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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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https://pdbp.ninds.nih.gov

Common data management resource and web portal to promote discovery of Parkinson's Disease diagnostic and progression biomarker candidates for early detection and measurement of disease progression. PDBP will serve as multi-faceted platform for integrating existing biomarker efforts, standardizing data collection and management across these efforts, accelerating discovery of new biomarkers, and fostering and expanding collaborative opportunities for all stakeholders.

Proper citation: Parkinson’s Disease Biomarkers Program Data Management Resource (PDBP DMR) (RRID:SCR_002517) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_002595

http://idealab.ucdavis.edu/software/

THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on January 14,2026. A collection of software tools used for processing and organizing MRI data. The Dicom Importer allows you to to view, assemble, and organize dicom files. Subject Library is a filesystem-based search and reporting tool that can be configured to work with many different organization schemes. This package also contains a python library that can be used to write scripts for custom tasks.

Proper citation: Subject Library (RRID:SCR_002595) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_002511

    This resource has 100+ mentions.

http://code.google.com/p/panda-tool/

Software matlab toolbox for pipeline processing of diffusion MRI images. For each subject, PANDA can provide outputs in 2 types: i) diffusion parameter data that is ready for statistical analysis; ii) brain anatomical networks constructed by using diffusion tractography. Particularly, there are 3 types of resultant diffusion parameter data: WM atlas-level, voxel-level and TBSS-level. The brain network generated by PANDA has various edge definitions, e.g. fiber number, length, or FA-weighted. The key advantages of PANDA are as follows: # fully-automatic processing from raw DICOM/NIFTI to final outputs; # Supporting both sequential and parallel computation. The parallel environment can be a single desktop with multiple-cores or a computing cluster with a SGE system; # A very friendly GUI (graphical user interface).

Proper citation: PANDA (RRID:SCR_002511) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_002596

    This resource has 50+ mentions.

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

A set of command line tools allowing 2D and 3D image registration, mainly for medical imaging (although also relevant to other image registration problems).

Proper citation: TAPIR (RRID:SCR_002596) Copy   


http://sve.bmap.ucla.edu/

THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on January 14,2026. An automated online framework for performing validation studies of skull-stripping methods. Registered users may download 40 T1 MRI volumes, skull-strip them with the algorithm of their choice, and upload their segmentation results to the SVE website. The server will then compare the 40 skull-stripped results against a set of manually generated brain masks. The server computes a series of measures for the uploaded data, including Jaccard and Dice measures. It also produces images for visualizing the spatial location of the segmentation errors relative to a common space. The results are archived on the server, and the measures are viewable by visitors to the site.

Proper citation: Segmentation Validation Engine (RRID:SCR_002591) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_002503

    This resource has 10+ mentions.

http://www.dartmouth.edu/~nir/nirfast/

Software package for modeling Near-Infrared light transport in tissue and image reconstruction. This includes: Standard single wavelength absorption and reduced scatter, Multi-wavelength spectrally constrained models and Fluorescence models.

Proper citation: Nirfast (RRID:SCR_002503) Copy   


http://www.nitrc.org/plugins/mwiki/index.php/webmscaleapi:MainPage

THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on January 13, 2026. Venue for discussing and defining standard web interfaces for sharing images, annotations, and analyses of multiscale biological images. The goal is to increase interoperability of code to share the burden of infrastructure, increase code reuse, and allow us to spend more time focused on scientific questions. Please visit our Wiki to start participating. Together we can develop a small group of interfaces which are easy to implement, extensible, and cover the major tasks of developing tools for multiscale data on the web.

Proper citation: Web Interfaces for Multiscale Images (RRID:SCR_002589) Copy   


http://www.osmicenterprises.com

A computerized, odor delivery device that can be used for basic research applications including mapping olfactory centers, cognitive / learning research, neuro-marketing among other uses. Additional products including tests for odor threshold, odor identification, odor discrimination and odor memory.

Proper citation: OEI fMRI compatible olfactometer (RRID:SCR_002507) Copy   


http://www.nirep.org/

Project to develop software tools and provide shared image validation databases for rigorous testing of non-rigid image registration algorithms. NIREP will extend the scope of prior validation projects by developing evaluation criteria and metrics using large image populations, using richly annotated image databases, using computer simulated data, and increasing the number and types of evaluation criteria. The goal of this project is to establish, maintain, and endorse a standardized set of relevant benchmarks and metrics for performance evaluation of nonrigid image registration algorithms. Furthermore, these standards will be incorporated into an exportable computer program to automatically evaluate the registration accuracy of nonrigid image registration algorithms.

