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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 5 showing 81 ~ 100 out of 278 results
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http://www.brainsciencepodcast.com/

Podcast, hosted by Dr. Ginger Campbell, featuring the latest books about neuroscience as well as interviews with leading scientists from around the world. In this podcast, she shares recent discoveries from the world of neuroscience in a way that people of all backgrounds can enjoy. Dr. Campbell is an experienced emergency physician with a long-standing interest in mind-body medicine, the brain, and consciousness. She believes that understanding how the brain works gives us insight into what makes us human. She is also committed to showing how the scientific method has unraveled many long-standing mysteries. Brain Science Transcripts are also available.

Proper citation: Brain Science Podcast (RRID:SCR_004491) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_010503

https://scicrunch.org/scicrunch/data/source/nlx_154697-18/search?q=*&l=

A virtual database cataloging numerous data set resources, including: BrainMaps.org, Cell Centered Database, Clinical Trials Network (CTN) Data Share, ClinicalTrials.gov, CRCNS, Gene Expression Omnibus, ArrayExpress, MPD - Mouse Phenome Database, BioSharing, Gene Weaver, XNAT Central, 1000 Functional Connectomes Project, Health.Data.gov, SciCrunch Registry, NIF Registry Automated Crawl Data, NeuroVault, OpenfMRI, Physiobank, RanchoBiosciences, YPED, Data.gov Science, and Research Data Catalog.

Proper citation: Integrated Datasets (RRID:SCR_010503) Copy   


http://www.ebi.ac.uk/gwas/

Catalog of published genome-wide association studies. Genome-wide set of genetic variants in different individuals to see if any variant is associated with trait and disease. Database of genome-wide association study (GWAS) publications including only those attempting to assay single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Publications are organized from most to least recent date of publication. Studies are identified through weekly PubMed literature searches, daily NIH-distributed compilations of news and media reports, and occasional comparisons with an existing database of GWAS literature (HuGE Navigator). Works with HANCESTRO ancestry representation.

Proper citation: GWAS: Catalog of Published Genome-Wide Association Studies (RRID:SCR_012745) Copy   


http://www.rcsb.org/#Category-welcome

Collection of structural data of biological macromolecules. Database of information about 3D structures of large biological molecules, including proteins and nucleic acids. Users can perform queries on data and analyze and visualize results.

Proper citation: Research Collaboratory for Structural Bioinformatics Protein Data Bank (RCSB PDB) (RRID:SCR_012820) Copy   


http://umcd.humanconnectomeproject.org

Web-based repository and analysis site for connectivity matrices that have been derived from neuroimaging data including different imaging modalities, subject groups, and studies. Users can analyze connectivity matrices that have been shared publicly and upload their own matrices to share or analyze privately.

Proper citation: USC Multimodal Connectivity Database (RRID:SCR_012809) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_012773

    This resource has 10000+ mentions.

http://www.kegg.jp/

Integrated database resource consisting of 16 main databases, broadly categorized into systems information, genomic information, and chemical information. In particular, gene catalogs in completely sequenced genomes are linked to higher-level systemic functions of cell, organism, and ecosystem. Analysis tools are also available. KEGG may be used as reference knowledge base for biological interpretation of large-scale datasets generated by sequencing and other high-throughput experimental technologies.

Proper citation: KEGG (RRID:SCR_012773) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_008261

https://scicrunch.org/scicrunch/data/source/nlx_154697-16/search?q=%2A&l=&facet[]=Database:ResearchCrossroads

THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on Feb. 05, 2014, however, NIF holds the Research Crossroads data and makes it available through Integrated Grants. World of publicly funded research aggregated into a database providing funding, publication, clinical trial and grant data from government and private research agencies. Advanced reporting and analysis tools are then used to connect research to researchers, organizations and topic areas to uncover non-obvious associations. Use ResearchCrossroads for: Researchers * Make your research visible to funding organizations and collaborators. * Connect with peers to stay up to date on their research progress * Update your investigator profile, biography and publications so funding organizations can find you * Discover available funding from private foundations and government funding organizations * Annotate your previous research grants with outcomes * Create a research diary and participate in discussions with your peers Foundations Participating in ResearchCrossroads is free if you share your research data. Send us a spreadsheet with your grant and investigator information. * Create a community for your researchers to learn from each other * Locate potential investigators and collaborators * Post available funding and be matched with investigator profiles * Access to analytical reporting of funding and research statistics * Update your personalized organization profile page * Display your logo in search results * Link to your ResearchCrossroads grants and investigator profiles from your own website Corporations, Academia & Governments Contact us about subscriptions to funding trend analytics and marketing opportunities. * In-depth reporting of 15 years of funding data from government and private institutions * Subscriptions available to advanced analysis & reporting tools * Display your corporate logo in search results * Update your organization profile page * Highly targeted marketing & advertising by research areas, keywords and categories of investigator * Register for notifications of the newest grants in your area of interest

Proper citation: ResearchCrossroads (RRID:SCR_008261) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_008786

