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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 293 results
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  • RRID:SCR_012803

    This resource has 10+ mentions.

http://ciliate.org/index.php/home/welcome

TGD Wiki is a user-updatable database of information about the Tetrahymena thermophila genome sequence determined at The Institute for Genomic Research (TIGR). TGD Wiki provides information on the genome, genes, and proteins of Tetrahymena collected from the scientific literature, research community and many other resources. In order to keep the information in our database as current as possible, we will soon be inviting the members of the Tetrahymena community to add and update these annotations to reflect published research. TGD Wiki currently offers the following features: * Free, unrestricted read access to all available data * Sequence and annotation data for 24,725 genes (TIGR v.2008) * GBrowse genome browser with links to and from each gene page (TIGR v.2006) * BLAST searching of the TIGR gene models and genome sequence (TIGR v.2006) Tetrahymena Genome Database (TGD) Wiki began in 2004 at Stanford University using the schema and programs of its parent project, Saccharomyces Genome Database. TGD Wiki is now a collaboration between Bradley University, Stanford University, and Cornell University. As we begin TGD Wiki at its new home at Bradley University, the TGD Wiki database contains the following data from TGD: * Gene Names and Aliases * Gene Descriptions * Gene Ontology (GO) Annotations * Homologs (similar genes in selected organisms) * Protein Domains * Associated Literature * Paragraphs (longer, free-text descriptions of gene function, structure, and significance) * Coding and Protein Sequences We have updated the following fields to match the newest gene model sequences (TIGR v.2008): Coding and Protein Sequences, Protein Domains and Gene Descriptions. We will also be recalculating the GO Annotations (IEA evidence code) and Homologs as part of our effort to keep the annotations in TGD Wiki as current as possible. We will be relying on members of the Tetrahymena community to maintain high-quality, updated annotations in the remainder of the fields using our annotation interface. Also setting up new database superdb - for unpublished data Look at Ciliate.org for news on this and other new databases

Proper citation: TGD (RRID:SCR_012803) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_010520

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://www.mssm.edu/research/programs/manhattan-hiv-brain-bank/

Biorepository of tissues and fluids relevant for the neurologic, neuropsychologic, psychiatric and neuropathologic manifestations of HIV infection, linked to medical records and an on-going clinical trial for research use by the scientific community. The MHBB conducts a longitudinal, observational study that follows a group of HIV-infected individuals who have agreed to be fluid and organ donors for the purposes of AIDS research. They are currently the largest, multidisciplinary neuroAIDS cohort in New York City, the epicenter of the US HIV epidemic. Research participants undergo regular neurologic, neuropsychologic, and psychiatric evaluations, and provide body fluid samples that are linked to clinical information. Upon their demise, study participants become organ donors. This program has supplied clinical information, tissue, and fluid samples to over 70 qualified AIDS researchers across America, Europe and Australia. In fulfilling its resource mission, the MHBB functions as part of the National NeuroAIDS Tissue Consortium (NNTC). MHBB provides a means by which people living with HIV can be engaged in the struggle to improve our knowledge about HIV infection and the damage it causes to the body.

Proper citation: Manhattan HIV Brain Bank (RRID:SCR_010520) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_010881

    This resource has 5000+ mentions.

http://homer.ucsd.edu/

Software tools for Motif Discovery and next-gen sequencing analysis. Used for analyzing ChIP-Seq, GRO-Seq, RNA-Seq, DNase-Seq, Hi-C and numerous other types of functional genomics sequencing data sets. Collection of command line programs for unix style operating systems written in Perl and C++.

Proper citation: HOMER (RRID:SCR_010881) Copy   


http://www.asn-online.org/

Society leading the fight against kidney disease by educating health professionals, sharing new knowledge, advancing research, and advocating the highest quality care for patients. To accomplish its mission, ASN will: # Educate health professionals by increasing the value of ASN education. # Share new knowledge by improving the quality and expanding the reach of ASN''s communications, including maintaining the premier publications in kidney disease. # Promote the highest quality care by serving as the professional organization informing health policy in kidney disease. # Advance patient care and research in kidney disease by strengthening the pipeline of clinicians, researchers, and educators. To accomplish this goal, ASN will: ## Implement a strategy to increase interest in nephrology careers, which includes promoting diversity within the nephrology workforce. ## Help fund travel to ASN educational activities for physicians and researchers training in the field of kidney disease. ## Use the ASN Grants Program to support outstanding research and foster career development. # Continue to bolster the ASN infrastructure, which includes: ## Increasing diversityincluding age and experience, ethnicity, and genderat all levels of the society. ## Providing avenues for helping ASN members facilitate professional exchange. ## Expanding ASN membership. ## Increasing the ASN Council-Designated Endowment Fund (independent of operational budget) to support grants and other priorities

