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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.
A clade oriented, community curated database containing genomic, genetic, phenotypic and taxonomic information for plant genomes. Genomic information is presented in a comparative format and tied to important plant model species such as Arabidopsis. SGN provides tools such as: BLAST searches, the SolCyc biochemical pathways database, a CAPS experiment designer, an intron detection tool, an advanced Alignment Analyzer, and a browser for phylogenetic trees. The SGN code and database are developed as an open source project, and is based on database schemas developed by the GMOD project and SGN-specific extensions.
Proper citation: SGN (RRID:SCR_004933) Copy
https://scicrunch.org/scicrunch/data/source/nlx_154697-6/search?q=*&l=
A virtual database currently indexing authoritative information on disease and treatment options from NINDS Disorder List and PubMed Health.
Proper citation: Integrated Disease (RRID:SCR_004892) Copy
https://www.clinicaltrialsregister.eu
Database of European clinical trials containing information on interventional clinical trials on medicines. The information available dates from 1 May 2004 when national medicine regulatory authorities began populating the EudraCT database, the application that is used by national medicine regulatory authorities to enter clinical trial data. The EU Clinical Trials Register website launched on 22 March 2011 enables users to search for information which has been included in the EudraCT database. Users are able to: * view the description of a phase II-IV adult clinical trial where the investigator sites are in European Union member states and the European Economic Area; * view the description of any pediatric clinical trial with investigator sites in the European Union and any trials which form part of a pediatric investigation plan (PIP) including those where the investigator sites are outside the European Union. * download up to 20 results (per request) in a text file (.txt). The details in the clinical trial description include: * the design of the trial; * the sponsor; * the investigational medicine (trade name or active substance identification); * the therapeutic areas; * the status (authorized, ongoing, complete).
Proper citation: EU Clinical Trials Register (RRID:SCR_005956) Copy
http://www.informatics.jax.org
International database for laboratory mouse. Data offered by The Jackson Laboratory includes information on integrated genetic, genomic, and biological data. MGI creates and maintains integrated representation of mouse genetic, genomic, expression, and phenotype data and develops reference data set and consensus data views, synthesizes comparative genomic data between mouse and other mammals, maintains set of links and collaborations with other bioinformatics resources, develops and supports analysis and data submission tools, and provides technical support for database users. Projects contributing to this resource are: Mouse Genome Database (MGD) Project, Gene Expression Database (GXD) Project, Mouse Tumor Biology (MTB) Database Project, Gene Ontology (GO) Project at MGI, and MouseCyc Project at MGI.
Proper citation: Mouse Genome Informatics (MGI) (RRID:SCR_006460) Copy
http://research.nhgri.nih.gov/CGD/
Manually curated database of all conditions with known genetic causes, focusing on medically significant genetic data with available interventions. Includes gene symbol, conditions, allelic conditions, inheritance, age in which interventions are indicated, clinical categorization, and general description of interventions/rationale. Contents are intended to describe types of interventions that might be considered. Includes only single gene alterations and does not include genetic associations or susceptibility factors related to more complex diseases.
Proper citation: Clinical Genomic Database (RRID:SCR_006427) Copy
Describes phenotype relationships with between breeds and genes. Catalogue/compendium of inherited disorders, other (single-locus) traits, and genes in 245 animal species. Database of genes, inherited disorders and traits in animal species other than human, mouse, and rats. Database contains textual information and references, as well as links to relevant records from OMIM, PubMed and Gene.
Proper citation: OMIA - Online Mendelian Inheritance in Animals (RRID:SCR_006436) Copy
http://www.physionet.org/physiobank/database/gaitndd/
Database of records from patients with Parkinson's disease (n = 15), Huntington's disease (n = 20), or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (n = 13). Records from 16 healthy control subjects are also included here. The raw data were obtained using force-sensitive resistors, with the output roughly proportional to the force under the foot. Stride-to-stride measures of footfall contact times were derived from these signals.
Proper citation: Gait Dynamics in Neuro-Degenerative Disease Data Base (RRID:SCR_006979) Copy
http://www.physionet.org/physiobank/database/gaitpdb/
Database that contains measures of gait from 93 patients with idiopathic PD (mean age: 66.3 years; 63% men), and 73 healthy controls (mean age: 66.3 years; 55% men). The database includes the vertical ground reaction force records of subjects as they walked at their usual, self-selected pace for approximately 2 minutes on level ground. Underneath each foot were 8 sensors (Ultraflex Computer Dyno Graphy, Infotronic Inc.) that measure force (in Newtons) as a function of time. The output of each of these 16 sensors has been digitized and recorded at 100 samples per second, and the records also include two signals that reflect the sum of the 8 sensor outputs for each foot. This database also includes demographic information, measures of disease severity (i.e., using the Hoehn & Yahr staging and/or the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale) and other related measures (available in HTML or xls spreadsheet format). A subset of the database includes measures recorded as subjects performed a second task (serial 7 subtractions) while walking, which shows excerpts of swing time series from a patient with PD and a control subject, under usual walking conditions and when performing serial 7 subtractions. Under usual walking conditions, variability is larger in the patient with PD (Coefficient of Variation = 2.7%), compared to the control subject (CV = 1.3%). Variability increases during dual tasking in the subject with PD (CV = 6.5%), but not in the control subject (CV = 1.2%).
