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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.

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On page 14 showing 261 ~ 280 out of 469 results
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  • RRID:SCR_004618

    This resource has 5000+ mentions.

http://www.arabidopsis.org

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   


  • RRID:SCR_005024

    This resource has 10+ mentions.

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   


  • RRID:SCR_002829

    This resource has 500+ mentions.

http://www.gramene.org

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   


  • RRID:SCR_003225

http://sobekrepository.org/

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   


  • RRID:SCR_003204

    This resource has 50+ mentions.

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   


http://www.incf.org/

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   


  • RRID:SCR_000022

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://bmcmicrobiol.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1471-2180-9-S1-S1

THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on June 10, 2016. A consortium that created universal descriptors to describe functionally similar gene products and their attributes across all organisms. In 2004, the PAMGO interest group joined the GO consortium to extend the GO to include terms describing various processes related to microbe-host interactions. The organization uses a controlled vocabulary to set a process in place to describe plant associated microbes and their interactions with their plant-hosts. These higher order terms can describe gene products of all types of symbionts (e.g. parasites, commensals, and mutualists), including prokaryotes and eukaryotes that associate with plant or animal hosts. This initiative is a multi-institutional collaborative effort to pool information and research in: the bacteria Dickeya dadantii, Pseudomonas syringae pv tomato and Agrobacterium tumefaciens, the fungus Magnaporthe grisea, the oomycetes Phytophthora sojae and Phytophthora ramorum, and the nematode Meloidogyne hapla.

Proper citation: PAMGO (RRID:SCR_000022) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_002188

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://workspace.earthcube.org/cinergi

A project constructing a community inventory and knowledge base on geoscience information resources to meet the challenge of finding resources across disciplines, assessing their fitness for use in specific research scenarios, and providing tools for integrating and re-using data from multiple domains. The project team envisions a comprehensive system linking geoscience resources, users, publications, usage information, and cyberinfrastructure components. This system would serve geoscientists across all domains to efficiently use existing and emerging resources for productive and transformative research.

Proper citation: CINERGI (RRID:SCR_002188) Copy   


http://geodynamics.org/

Community-driven organization that develops and disseminates software for geophysics and related fields. They host codes in a wide range of disciplines in geodynamics and computational science including geodynamo, long-term tectonics, magma migration, mantle dynamics, seismology, and short-term crustal dynamics.

Proper citation: Computational Infrastructure for Geodynamics (RRID:SCR_003371) Copy   


http://research.amnh.org/atol/files/

Project whose aim is to produce a robust phylogeny of all the deepest branches within a mega-diverse group, the spiders, by combining a massive amount of newly generated comparative genomic data with a substantial set of new and re-assessed data on morphology and behavior. They propose to collect a huge amount of genomic information in order to test and improve the results achieved by over 50 detailed morphological cladistic analyses conducted by more than 30 investigators during the past 15 years. The insignificant amount of genomic work to date on spiders has been uncoordinated and of little utility for broad-scale phylogenetic investigation. The advent of high-throughput DNA sequencing, however, makes it feasible to examine substantial parts of the genome across a dense sampling of spider taxa. They propose to sequence at least 50 loci (genome samples of 500-1,000 or more base pairs that can be sequenced as single pieces in both directions simultaneously) for representatives of at least 500 genera of spiders and their closest relatives (the whipscorpion orders Amblypygi, Uropygi, and Schizomida). These genera will be carefully selected by a sampling strategy designed to maximize the resolution of deep branches within spider phylogeny, and will purposefully include all the previously most-favored study organisms of ethologists, ecologists, physiologists, and developmental and molecular biologists, thus integrating and contextualizing their research. Data matrices will be produced that combine the new genomic data with a new, comprehensive survey of morphological and behavioral homologies, offering a unique index to all comparative data on one large group. New computer software, designed in large part by members of their group and using massively parallel processing to achieve supercomputing capability, makes such analyses feasible.

Proper citation: Tree of Life: Phylogeny of Spiders (RRID:SCR_003801) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_003799

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://phenoscape.org/

Project to create a scalable infrastructure that enables linking phenotypes across different fields of biology by the semantic similarity of their descriptions.

Proper citation: Phenoscape (RRID:SCR_003799) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_004251

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

https://obofoundry.org/ontology/cl.html

Ontology designed as a structured controlled vocabulary for cell types. It was constructed for use by the model organism and other bioinformatics databases. It includes cell types from prokaryotes, mammals, and fungi. The ontology is available in the formats adopted by the Open Biological Ontologies umbrella and is designed to be used in the context of model organism genome and other biological databases.

