Are you sure you want to leave this community? Leaving the community will revoke any permissions you have been granted in this community.
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.
Collection of structured and manually curated data of current therapeutic interventions in aging and age-related disease. Describes compounds and mechanisms using multiple chemical and biological databases.
Proper citation: GEROprotectors (RRID:SCR_016737) Copy
https://github.com/kjolley/BIGSdb
Platform for gene-by-gene bacterial population annotation and analysis. Designed to store and analyse sequence data for bacterial isolates. Used for scalable analysis of bacterial genome variation at population level.
Proper citation: BIGSdb (RRID:SCR_023551) Copy
Interactive database which incorporates a suite of tools designed to aid the interpretation of submicroscopic chromosomal imbalance. Used to enhance clinical diagnosis by retrieving information from bioinformatics resources relevant to the imbalance found in the patient. Contributing to the DECIPHER database is a Consortium, comprising an international community of academic departments of clinical genetics. Each center maintains control of its own patient data (which are password protected within the center''''s own DECIPHER project) until patient consent is given to allow anonymous genomic and phenotypic data to become freely viewable within Ensembl and other genome browsers. Once data are shared, consortium members are able to gain access to the patient report and contact each other to discuss patients of mutual interest, thus facilitating the delineation of new microdeletion and microduplication syndromes.
Proper citation: DECIPHER (RRID:SCR_006552) Copy
http://zebrafishucl.org/zebrafishbrain#about-1
Collates and curates neuroanatomical data and information generated both in-house and by community to communicate current state of knowledge about neuroanatomical structures in developing zebrafish. Most of data come from high resolution confocal imaging of intact brains in which neuroanatomical structures are labelled by combinations of transgenes and antibodies. Community repository for image based data related to neuroanatomy of zebrafish.
Proper citation: Zebrafish Brain Atlas (RRID:SCR_000606) Copy
http://www.genes2cognition.org/resources/
Biological resources, including gene-targeting vectors, ES cell lines, antibodies, and transgenic mice, generated for its phenotyping pipeline as part of the Genes to Cognition research program are freely-available to interested researchers. Available Transgenic Mouse Lines: *Hras1 (H-ras) knockout,C57BL/6J *Dlg4 (PSD-95) knockout,129S5 *Dlg4 (PSD-95) knockout,C57BL/6J *Dlg3 (SAP102) knockout with hprt mutation,129S5 *Dlg3 (SAP102) knockout (wild-type for hprt,C57BL/6J *Syngap1 (SynGAP) knockout (from 8.24 clone), C57BL/6J *Dlg4 (PSD-95) guanylate kinase domain deletion, C57BL/6J *Ptk2 (FAK) knockout,C57BL/6J
Proper citation: Genes to Cognition - Biological Resources (RRID:SCR_001675) Copy
http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2013/11/27/000455
A subset of the CARMEN repository, a curated set of data and code of multielectrode array recordings of spontaneous activity in developing mouse and ferret retina. The data have been annotated with minimal metadata and converted into HDF5 (Hierarchical data format, version 5) including the essential features of the recordings, such as developmental age, and genotype. All code and tools used in the analyses are also fully available for reuse, giving the ability to regenerate each figure and table and know exactly how the results were calculated, adding confidence in the research output and allowing others to easily build upon previous work. The addition of published data to the repository is encouraged.
Proper citation: Retinal wave repository (RRID:SCR_010462) Copy
Project content including raw image data, neuronal tracings, image registration tools and analysis scripts covering three manuscripts: Comprehensive Maps of DrosophilaHigher Olfactory Centres : Spatially Segregated Fruit and Pheromone Representation which uses single cell labeling and image registration to describe the organization of the higher olfactory centers of Drosophila; Diversity and wiring variability of olfactory local interneurons in the Drosophila antennal lobe which uses single cell labeling to describe the organization of the antennal lobe local interneurons; and Sexual Dimorphism in the Fly Brain which uses clonal analysis and image registration to identify a large number of sex differences in the brain and VNC of Drosophila. Data * Raw Data of Reference Brain (pic, amira) (both seed and average) * Label field of LH and MB calyx and surfaces for these structures * Label field of neuropil of Reference Brain * Traces (before and after registration). Neurolucida, SWC and AmiraMesh lineset. * MB and LH Density Data for different classes of neuron. In R format and as separate amira files. * Registration files for all brains used in the study * MBLH confocal images for all brains actually used in the study (Biorad pic format) * Sample confocal images for antennal lobe of every PN class * Confocal stacks of GABA stained ventral PNs Programs * ImageJ plugins (Biorad reader /writer/Amira reader/writer/IGS raw Reader) * Binary of registration, warp and gregxform (macosx only, others on request) * Simple GUI for registration tools (macosx only at present) * R analysis/visualization functions * Amira Script to show examples of neuronal classes The website is a collaboration between the labs of Greg Jefferis and Liqun Luo and has been built by Chris Potter and Greg Jefferis. The core Image Registration tools were created by Torsten Rohlfing and Calvin Maurer.