Proper citation: Non-Rigid Image Registration Evaluation Project (RRID:SCR_002505) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_002793

    This resource has 10+ mentions.

http://www.cognitiveatlas.org/

Knowledge base (or ontology) that characterizes the state of current thought in cognitive science that captures knowledge from users with expertise in psychology, cognitive science, and neuroscience. There are two basic kinds of knowledge in the knowledge base. Terms provide definitions and properties for individual concepts and tasks. Assertions describe relations between terms in the same way that a sentence describes relations between parts of speech. The goal is to develop a knowledge base that will support annotation of data in databases, as well as supporting improved discourse in the community. It is open to all interested researchers. A fundamental feature of the knowledge base is the desire and ability to capture not just agreement but also disagreement regarding definitions and assertions. Thus, if you see a definition or assertion that you disagree with, then you can assert and describe your disagreement. The project is led by Russell Poldrack, Professor of Psychology and Neurobiology at the University of Texas at Austin in collaboration with the UCLA Center for Computational Biology (A. Toga, PI) and UCLA Consortium for Neuropsychiatric Phenomics (R. Bilder, PI). Most tasks used in cognitive psychology research are not identical across different laboratories or even within the same laboratory over time. A major advantage of anchoring cognitive ontologies to the measurement level is that the strategy for determining changes in task properties is easier than tracking changes in concept definitions and usage. The process is easier because task parameters are usually (if not always) operationalized objectively, offering a clear basis to judge divergence in methods. The process is also easier because most tasks are based on prior tasks, and thus can more readily be considered descendants in a phylogenetic sense.

Proper citation: Cognitive Atlas (RRID:SCR_002793) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_002698

http://www.loni.usc.edu/Software/FFT

Java library used for the execution of discrete Fourier transforms in 1-D, 2-D and 3-D through the implementation of Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) algorithms. * The FFT library has been written in Java for portability across different platforms, integrated into a single jar file for easy implementation. * The FFT library provides forward and backward fast Fourier transforms in 1-D, 2-D and 3-D with an easy-to-use manner. * The FFT requires the length equal to a number with an integer power of two. This library automatically examines the input data and detects the length to prevent improper execution.

Proper citation: FFT Library (RRID:SCR_002698) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_002695

http://www.LONI.usc.edu/Software/ShapeViewer

Java-based geometry viewer that supports file formats used by Center for Computational Biology (CCB) researchers and provides necessary viewing functions. ShapeViewer uses ShapeTools library support to read and display LONI Ucf, VTX XML, FreeSurfer, Minc Obj (both binary and ascii), Open Dx, Gifti, and OFF format data files.

Proper citation: LONI ShapeViewer (RRID:SCR_002695) Copy   


http://www.loni.usc.edu/Software/SHIVA

A Java-based visualization and analysis application that can process 2D and 3D image files and provides convenient methods for users to overlay multiple datasets. * Simultaneous visualization of multiple image volumes. * Tools for labeling and masking of structures. * Framework for the Mouse Atlas Project.

Proper citation: Synchronized Histological Image Viewing Architecture (RRID:SCR_002690) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_002759

    This resource has 10+ mentions.

http://sumsdb.wustl.edu/sums/

THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on May 11, 2016. Repository of brain-mapping data (surfaces and volumes; structural and functional data) derived from studies including fMRI and MRI from many laboratories, providing convenient access to a growing body of neuroimaging and related data. WebCaret is an online visualization tool for viewing SumsDB datasets. SumsDB includes: * data on cerebral cortex and cerebellar cortex * individual subject data and population data mapped to atlases * data from FreeSurfer and other brainmapping software besides Caret SumsDB provides multiple levels of data access and security: * Free (public) access (e.g., for data associated with published studies) * Data access restricted to collaborators in different laboratories * Owner-only access for work in progress Data can be downloaded from SumsDB as individual files or as bundles archived for offline visualization and analysis in Caret WebCaret provides online Caret-style visualization while circumventing software and data downloads. It is a server-side application running on a linux cluster at Washington University. WebCaret "scenes" facilitate rapid visualization of complex combinations of data Bi-directional links between online publications and WebCaret/SumsDB provide: * Links from figures in online journal article to corresponding scenes in WebCaret * Links from metadata in WebCaret directly to relevant online publications and figures

Proper citation: SumsDB (RRID:SCR_002759) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_002823

    This resource has 1000+ mentions.

http://www.fmrib.ox.ac.uk/fsl/

Software library of image analysis and statistical tools for fMRI, MRI and DTI brain imaging data. Include registration, atlases, diffusion MRI tools for parameter reconstruction and probabilistic taractography, and viewer. Several brain atlases, integrated into FSLView and Featquery, allow viewing of structural and cytoarchitectonic standard space labels and probability maps for cortical and subcortical structures and white matter tracts. Includes Harvard-Oxford cortical and subcortical structural atlases, Julich histological atlas, JHU DTI-based white-matter atlases, Oxford thalamic connectivity atlas, Talairach atlas, MNI structural atlas, and Cerebellum atlas.