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://researchblogging.org/

Aggregator of blogs about new developments in science and other fields that allows readers to easily find blog posts about serious peer-reviewed research, instead of just news reports and press releases. If you''re a blogger who writes about serious research, Research Blogging offers you a way to distinguish your serious posts from news, politics, family, bagpipes, and so on. They can direct your regular readers - and new readers - to the posts you''ve worked the hardest to create. All you need to get started is a blog and a peer-reviewed research report that you''d like to discuss. How it works * Bloggers -- often experts in their field -- find exciting new peer-reviewed research they''d like to share. They write thoughtful posts about the research for their blogs. * Bloggers register and use a simple one-line form to create a snippet of code to place in their posts. This snippet not only notifies this site about their post, it also creates a properly formatted research citation for their blog. * Their software automatically scans registered blogs for posts containing their code snippet. When it finds them, it indexes them and displays them on their front page -- thousands of posts from hundreds of blogs, in one convenient place, organized by topic. * Their editors identify the notable posts in each major discipline, publishing the results on their news page. * Other services like PubGet index their database as well, so every time readers search for a journal article, they can also locate blog posts discussing the article. * The quality of the posts listed on their site is monitored by the member bloggers. If a post doesn''t follow their guidelines, it is removed from their database. Borderline cases may be discussed publicly on the blog as well. Bloggers are also provided with an icon they can use to show when they''re talking about a peer-reviewed work that they''ve read and analyzed closely. There are already over seven thousand blog posts using the icon, and now it''s easier than ever to find them.

Proper citation: Research Blogging (RRID:SCR_008786) Copy   


http://www.mmpc.org

Center mission is to advance medical and biological research by providing the scientific community with standardized, high quality metabolic and physiologic phenotyping services for mouse models of diabetes, diabetic complications, obesity and related disorders.

Proper citation: National Mouse Metabolic Phenotyping Centers (RRID:SCR_008997) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_002134

    This resource has 1000+ mentions.

http://wikipathways.org/

Open and collaborative platform dedicated to curation of biological pathways. Each pathway has dedicated wiki page, displaying current diagram, description, references, download options, version history, and component gene and protein lists. Database of biological pathways maintained by and for scientific community.

Proper citation: WikiPathways (RRID:SCR_002134) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_000654

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://retractionwatch.wordpress.com/

Retraction Watch is a blog of retractions in the scientific literature. It is maintained by Adam Marcus and Ivan Oransky and has been operating since August 2010.

Proper citation: RetractionWatch.com (RRID:SCR_000654) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_001371

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://blogs.plos.org/

PLoS Blogs has been set up to bring a select group of independent science and medicine bloggers together with the editors and staff who run our blogs. Our independent network is made up of writers who love science and medicine, and scientists and physicians that love to write. Here, you'll find an equal mix of blogs from journalists and researchers tackling diverse issues in science and medicine. There are three very distinct types of blogs on the PLoS Blogs network: the official PLoS blog, the PLoS journal blogs (collectively known as The PLoS Blogs), and blogs from the independent network (a.k.a. The PLoS Blogosphere) # The official PLoS blog: This content is produced, edited, and/or maintained by PLoS staff. # The journal blogs: This content is produced, edited, and/or maintained by PLoS journal staff: The current journal blogs are Speaking of Medicine (PLoS Medicine's blog) and everyONE (PLoS ONE's blog). # Our independent network of bloggers (The PLoS Blogosphere): This content is produced, edited, and/or maintained by the authors. * All of the content in The PLoS Blogosphere came from the minds of the authors. PLoS does not screen, edit, or otherwise meddle with content on the these blogs in any way. Our bloggers and our users are held to exactly the same standards, and the community guidelines apply to everyone that uses our site. If a blogger has posted content that you believe violates our site abuse policy, please contact PLoS. * Bloggers monitor their own comment threads: All comments will be reviewed by the author of the blog where you leave your thoughts. Just follow our simple community guidelines and we'll all get along just fine.

Proper citation: PLoS Blogs (RRID:SCR_001371) Copy   


http://www.diacomp.org

Consortium serving the diabetic complications community that sponsors annual meetings in complications-relevant scientific areas, solicits and funds pilot projects in high impact areas of complications research, and provides resources and data including animal models, protocols and methods, validation criteria, reagents and resources, histology, publications and bioinformatics for researchers conducting diabetic complications research.

Proper citation: Diabetic Complications Consortium (RRID:SCR_001415) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_000686

http://www.labspaces.net/view_blog.php?ID=15

Blog about technology, molecular biology, and editorial comments on the current state of science on the internet. Brian Krueger PhD, is the owner, creator and coder of LabSpaces by night and a Molecular biologist by day. His posts are presented as opinion and commentary and do not represent the views of LabSpaces Productions, LLC, his employer, or his educational institution.

