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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.
http://www.nitrc.org/projects/cta_toolbox
A Matlab tool to perform statistical analysis on cortical thickness signals on brain surfaces obtained from Freesurfer. It is used for multi-resolutional analysis of such cortical thickness signals and detecting group differences. It is based on the Spectral Graph Wavelet Transform (SGWT) toolbox and provides plug and play methods for deriving Wavelet Multiscale Descriptor (WMD), cortical thickness smoothing using SGWT, Multivariate General Linear Model (MGLM), and False Discovery Rate (FDR).
Proper citation: Wisconsin Cortical Thickness Analysis (CTA) Toolbox (RRID:SCR_014180) Copy
http://ccb.jhu.edu/software/hisat2/index.shtml
Graph-based alignment of next generation sequencing reads to a population of genomes.
Proper citation: HISAT2 (RRID:SCR_015530) Copy
Visualization and analysis software for interactive visual exploration and mining of fiber-tracts and brain networks with their genetic determinants and functional outcomes. BECA includes an fMRI and Diseases Analysis version as well as a Genome Explorer version.
Proper citation: BECA (RRID:SCR_015846) Copy
Software for semantic chemical editing, visualization, and analysis. It is designed for cross-platform use in computational chemistry, molecular modeling, bioinformatics, materials science, and related areas.
Proper citation: Avogadro (RRID:SCR_015983) Copy
https://github.com/brain-life/encode
Software that implements a framework to encode structural brain connectomes into multidimensional arrays (tensors). Encoding Connectomes provides an agile framework for computing over connectome edges and nodes.
Proper citation: Linear Fascicle Evaluation (RRID:SCR_016153) Copy
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
http://www.nitrc.org/projects/psc/
Data analysis software that can simultaneously characterize a large number of white matter bundles within and across different subjects for group analysis. It has three major components: construction of the structural connectome for the whole brain, low-dimensional representation of streamlines in each connection, and multi-level connectome analysis.
Proper citation: Mapping Population-based Structural Connectomes (RRID:SCR_016232) Copy
Standard specification for organizing and describing outputs of neuroimaging experiments. Used to organize and describe neuroimaging and behavioral data by neuroscientific community as standard to organize and share data. BIDS prescribes file naming conventions and folder structure to store data in set of already existing file formats. Provides standardized templates to store associated metadata in form of Javascript Object Notation (JSON) and tab-separated value (TSV) files. Facilitates data sharing, metadata querying, and enables automatic data analysis pipelines. System to curate, aggregate, and annotate neuroimaging databases. Intended for magnetic resonance imaging data, magnetoencephalography data, electroencephalography data, and intracranial encephalography data.
Proper citation: Brain Imaging Data Structure (BIDs) (RRID:SCR_016124) Copy
Software toolkit for neuroelectrophysiology object modeling and data analysis in Python. Open source Python package for analysis of neuroelectrophysiology data.
Proper citation: nelpy (RRID:SCR_016209) Copy
https://github.com/ihmwg/IHM-dictionary
Software resource for a data representation for integrative/hybrid methods of modeling macromolecular structures.
Proper citation: IHM-dictionary (RRID:SCR_016186) Copy
Data repository for integrative/hybrid structural models of macromolecules and their assemblies. This includes atomistic models as well as multi-scale models consisting of different coarse-grained representations.
Proper citation: PDB-Dev (RRID:SCR_016185) Copy
Database of results of published experimental studies involving liquid-solid phase equilibria relevant to natural magmatic systems.
Proper citation: Library of Experimental Phase Relations (RRID:SCR_002202) Copy
https://enigma.lbl.gov/regprecise/
Collection of manually curated inferences of regulons in prokaryotic genomes. Database for capturing, visualization and analysis of transcription factor regulons that were reconstructed by comparative genomic approach in wide variety of prokaryotic genomes., THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 16,2025.
Proper citation: RegPrecise (RRID:SCR_002149) Copy
http://www.earthchem.org/seddb
Geochemical database for marine and terrestrial sediments primarily from the published literature containing a full range of analytical values for sediment samples, primarily from marine sediment cores. It includes major and trace element concentrations, radiogenic and stable isotope ratios, and data for a plethora of materials such as organic and inorganic components, leachates, and size fractions. SedDB also archives a vast array of metadata relating to the individual sample.