Proper citation: ASN - American Society of Nephrology (RRID:SCR_006709) Copy   


http://med.stanford.edu/narcolepsy.html

The Stanford Center for Narcolepsy was established in the 1980s as part of the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences. Today, it is the world leader in narcolepsy research with more than 100 articles on narcolepsy to its name. The Stanford Center for Narcolepsy was the first to report that narcolepsy-cataplexy is caused by hypocretin (orexin) abnormalities in both animal models and humans. Under the direction of Drs. Emmanuel Mignot and Seiji Nishino, the Stanford Center for Narcolepsy today treats several hundred patients with the disorder each year, many of whom participate in various research protocols. Other research protocols are conducted in animal models of narcolespy. We are always looking for volunteers in our narcolepsy research studies. We are presently recruiting narcoleptic patients for genetic studies, drug clinical trials, hypocretin measurement studies in the CSF and functional MRI studies. Monetary gifts to the Center for Narcolepsy are welcome. If you wish to make the ultimate gift, please consider participating in our Brain Donation Program. To advance our understanding of the cause, course, and treatment of narcolepsy, in 2001 Stanford University started a program to obtain human brain tissue for use in narcolepsy research. Donated brains provide an invaluable resource and we have already used previously donated brains to demonstrate that narcolepsy is caused by a lack of a very specific type of cell in the brain, the hypocretin (orexin) neuron. While the brain donations do not directly help the donor, they provide an invaluable resource and a gift to others. The real answers as to what causes or occurrs in the brain when one has narcolepsy will only be definitively understood through the study of brain tissue. Through these precious donations, narcolepsy may eventually be prevented or reversible. We currently are seeking brains from people with narcolepsy (with cataplexy and without), idiopathic hypersomnia and controls or people without a diagnosed sleep disorder of excessive sleepiness. Control brains are quite important to research, as findings must always be compared to tissue of a non-affected person. Friends and loved ones of people who suffer with narcoleps may wish to donate to our program to help fill this very important need. Refer to the Movies tab for movies of Narcolepsy / Cataplexy.

Proper citation: Stanford Center for Narcolepsy (RRID:SCR_007021) Copy   


https://mctfr.psych.umn.edu/

Composed of many projects, including the Minnesota Twin Family Study (MTFS) and The Sibling Interaction and Behavior Study (SIBS), this research center seeks to identify genetic and environmental influences on development and psychological traits. Both projects are longitudinal research studies including twins, siblings, and parents. Over 9800 individuals have contributed to these exciting projects! By studying twins and siblings and their families, we can estimate how genes and environment interact to influence character, strengths, vulnerabilities and values. Participants in the MTFS include families with same-sex identical or fraternal twins who were born in Minnesota. The SIBS study is comprised of adoptive and biological siblings and their parents. Most participants partake in day-long visits to the MCTFR, and due to the longitudinal nature of our projects, they return every 3-4 years for follow-up visits.

Proper citation: Minnesota Center for Twin and Family Research (RRID:SCR_006948) Copy   


http://www.nitrc.org/projects/gscca_2013/

Group Sparse Canonical Correlation Analysis is a method designed to study the mutual relationship between two different types of data.

Proper citation: Group Sparse Canonical Correlation Analysis (RRID:SCR_014977) Copy   


http://cerebrovascularportal.org

Portal enables browsing, searching, and analysis of human genetic information linked to cerebrovascular disease and related traits, while protecting the integrity and confidentiality of the underlying data.

Proper citation: Cerebrovascular Disease Knowledge Portal (RRID:SCR_015628) Copy   


https://github.com/KravitzLab/fed/wiki

Flexible open-source device for measuring feeding behavior. FED measures food intake in mice. It is battery powered and designed to be used in rodent colony caging.Home cage-compatible feeding system that measures food intake with high accuracy and temporal resolution. FED offers alternative to commercial feeders, with convenience of use in tradition colony rack caging.

Proper citation: Feeding Experimentation Device project (RRID:SCR_015942) Copy   


http://www.genetherapyreview.com/gene-therapy-research

The National Gene Vector Laboratories (NGVL) was established as a cooperative national effort to produce and distribute vectors for human gene transfer studies.