Proper citation: Gait in Parkinson's Disease (RRID:SCR_006891) Copy
http://www.genedb.org/Homepage/Pfalciparum
Database of the most recent sequence updates and annotations for the P. falciparum genome. New annotations are constantly being added to keep up with published manuscripts and feedback from the Plasmodium research community. You may search by Protein Length, Molecular Mass, Gene Type, Date, Location, Protein Targeting, Transmembrane Helices, Product, GO, EC, Pfam ID, Curation and Comments, and Dbxrefs. BLAST and other tools are available. The P. falciparum 3D7 nuclear genome is 23.3 Mb in size, with a karyotype of 14 chromosomes. The G+C content is approximately 19%. The P. falciparum genome is undergoing re-annotation. This process started in October 2007 with a weeklong workshop co-organized by staff from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Intistute and the EuPathDB team. Ongoing curation and sequence checking is being carried out by the Pathogen Genomics group. Plasmodium falciparum is the most deadly of the five Plasmodium species that cause human malaria. Malaria has a massive impact on human health; it is the worlds second biggest killer after tuberculosis. Around 300 million clinical cases occur each year resulting in between 1.5 - 2.7 million deaths annually, the majority in sub-saharan Africa. It is estimated that 3,000 children under the age of five years fall victim to malaria each day. Around 40% of the worlds population are at risk. In collaboration with EuPathDB, genomic sequence data and annotations are regularly deposited on PlasmoDB where they can be integrated with other datasets and queried using customized queries.
Proper citation: GeneDB Pfalciparum (RRID:SCR_006567) Copy
http://cocomac.g-node.org/main/index.php?
Online access (html or xml) to structural connectivity ("wiring") data on the Macaque brain. The database has become by far the largest of its kind, with data extracted from more than four hundred published tracing studies. The main database, contains data from tracing studies on anatomical connectivity in the macaque cerebral cortex. Also available are a variety of tools including a graphical simulation workbench, map displays and the CoCoMac-Paxinos-3D viewer. Submissions are welcome. To overcome the problem of divergent brain maps ORT (Objective Relational Transformation) was developed, an algorithmic method to convert data in a coordinate- independent way based on logical relations between areas in different brain maps. CoCoMac data is used to analyze the organization of the cerebral cortex, and to establish its structure- function relationships. This includes multi-variate statistics and computer simulation of models that take into account the real anatomy of the primate cerebral cortex. This site * Provides full, scriptable open access to the data in CoCoMac (you must adhere to the citation policy) * Powers the graphical interface to CoCoMac provided by the Scalable Brain Atlas * Sports an extensive search/browse wizard, which automatically constructs complex search queries and lets you further explore the database from the results page. * Allows you to get your hands dirty, by using the custom SQL query service. * Displays connectivity data in tabular form, through the axonal projections service. CoCoMac 2 was initiated at the Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, and is currently supported by the German neuroinformatics node and the Computational and Systems Neuroscience group at the Juelich research institute.
Proper citation: CoCoMac (RRID:SCR_007277) Copy
Project aimed at making neuroimaging data sets of brain freely available to scientific community. By compiling and freely distributing neuroimaging data sets, future discoveries in basic and clinical neuroscience are facilitated.
Proper citation: Open Access Series of Imaging Studies (RRID:SCR_007385) Copy
https://bams1.org/connectomes/standard_rat.php, https://bams1.org/connectomes/custom_rat.php
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 9,2022. Database of information about brain region circuitry, it collates data from the literature on tract tracing studies and provides tools for analysis and visualization of connectivity between brain regions., THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 16,2025.
Proper citation: BAMS Connectivity (RRID:SCR_000561) Copy
http://lifespandb.sageweb.org/
Database that collects published lifespan data across multiple species. The entire database is available for download in various formats including XML, YAML and CSV.
Proper citation: Lifespan Observations Database (RRID:SCR_001609) Copy
A database of brain neuroanatomic volumetric observations spanning various species, diagnoses, and structures for both individual and group results. A major thrust effort is to enable electronic access to the results that exist in the published literature. Currently, there is quite limited electronic or searchable methods for the data observations that are contained in publications. This effort will facilitate the dissemination of volumetric observations by making a more complete corpus of volumetric observations findable to the neuroscience researcher. This also enhances the ability to perform comparative and integrative studies, as well as metaanalysis. Extensions that permit pre-published, non-published and other representation are planned, again to facilitate comparative analyses. Design strategy: The principle organizing data structure is the "publication". Publications report on "groups" of subjects. These groups have "demographic" information as well as "volume" information for the group as a whole. Groups are comprised of "individuals", which also have demographic and volume information for each of the individuals. The finest-grained data structure is the "individual volume record" which contains a volume observation, the units for the observation, and a pointer to the demographic record for individual upon which the observation is derived. A collection of individual volumes can be grouped into a "group volume" observation; the group can be demographically characterized by the distribution of individual demographic observations for the members of the group.
