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| Resource Name | Proper Citation | Abbreviations | Resource Type |
Description |
Keywords | Resource Relationships | |||||||||||||
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National NeuroAIDS Tissue Consortium Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
National NeuroAIDS Tissue Consortium (RRID:SCR_007323) | NNTC | biomaterial supply resource, tissue bank, material resource, brain bank | Collects, stores, and distributes samples of nervous tissue, cerebrospinal fluid, blood, and other tissue from HIV-infected individuals. The NNTC mission is to bolster research on the effects of HIV infection on human brain by providing high-quality, well-characterized tissue samples from patients who died with HIV, and for whom comprehensive neuromedical and neuropsychiatric data were gathered antemortem. Researchers can request tissues from patients who have been characterized by: * degree of neurobehavioral impairment * neurological and other clinical diagnoses * history of drug use * antiretroviral treatments * blood and CSF viral load * neuropathological diagnosis The NNTC encourages external researchers to submit tissue requests for ancillary studies. The Specimen Query Tool is a web-based utility that allows researchers to quickly sort and identify appropriate NNTC specimens to support their research projects. The results generated by the tool reflect the inventory at a previous time. Actual availability at the local repositories may vary as specimens are added or distributed to other investigators. | human immunodeficiency virus, nervous tissue, cerebral spinal fluid, blood, tissue, brain, neuromedical data, neuropsychiatric data, tissue, plasma, peripheral blood mononuclear cell, serum, urine, spinal cord, nervous tissue, pituitary gland, trigeminal ganglia, dorsal root ganglion, peripheral nerve, lymph node, liver, spleen, adipose tissue, bone marrow, muscle, hair, heart, thymus, kidney, lung, eye, brain, ante-mortem, post-mortem, normal, subsyndromic, minor cognitive motor disorder, hiv - associated dementia, cytomegalovirus encephalitis, neurological impairment, traumatic brain injury, neurocognitive disease, frozen, fixed, aids, one mind tbi, asymptomatic neurocognitive impairment, minor cognitive disorder, gene array, snp |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing is related to: Manhattan HIV Brain Bank is related to: CHARTER - CNS HIV Antiretroviral Therapy Effects Research |
Human immunodeficiency virus, Neurocognitive disease, Normal, Subsyndromic, Minor Cognitive Motor Disorder, HIV - Associated Dementia, Cytomegalovirus Encephalitis, Neurological impairment, Infectious disease | NIMH ; NINDS ; NIH Blueprint for Neuroscience Research |
Public: The NNTC encourages external researchers to submit tissue requests for ancillary studies. | nif-0000-00193 | SCR_007323 | nntc.org, nntc | 2026-02-11 10:57:34 | 11 | |||||
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BAMS Nested Regions Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
BAMS Nested Regions (RRID:SCR_000238) | BAMS Nested Regions | data or information resource, database | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on July 7th, 2019. BAMS is an online resource for information about neural circuitry. The BAMS Nested Regions view focuses on the major brain regions and their relationships. | neural circuitry, brain region, brain |
is used by: NIF Data Federation has parent organization: Brain Architecture Management System |
NIMH MH61223; NINDS NS16686; NINDS/NIMH/NIBIB NS50792-01 |
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-10175 | SCR_000238 | Brain Architecture Management System Nested Regions | 2026-02-11 10:56:00 | 3 | ||||||
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brainSCANr Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
brainSCANr (RRID:SCR_000500) | brainSCANr | data or information resource, database | A database of neuroscience-related concepts that utilizes visualization tools for the purpose of research, education and knowledge discovery. The data comes from PubMed abstracts and an algorithm that assumes related terms will appear together. The topics can include computational modeling, behavioral functions and neurological degeneration. | neuroscience, pubmed, visualization, education, computation, modeling, research |
is related to: Oscillatory Thoughts has parent organization: University of California at Berkeley; Berkeley; USA |
NIMH 5-T32-MH18882 | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nlx_143546 | SCR_000500 | Brain Systems Connections Associations and Network Relationships | 2026-02-11 10:56:03 | 1 | ||||||
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WINGS Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
WINGS (RRID:SCR_013997) | software application, systems interoperability software, software resource, data management software | A software application which assists scientists with designing computational experiments. WINGS is a semantic workflow system which incorporates semantic constraints about datasets and workflow components into its workflow representations. The workflow system has an open modular design and can be easily integrated with other existing workflow systems and execution frameworks to extend them with semantic reasoning capabilities. WINGS also allows users to express high-level descriptions of their analysis goals, and assists them by automatically and systematically generating possible workflows that are consistent with that request. In cases where privacy or off-line use are important, WINGS can submit workflows in a scripted format for execution in the local host. It uses Pegasus or OODT as the execution engine for large-scale distributed workflow execution. | semantic workflow system, software application, computational experiment, computational experiment design, data management software |
is listed by: Connected Researchers is related to: Connected Researchers |
NSF CCF-0725332; NSF IIS-0917328; NSF IIS-0948429; NSF CSR-0615412; NIMH U24 MH068457; Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency HR0011-07-C-0060; Air Force Research Laboratory FA8750-06-C-0210 |
Free, Public | SCR_013997 | Workflow Instance Generation and Specialization | 2026-02-12 09:45:46 | 27 | ||||||||