Proper citation: Cell Type Ontology (RRID:SCR_004251) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_013963

    This resource has 10+ mentions.

https://nanohub.org

A portal which provides simulation programs for nanoscale phenomena, online presentations, courses, learning modules, podcasts, animations, and teaching materials. Researchers can also collaborate with others and publish content.

Proper citation: nanoHUB (RRID:SCR_013963) Copy   


https://prr.osu.edu/

National facility for permanent curatorial preservation of rock collections from Antarctica and Southern Ocean. Repository preserves existing rock/dredge/unconsolidated/terrestrial core/photo archive collections for research use. Database allows online requests for sample loans. Mapping tool combines existing PRR database with high resolution satellite images of Antarctica, REMA or USGS topographic layers. PRR created Polar Rock Boxes for educators who are teaching about Earth science and Antarctica. Each Polar Rock Box contains samples with binder full of teaching information about Earth science and Antarctica. These boxes are freely available as short loans to US schools.

Proper citation: Polar Rock Repository (RRID:SCR_002212) Copy   


http://www.cpc.unc.edu/projects/addhealth

Longitudinal study of a nationally representative sample of adolescents in grades 7-12 in the United States during the 1994-95 school year. Public data on about 21,000 people first surveyed in 1994 are available on the first phases of the study, as well as study design specifications. It also includes some parent and biomarker data. The Add Health cohort has been followed into young adulthood with four in-home interviews, the most recent in 2008, when the sample was aged 24-32. Add Health combines longitudinal survey data on respondents social, economic, psychological and physical well-being with contextual data on the family, neighborhood, community, school, friendships, peer groups, and romantic relationships, providing unique opportunities to study how social environments and behaviors in adolescence are linked to health and achievement outcomes in young adulthood. The fourth wave of interviews expanded the collection of biological data in Add Health to understand the social, behavioral, and biological linkages in health trajectories as the Add Health cohort ages through adulthood. The restricted-use contract includes four hours of free consultation with appropriate staff; after that, there''s a fee for help. Researchers can also share information through a listserv devoted to the database.

Proper citation: Add Health (National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health) (RRID:SCR_007434) Copy   


http://posa.sanfordburnham.org/fatcat-cgi/cgi/FSN/fsn.pl

Flexible Structural Neighborhood is a database of structural neighbors of proteins as seen by FATCAT - a flexible protein structure alignment program. The server accepts either a protein (PDB ID) or a domain (SCOP ID) as a query. For the former case, the server first displays the information of chains and domains of a given protein. Afterwards, users can retrieve similar structures for a domain (if domain information is available, i.e., the protein is collected by SCOP), or for a chain otherwise. The protein structure database we collected for similar structure search includes a representative set at 90% sequence identity of SCOP domains, and of up-to-date PDB entries that are not included in the latest release of SCOP.

Proper citation: FATCAT Flexible Structural Neighborhood (RRID:SCR_007665) Copy   


http://www.data.scec.org/

Archive of earthquake data for research in seismology and earthquake engineering in Southern California recorded or processed by the Southern California Seismic Network (SCSN). Users can access information on: * Recent earthquakes detected by the SCSN * Significant southern California earthquakes and faults * The southern California earthquake catalog, spanning from 1933 to present * Waveform and metadata files of SCSN seismic stations from 1977 to present * Data sets created by SCEC scientists to assist in ongoing and future research

Proper citation: Southern California Earthquake Data Center (RRID:SCR_000663) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_000390

    This resource has 10+ mentions.

http://www.bindingdb.org

Web accessible database of data extracted from scientific literature, focusing on proteins that are drug-targets or candidate drug-targets and for which structural data are present in Protein Data Bank . Website supports query types including searches by chemical structure, substructure and similarity, protein sequence, ligand and protein names, affinity ranges and molecular weight . Data sets generated by BindingDB queries can be downloaded in form of annotated SDfiles for further analysis, or used as basis for virtual screening of compound database uploaded by user. Data are linked to structural data in PDB via PDB IDs and chemical and sequence searches, and to literature in PubMed via PubMed IDs .

Proper citation: BindingDB (RRID:SCR_000390) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_023770

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

https://github.com/wlloyduw/ContainerProfiler

Software tool supports profiling resource utilization including CPU, memory, disk, and network metrics of containerized tasks. Resource utilization metrics are obtained across three levels: virtual machine (VM)/host, container, and process. Implementation leverages facilities provided by Linux operating system that is integral with Docker containers.

Proper citation: ContainerProfiler (RRID:SCR_023770) Copy   



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