Proper citation: SedDB (RRID:SCR_002210) Copy
http://www.earthchem.org/petdb
Accepts and provides access to geochemical and petrological data for ocean floor igneous and metamorphic rocks, (whole rock, volcanic, glass, mineral, and melt inclusion analyses), and mantle and lower-crustal xenolith samples. Data are compiled primarily from the published literature. Authors are encouraged to submit their datasets and databases to EarthChem.
Proper citation: PetDB (RRID:SCR_002209) Copy
Collection of data of protein sequence and functional information. Resource for protein sequence and annotation data. Consortium for preservation of the UniProt databases: UniProt Knowledgebase (UniProtKB), UniProt Reference Clusters (UniRef), and UniProt Archive (UniParc), UniProt Proteomes. Collaboration between European Bioinformatics Institute (EMBL-EBI), SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics and Protein Information Resource. Swiss-Prot is a curated subset of UniProtKB.
Proper citation: UniProt (RRID:SCR_002380) Copy
A tool for annotating, exploring, and analyzing gene sets that may be associated with cancer.
Proper citation: Mutation Annotation and Genomic Interpretation (RRID:SCR_002800) Copy
Knowledgebase that uses ontologies to integrate phenotypic data from genetic studies of zebrafish with evolutionary variable phenotypes from the systematic literature of ostariophysan fishes. Users can explore the data by searching for anatomical terms, taxa, or gene names. The expert system enables the broad scale analysis of phenotypic variation across taxa and the co-analysis of these evolutionarily variable features with the phenotypic mutants of model organisms. The Knowledgebase currently contains 565,158 phenotype statements about 2,527 taxa, sourced from 57 publications, as well as 38,189 phenotype statements about 4,727 genes, retrieved from ZFIN. 2013-01-26.
Proper citation: Phenoscape Knowledgebase (RRID:SCR_002821) Copy
A database of three-dimensional structural information about nucleic acids and their complexes. In addition to primary data, it contains derived geometric data, classifications of structures and motifs, standards for describing nucleic acid features, as well as tools and software for the analysis of nucleic acids. A variety of search capabilities are available, as are many different types of reports. NDB maintains the macromolecular Crystallographic Information File (mmCIF).
Proper citation: Nucleic Acid Database (RRID:SCR_003255) Copy
http://bioinfo.mbi.ucla.edu/ASAP/
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on 8/12/13. Database to access and mine alternative splicing information coming from genomics and proteomics based on genome-wide analyses of alternative splicing in human (30 793 alternative splice relationships found) from detailed alignment of expressed sequences onto the genomic sequence. ASAP provides precise gene exon-intron structure, alternative splicing, tissue specificity of alternative splice forms, and protein isoform sequences resulting from alternative splicing. They developed an automated method for discovering human tissue-specific regulation of alternative splicing through a genome-wide analysis of expressed sequence tags (ESTs), which involves classifying human EST libraries according to tissue categories and Bayesian statistical analysis. They use the UniGene clusters of human Expressed Sequence Tags (ESTs) to identify splices. The UniGene EST's are clustered so that a single cluster roughly corresponds to a gene (or at least a part of a gene). A single EST represents a portion of a processed (already spliced) mRNA. A given cluster contains many ESTs, each representing an outcome of a series of splicing events. The ESTs in UniGene contain the different mRNA isoforms transcribed from an alternatively spliced gene. They are not predicting alternative splicing, but locating it based on EST analysis. The discovered splices are further analyzed to determine alternative splicing events. They have identified 6201 alternative splice relationships in human genes, through a genome-wide analysis of expressed sequence tags (ESTs). Starting with 2.1 million human mRNA and EST sequences, they mapped expressed sequences onto the draft human genome sequence and only accepted splices that obeyed the standard splice site consensus. After constructing a tissue list of 46 human tissues with 2 million human ESTs, they generated a database of novel human alternative splices that is four times larger than our previous report, and used Bayesian statistics to compare the relative abundance of every pair of alternative splices in these tissues. Using several statistical criteria for tissue specificity, they have identified 667 tissue-specific alternative splicing relationships and analyzed their distribution in human tissues. They have validated our results by comparison with independent studies. This genome-wide analysis of tissue specificity of alternative splicing will provide a useful resource to study the tissue-specific functions of transcripts and the association of tissue-specific variants with human diseases.
Proper citation: ASAP: the Alternative Splicing Annotation Project (RRID:SCR_003415) Copy
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