Proper citation: FSL (RRID:SCR_002823) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_003112

    This resource has 10+ mentions.

http://studyforrest.org

An MRI data repository that holds a set of 7 Tesla images and behavioral metadata. Multi-faceted brain image archive with behavioral measurements. For each participant a number of different scans and auxiliary recordings have been obtained. In addition, several types of minimally preprocessed data are also provided. The full description of the data release is available in a dedicated publication. This project invites anyone to participate in a decentralized effort to explore the opportunities of open science in neuroimaging by documenting how much (scientific) value can be generated out of a single data release by publication of scientific findings derived from a dataset, algorithms and methods evaluated on this dataset, and/or extensions of this dataset by acquisition and integration of new data.

Proper citation: studyforrest.org (RRID:SCR_003112) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_003069

    This resource has 100+ mentions.

http://brainmap.org/

A community database of published functional and structural neuroimaging experiments with both metadata descriptions of experimental design and activation locations in the form of stereotactic coordinates (x,y,z) in Talairach or MNI space. BrainMap provides not only data for meta-analyses and data mining, but also distributes software and concepts for quantitative integration of neuroimaging data. The goal of BrainMap is to develop software and tools to share neuroimaging results and enable meta-analysis of studies of human brain function and structure in healthy and diseased subjects. It is a tool to rapidly retrieve and understand studies in specific research domains, such as language, memory, attention, reasoning, emotion, and perception, and to perform meta-analyses of like studies. Brainmap contains the following software: # Sleuth: database searches and Talairach coordinate plotting (this application requires a username and password) # GingerALE: performs meta-analyses via the activation likelihood estimation (ALE) method; also converts coordinates between MNI and Talairach spaces using icbm2tal # Scribe: database entry of published functional neuroimaging papers with coordinate results

Proper citation: brainmap.org (RRID:SCR_003069) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_002998

    This resource has 10+ mentions.

http://briansimulator.org/

Software Python package for simulating spiking neural networks. Useful for neuroscientific modelling at systems level, and for teaching computational neuroscience. Intuitive and efficient neural simulator.

Proper citation: Brian Simulator (RRID:SCR_002998) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_004232

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://openconnectomeproject.org/

THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on January 9, 2023. Connectomes repository to facilitate the analysis of connectome data by providing a unified front for connectomics research. With a focus on Electron Microscopy (EM) data and various forms of Magnetic Resonance (MR) data, the project aims to make state-of-the-art neuroscience open to anybody with computer access, regardless of knowledge, training, background, etc. Open science means open to view, play, analyze, contribute, anything. Access to high resolution neuroanatomical images that can be used to explore connectomes and programmatic access to this data for human and machine annotation are provided, with a long-term goal of reconstructing the neural circuits comprising an entire brain. This project aims to bring the most state-of-the-art scientific data in the world to the hands of anybody with internet access, so collectively, we can begin to unravel connectomes. Services: * Data Hosting - Their Bruster (brain-cluster) is large enough to store nearly any modern connectome data set. Contact them to make your data available to others for any purpose, including gaining access to state-of-the-art analysis and machine vision pipelines. * Web Viewing - Collaborative Annotation Toolkit for Massive Amounts of Image Data (CATMAID) is designed to navigate, share and collaboratively annotate massive image data sets of biological specimens. The interface is inspired by Google Maps, enhanced to allow the exploration of 3D image data. View the fork of the code or go directly to view the data. * Volume Cutout Service - RESTful API that enables you to select any arbitrary volume of the 3d database (3ddb), and receive a link to download an HDF5 file (for matlab, C, C++, or C#) or a NumPy pickle (for python). Use some other programming language? Just let them know. * Annotation Database - Spatially co-registered volumetric annotations are compactly stored for efficient queries such as: find all synapses, or which neurons synapse onto this one. Create your own annotations or browse others. *Sample Downloads - In addition to being able to select arbitrary downloads from the datasets, they have also collected a few choice volumes of interest. * Volume Viewer - A web and GPU enabled stand-alone app for viewing volumes at arbitrary cutting planes and zoom levels. The code and program can be downloaded. * Machine Vision Pipeline - They are building a machine vision pipeline that pulls volumes from the 3ddb and outputs neural circuits. - a work in progress. As soon as we have a stable version, it will be released. * Mr. Cap - The Magnetic Resonance Connectome Automated Pipeline (Mr. Cap) is built on JIST/MIPAV for high-throughput estimation of connectomes from diffusion and structural imaging data. * Graph Invariant Computation - Upload your graphs or streamlines, and download some invariants. * iPad App - WholeSlide is an iPad app that accesses utilizes our open data and API to serve images on the go.

Proper citation: Open Connectome Project (RRID:SCR_004232) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_003238

    This resource has 500+ mentions.

https://osf.io/

Platform to support research and enable collaboration. Used to discover projects, data, materials, and collaborators helpful to your own research.

Proper citation: Open Science Framework (RRID:SCR_003238) Copy   



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