care and use and conducts conferences, symposia, and workshops on important laboratory animal problems. ILAR publishes the ILAR Journal on a quarterly basis, as well as conference proceedings and special reports prepared by committees of experts. A list of ILAR publications on issues related to laboratory animal research is available on the Web site. As part of the Animal Models and Genetic Stocks Information Exchange Program, ILAR staff members answer direct telephone and mail inquiries and maintain a Web page containing a database on animal models and genetic stock. The Web site also offers a comprehensive search engine that enables users to find information on the existence and location of special animal models, correct nomenclature to identify animals, and related topics such as diseases of animals and relevant publications. Sponsors: ILAR receives funding from the following sponsors: -Abbott Laboratories -Abbott Fund -American College of Laboratory Animal Medicine (ACLAM) -American Society of Laboratory Animal Practitioners (ASLAP) -Association for Assessment and Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care (AAALAC) -Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. -Charles River -Charles River Laboratories Foundation -Covance -Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology (FASEB) -GlaxoSmithKline -Merck & Co., Inc. -National Science Foundation (NSF) -Pfizer -Scientists Center for Animal Welfare (SCAW) -U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) -U.S. Department of the Army -U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) :*National Institutes of Health (NIH) :*Office of Research Integrity (ORI) -U.S. Department of the Navy -U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs -Wellcome Trust -Wyeth Pharmaceuticals | education, ethical, animal, biological, biomedical, health, human, laboratory, life, quality, research, scientific, technological, test | nif-0000-24355 | SCR_006872 | ILAR | 2026-02-17 10:01:00 | 50 |
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