Proper citation: Internet Brain Volume Database (RRID:SCR_002060) Copy
https://scicrunch.org/scicrunch/data/source/nlx_154697-12/search?q=*
A virtual database of several model resources including: CellML Model Repository, ModelDB, Open Source Brain, SimTK, and ModelRun.
Proper citation: Integrated Models (RRID:SCR_001481) Copy
Virtual database of individual data sources, maintained by SciCrunch participating groups. Database topics are varied, including animals, grants, software, brain gene expression, and clinical trials.
Proper citation: Integrated (RRID:SCR_002187) Copy
https://scicrunch.org/scicrunch/data/source/nlx_154697-16/search?q=*&l=
Integrated Grants is a virtual database currently indexing funded research resources including NIH Research Portfolio Online Reporting Tool (RePORT) (current grants, updated monthly) and ResearchCrossroads (1970-2008, defunct as of 2009).
Proper citation: Integrated Grants (RRID:SCR_003111) Copy
http://lucene1.neuinfo.org/nif_resource/monthly_results/current/
An automatic pipeline based on an algorithm that identifies new resources in publications every month to assist the efficiency of NIF curators. The pipeline is also able to find the last time the resource's webpage was updated and whether the URL is still valid. This can assist the curator in knowing which resources need attention. Additionally, the pipeline identifies publications that reference existing NIF Registry resources as this is also of interest. These mentions are available through the Data Federation version of the NIF Registry, http://neuinfo.org/nif/nifgwt.html?query=nlx_144509 The RDF is based on an algorithm on how related it is to neuroscience. (hits of neuroscience related terms). Each potential resource gets assigned a score (based on how related it is to neuroscience) and the resources are then ranked and a list is generated.
Proper citation: NIF Registry Automated Crawl Data (RRID:SCR_012862) Copy
http://neuroinformatics.kiv.zcu.cz/articles/read/eegerp-portal-eegbase-_2014-12-19
EEG base is a system for storage and management of EEG/ERP resources - data, metadata, tools and materials related to EEG/ERP experiments. EEG base advances electrophysiology research by enabling access to public data, tools and results of research groups. The system essentially offers the following set of features (the set of accessible features depends on a specific user role): * User authentication * Storage, update, and download of EEG/ERP data and metadata * Storage, update and download of EEG/ERP experimental design (experimental scenarios) * Storage, update and download of data related to testing subjects * Fulltext search * Sharing of knowledge and working in groups The system is based on tree layer architecture (MVC pattern) consisting of persistent layer (relational database), application layer (object oriented code, object relational mapping from persistence layer) and presentation layer (JSP). The persistence layer uses Hibernate framework; Oracle 11g database server is used to ensure the processing of large data files. Application and presentation layers are designed and implemented using Spring technology. This framework supports MVC architecture, Dependency injection and Aspect Oriented Programming. There were no significant difficulties with integration of both frameworks, Hibernate and Spring MVC. Spring Security framework is used to ensure management of authentication and user roles. Since the system is thought to be finally open to the whole EEG/ERP community it is necessary to protect EEG/ERP data and metadata, and especially personal data of testing subjects stored in the database from an unauthorized access. Then a restricted user policy is applied and user roles are introduced. The complete overview of the system features and user roles (use case diagram) is available in (Pergler 2009). Concerning the architectural layers there is a question which layer is more feasible for mapping of its structure into ontology. Currently we have studied two possibilities: * Mapping from the persistence layer (relational database) * Mapping from the application layer (object oriented code) The mapping from the application layer to an ontology includes the precedent object relational mapping provided by Hibernate framework.
Proper citation: EEGbase (RRID:SCR_001452) Copy
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 23,2022. Consortium to advance the understanding of intestinal epithelial stem cell biology during development, homeostasis, regeneration and disease. Its immediate goals are to isolate, characterize, culture and validate populations of intestinal stem cells; answer major questions in stem cell biology of the intestinal epithelium; and accelerate research by making information and resources available to the research community. Resources include data sets, protocols, and a resource catalog. Long-term goals include: 1) laying the ground work for therapeutic manipulation of the intestinal epithelium 2) contributing to the greater understanding of stem cell biology through knowledge of the intestine as a model stem cell-driven system. Research Projects are housed at 8 institutions across the nation: Oregon Health & Science University, Stanford University, Stowers Institute for Medical Research, University of California, Los Angeles School of Medicine (UCLA) (partnered with the VA Greater Los Angeles), University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill (UNC), University of Oklahoma, University of Pennsylvania, and University of Pittsburgh.
Proper citation: Intestinal Stem Cell Consortium (RRID:SCR_001555) Copy
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