Proper citation: H2SO4Hurts (RRID:SCR_000686) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_002884

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://www.gensat.org/retina.jsp

Collection of images from cell type-specific protein expression in retina using BAC transgenic mice. Images from cell type-specific protein expression in retina using BAC transgenic mice from GENSAT project.

Proper citation: Retina Project (RRID:SCR_002884) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_006503

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://f1000.com/posters

An open access repository of conference posters from across the life sciences and medicine. It provides a permanent, structured environment for the deposition of posters as well as a trustworthy venue for ongoing discussion and development of the information being presented. You can browse posters by Topic or Section or by conference. Please note that most posters on this site present work that is preliminary in nature and has not been peer reviewed. The most interesting posters are selected for evaluation by our expert Faculty and you will receive ideas and feedback. Widen your audience ����?? top performing posters receive 800+ views in a month!

Proper citation: F1000 Posters (RRID:SCR_006503) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_005156

http://sciencecareers.sciencemag.org/

The journal Science is one of the most prestigious and widely cited scientific journals in the world. Founded by Thomas Edison in 1880, Science has been publishing breaking news and seminal research for more than 125 years. Science Careers is the careers component of Science that scientists rely on for career information and job postings. Science Careers offers a wide variety of content designed to assist scientists of all disciplines, backgrounds and experience levels navigate their career path. This includes over 3,000 job listings that are updated daily, thousands of career advice articles written by the Science Careers editorial staff, graduate program information, meetings and event information, funding opportunities on GrantsNet, and a Career Forum where scientists can join a community of experts and peers engaging in real time discussions around career issues. For employers, Science Careers provides multiple platforms for recruiting scientists and extending their employment brand including job postings, banner advertisements, email and newsletters and sponsorships.

Proper citation: Science Careers (RRID:SCR_005156) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_005398

    This resource has 10+ mentions.

http://cmr.jcvi.org/tigr-scripts/CMR/CmrHomePage.cgi

Database of all of the publicly available, complete prokaryotic genomes. In addition to having all of the organisms on a single website, common data types across all genomes in the CMR make searches more meaningful, and cross genome analysis highlight differences and similarities between the genomes. CMR offers a wide variety of tools and resources, all of which are available off of our menu bar at the top of each page. Below is an explanation and link for each of these menu options. * Genome Tools: Find organism lists as well as summary information and analyses for selected genomes. * Searches: Search CMR for genes, genomes, sequence regions, and evidence. * Comparative Tools: Compare multiple genomes based on a variety of criteria, including sequence homology and gene attributes. SNP data is also found under this menu. * Lists: Select and download gene, evidence, and genomic element lists. * Downloads: Download gene sequences or attributes for CMR organisms, or go to our FTP site. * Carts: Select genome preferences from our Genome Cart or download your Gene Cart genes. The Omniome is the relational database underlying the CMR and it holds all of the annotation for each of the CMR genomes, including DNA sequences, proteins, RNA genes and many other types of features. Associated with each of these DNA features in the Omniome are the feature coordinates, nucleotide and protein sequences (where appropriate), and the DNA molecule and organism with which the feature is associated. Also available are evidence types associated with annotation such as HMMs, BLAST, InterPro, COG, and Prosite, as well as individual gene attributes. In addition, the database stores identifiers from other centers such as GenBank and SwissProt, as well as manually curated information on each genome or each DNA molecule including website links. Also stored in the Omniome are precomputed homology data, called All vs All searches, used throughout the CMR for comparative analysis.

Proper citation: JCVI CMR (RRID:SCR_005398) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_004905

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://vmd.vbi.vt.edu/

THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on July 15, 2013. Database covering a range of plant pathogenic oomycetes, fungi and bacteria primarily those under study at Virginia Bioinformatics Institute. The data comes from different sources and has genomes of 3 oomycetes pathogens: Phytophthora sojae, Phytophthora ramorum and Hyaloperonospora arabidopsidis. The genome sequences (95 MB for P.sojae and 65 MB for P.ramorum) were annotated with approximately 19,000 and approximately 16,000 gene models, respectively. Two different statistical methods were used to validate these gene models, Fickett''''s and a log-likelihood method. Functional annotation of the gene models is based on results from BlastX and InterProScan screens. From the InterProScan results, putative functions to 17,694 genes in P.sojae and 14,700 genes in P.ramorum could be assigned. An easy-to-use genome browser was created to view the genome sequence data, which opens to detailed annotation pages for each gene model. A community annotation interface is available for registered community members to add or edit annotations. There are approximately 1600 gene models for P.sojae and approximately 700 models for P.ramorum that have already been manually curated. A toolkit is provided as an additional resource for users to perform a variety of sequence analysis jobs.

Proper citation: VMD (RRID:SCR_004905) Copy   


http://zebrafish.org

Center that supplies access to wild-type, mutant, and transgenic zebrafish lines, EST's/cDNAs, antibodies and fish health services. ZIRC Health Services include diagnostic pathology testing for zebrafish and other small laboratory fish species.

Proper citation: Zebrafish International Resource Center (RRID:SCR_005065) Copy   



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