Proper citation: Flybrain at Stanford (RRID:SCR_001877) Copy
http://www.openmicroscopy.org/site/support/ome-model/ome-tiff/
A standardized file format for multidimensional microscopy image data. OME-TIFF maximizes the respective strengths of OME-XML and TIFF. It takes advantage of the rich metadata defined in OME-XML while retaining the pixel structure in multi-page TIF format for compatibility with many image-processing applications. An OME-TIFF dataset has the following characteristics: * Image planes are stored within one multi-page TIFF file, or across multiple TIFF files. Any image organization is feasible. * A complete OME-XML metadata block describing the dataset is embedded in each TIFF file's header. Thus, even if some of the TIFF files in a dataset are misplaced, the metadata remains intact. * The OME-XML metadata block may contain anything allowed in a standard OME-XML file. * OME-TIFF uses the standard TIFF mechanism for storing one or more image planes in each of the constituent files, instead of encoding pixels as base64 chunks within the XML. Since TIFF is an image format, it makes sense to only use OME-TIFF as opposed to OME-XML, when there is at least one image plane.
Proper citation: OME-TIFF Format (RRID:SCR_002636) Copy
https://www.openmicroscopy.org/site/products/bio-formats
Standalone software Java library for reading microscopy image data files in any format and writing image data using standardized, open formats. It currently reads and converts more than 120 file formats to the OME-TIFF data standard.
Proper citation: Bio-Formats (RRID:SCR_000450) Copy
http://tree.bio.ed.ac.uk/software/seqgen/
Software program that simulates the evolution of nucleotide or amino acid sequences along a phylogeny using common models of the substitution process. A range of models of molecular evolution are implemented, including the general reversible model. State frequencies and other parameters of the model may be given and site-specific rate heterogeneity may also be incorporated in a number of ways. Any number of trees may be read in and the program will produce any number of data sets for each tree.
Proper citation: Seq-Gen (RRID:SCR_014934) Copy
https://github.com/sanger-pathogens/ariba
Analysis software that identifies antibiotic resistance genes by running local assemblies. It can also be used for MLST calling.
Proper citation: Ariba (RRID:SCR_015976) Copy
Ratings or validation data are available for this resource
Human and mouse genome annotation project which aims to identify all gene features in the human genome using computational analysis, manual annotation, and experimental validation.
Proper citation: GENCODE (RRID:SCR_014966) Copy
https://github.com/JCVenterInstitute/NSForest/releases
Software tool as method that takes cluster results from single cell nuclei RNAseq experiments and generates lists of minimal markers needed to define each cell type cluster. Utilizes random forest of decision trees machine learning approach. Used to determine minimum set of marker genes whose combined expression identified cells of given type with maximum classification accuracy.
Proper citation: NS-Forest (RRID:SCR_018348) Copy
https://fsl.fmrib.ox.ac.uk/fsl/fslwiki/PALM
Software tool for inference using permutation methods. Requires Matlab or Octave. Can be executed from inside either environment, or directly from the shell and can be called from scripts. For users who are familiar with statistics and willing to use experimental analysis tools.
Proper citation: PALM (RRID:SCR_017029) Copy
https://models.physiomeproject.org
Repository of mainly CellML models powered by collection of software tools and libraries with PMR2 software suite as core power. Third party integration suites are RICORDO, Virtuoso, BiVeS/BudHat, OpenCOR, CombineArchive Web, WebCAT, Morre/MaSyMoS.
Proper citation: Physiome Model Repository (RRID:SCR_017374) Copy
Open source and stand alone software for assessing vascular reactivity. Used in pressure myograph system.
Proper citation: VasoTracker (RRID:SCR_017233) Copy
http://www.ariesepigenomics.org.uk/
Portal for epigenomic information on range of human tissues, including DNA methylation data on peripheral blood at multiple time points across lifecourse. Provides web interface to browse methylation variation between groups of individuals and across time.
Proper citation: Accessible Resource for Integrated Epigenomics Studies (RRID:SCR_017492) Copy
https://github.com/shanemomara/omaraneurolab/tree/master/NeuroChaT
Software open source python toolbox to analyse neuronal signals recorded in vivo in freely behaving animal, with particular emphasis on spatial coding. Can be used as application programming interface, or as general user interface, and is designed to help simplify adoption of standardised analyses for behavioural neurophysiology and facilitate open data sharing and collaboration between laboratories.
Proper citation: NeuroChaT (RRID:SCR_018020) Copy
https://github.com/linnarsson-lab/cytograph
Software multistage analysis pipeline which progressively discovers cell types or states while mitigating impact of technical artifacts.Used for single cell analysis.
Proper citation: Cytograph (RRID:SCR_023101) Copy
Web application as repository and launch platform for Psychopy experiments and other open-source tools.
Proper citation: Pavlovia (RRID:SCR_023320) Copy
Can't find your Tool?
We recommend that you click next to the search bar to check some helpful tips on searches and refine your search firstly. Alternatively, please register your tool with the SciCrunch Registry by adding a little information to a web form, logging in will enable users to create a provisional RRID, but it not required to submit.
Welcome to the RRID Resources search. From here you can search through a compilation of resources used by RRID and see how data is organized within our community.
You are currently on the Community Resources tab looking through categories and sources that RRID has compiled. You can navigate through those categories from here or change to a different tab to execute your search through. Each tab gives a different perspective on data.
If you have an account on RRID then you can log in from here to get additional features in RRID such as Collections, Saved Searches, and managing Resources.
Here is the search term that is being executed, you can type in anything you want to search for. Some tips to help searching:
You can save any searches you perform for quick access to later from here.
We recognized your search term and included synonyms and inferred terms along side your term to help get the data you are looking for.
If you are logged into RRID you can add data records to your collections to create custom spreadsheets across multiple sources of data.
Here are the sources that were queried against in your search that you can investigate further.
Here are the categories present within RRID that you can filter your data on
Here are the subcategories present within this category that you can filter your data on
If you have any further questions please check out our FAQs Page to ask questions and see our tutorials. Click this button to view this tutorial again.