Proper citation: National Gene Vector Laboratories (RRID:SCR_015944) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_001473

http://www.sfn.org/SiteObjects/published/0000BDF20016F63800FD712C30FA42DD/1304F8BE908CE526359306C138737F9F/file/NRF%20Contacts.pdf

This resource provides a list of federal program officials in the neurosciences. An informal compendium of names and contact information for nearly 300 research grant and scientific review administrators in 21 organizational units.

Proper citation: NRF Contacts (RRID:SCR_001473) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_001808

    This resource has 10+ mentions.

http://www.nesys.uio.no/Atlas3D/

A multi-platform visualization tool which allows import and visualization of 3-D atlas structures in combination with tomographic and histological image data. The tool allows visualization and analysis of the reconstructed atlas framework, surface modeling and rotation of selected structures, user-defined slicing at any chosen angle, and import of data produced by the user for merging with the atlas framework. Tomographic image data in NIfTI (Neuroimaging Informatics Technology Initiative) file format, VRML and PNG files can be imported and visualized within the atlas framework. XYZ coordinate lists are also supported. Atlases that are available with the tool include mouse brain structures (3-D reconstructed from The Mouse Brain in Stereotaxic Coordinates by Paxinos and Franklin (2001)) and rat brain structures (3-D reconstructed from The Rat Brain in Stereotaxic Coordinates by Paxinos and Watson (2005)). Experimental data can be imported in Atlas3D and warped to atlas space, using manual linear registration, with the possibility to scale, rotate, and position the imported data. This facilitates assignment of location and comparative analysis of signal location in tomographic images.

Proper citation: Atlas3D (RRID:SCR_001808) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_016162

    This resource has 1000+ mentions.

http://hyphy.org/

Open source software package for comparative sequence analysis using stochastic evolutionary models. Used for analysis of genetic sequence data in particular the inference of natural selection using techniques in phylogenetics, molecular evolution, and machine learning.

Proper citation: HyPhy (RRID:SCR_016162) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_016399

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

https://gotrack.msl.ubc.ca/

Open source web-based system and database that provides access to historical records and trends in the Gene Ontology (GO) and GO annotations (GOA). Used for monitoring changes in the Gene Ontology and their impact on genomic data analysis.

Proper citation: GOTrack (RRID:SCR_016399) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_016552

https://www.mousephenotype.org/imits/

This resource has been replaced by GenTaR. Software tool for the planning of all IMPC mouse production. Allows IMPC production centers to record the progress of mouse production, cre-excision and to summarise the progress of phenotype data collection and transfer to the IMPC DCC. Stores all the mutation molecular structures made for the IKMC, catalogs of all IKMC products.

Proper citation: iMITS (RRID:SCR_016552) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_016499

    This resource has 100+ mentions.

https://emcore.ucsf.edu/cryoem-software

Software tool for anisotropic correction of beam-induced motion for improved cryo-electron microscopy. Used to describe the sample motion as a local deformation that varies smoothly throughout the exposure. A program running on Linux.

Proper citation: MotionCor2 (RRID:SCR_016499) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_016507

    This resource has 100+ mentions.

https://cm.jefferson.edu/rna22/

Software tool as a pattern based algorithm for detecting microRNA binding sites and their corresponding microRNA and mRNA complexes. Allows interactive exploration and visualization of miRNA target predictions. Permits link-out to external expression repositories and databases.

Proper citation: RNA22 (RRID:SCR_016507) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_016594

    This resource has 10+ mentions.

https://tbportals.niaid.nih.gov

Web based open access platform for global drug resistant tuberculosis data sharing and analysis. The NIAID TB Portals program and consortium of clinicians and scientists from countries with a heavy burden of TB, especially drug resistant TB, to collect TB data.

Proper citation: TB PORTALS (RRID:SCR_016594) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_016609

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

https://triage.niaid.nih.gov

Platform to facilitate prediction, analysis, and hypothesis generation from genome wide perturbation studies like those designed with RNAi and CRISPR technologies.

Proper citation: TRIAGE (RRID:SCR_016609) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_016574

    This resource has 10+ mentions.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/projects/mutagene/

Software tool to explore and analyze mutagenic factors leading to tumors to decipher cancer genetic heterogeneity.

Proper citation: MutaGene (RRID:SCR_016574) Copy   



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