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NIH Pediatric MRI Data Repository Resource Report Resource Website |
NIH Pediatric MRI Data Repository (RRID:SCR_014149) | NIHPD | data or information resource, database, image collection | A database which contains longitudinal structural MRIs, spectroscopy, DTI and correlated clinical/behavioral data from approximately 500 healthy, normally developing children, ages newborn to young adult. | database, image collection, structural mri, dti, spectroscopy, human brain, child |
is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC) has parent organization: National Institutes of Health |
NICHD ; National Institute on Drug Abuse ; NIMH ; NINDS |
Available to the research community, Access must be granted | http://pediatricmri.nih.gov/nihpd/info/index.html | SCR_014149 | Pediatric MRI Data Repository, NIH MRI Study of Normal Brain Development Pediatric MRI Data Repository | 2026-02-12 09:46:14 | 0 | ||||||
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HED Tags Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
HED Tags (RRID:SCR_014074) | HED | data or information resource, standard specification, narrative resource | Strategy guide for HED Annotation. Framework for systematically describing laboratory and real world events.HED tags are comma separated path strings. Organized in forest of groups with roots Event, Item, Sensory presentation, Attribute, Action, Participant, Experiment context, and Paradigm. Used for preparing brain imaging data for automated analysis and meta analysis. Applied to brain imaging EEG, MEG, fNIRS, multimodal mobile brain or body imaging, ECG, EMG, GSR, or behavioral data. Part of Brain Imaging Data Structure standard for brain imaging. | Data, structure, standard, EEG, brain, imaging, comma, separated, path, string, analysis, MEG, fNIRS, multimodal, ECG, EMG, GSR, behavioral, BRAIN Initiative |
is used by: NIMH Data Archive is used by: HeadIT is used by: OpenNeuro is recommended by: BRAIN Initiative has parent organization: University of California at San Diego; California; USA |
Swartz Foundation ; Army Research Laboratory Cooperative Agreement ; NIMH R01MH084819; NINDS R01 NS047293 |
PMID:27799907 | Free, Freely available | SCR_017630 | SCR_014074 | Hierarchical Event Descriptor Tags, Hierarchical Event Descriptor, HED, HED tags | 2026-02-12 09:45:47 | 7 | |||||
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NIMH Division of Intramural Research Programs Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
NIMH Division of Intramural Research Programs (RRID:SCR_006860) | DIRP | training resource, organization portal, postdoctoral program resource, data or information resource, portal | The Division of Intramural Research Programs (DIRP) at the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) is the internal research division of the NIMH. NIMH DIRP scientists conduct research ranging from studies into mechanisms of normal brain function, conducted at the behavioral, systems, cellular, and molecular levels, to clinical investigations into the diagnosis, treatment and prevention of mental illness. Major disease entities studied throughout the lifespan include mood disorders and anxiety, schizophrenia, obsessive-compulsive disorder, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, and pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorders. Because of its outstanding resources, unique funding mechanisms, and location in the nation''s capital, the DIRP is viewed as a national resource, providing unique opportunities in mental health research and research training. Training is conducted in all the Institute''s clinical branches and basic neuroscience laboratories located on the 305-acre National Institutes of Health campus in Bethesda, Maryland. In addition to individualized trainee/mentor-driven postdoctoral training opportunities in the clinical and basic sciences, the DIRP offers Postbaccalaureate Research Training Awards, a Clinical Electives Program, as well as a variety of Summer Research Fellowships and an Undergraduate Internship Program. The mission of the division is to plan and conduct basic, clinical, and translational research to advance understanding of the diagnosis, causes, treatment, and prevention of mental disorders through the study of brain function and behavior; conduct state-of-the-art research that, in part, complements extramural research activities and exploits the special resources of the National Institutes of Health; and provide an environment conducive to the training and development of clinical and basic scientists. In addition the DIRP fosters standards of excellence in the ethical treatment and the provision of clinical care to research subjects; serve as a resource to the NIMH in responding to requests made by the Administration, members of Congress, and citizens'' groups for information regarding mental disorders; and analyzes and evaluates national needs and research opportunities and provides advice to the Institute Director on matters of scientific interest. Core Facilities: * Functional MRI Core * Magnetic Resonance Core * Magnetoencephalography Core * Microarray Core * Neurophysiology Imaging Facility * Non-Human Primate Core * Scientific and Statistical Computing Core * Section on Instrumentation Core * Transgenic Core * Veterinary Medicine Resources |
has parent organization: National Institute of Mental Health is parent organization of: Genes Cognition and Psychosis Program is parent organization of: NIMH CORTEX is parent organization of: NIMH DIRP Scientific and Statistical Computing Core is parent organization of: NIMH Intramural Research Program Clinical Brain Disorders Branch |
NIMH | nlx_143686 | SCR_006860 | NIMH DIRP, Division of Intramural Research Programs at the National Institute of Mental Health, National Institute of Mental Health Intramural Research Program, DIRP at the NIMH, NIMH Intramural Research Program | 2026-02-12 09:44:35 | 3 | ||||||||
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BrainMaps.org Resource Report Resource Website 50+ mentions |
BrainMaps.org (RRID:SCR_006878) | BrainMaps | data repository, service resource, image repository, storage service resource, atlas, data or information resource | An interactive multiresolution brain atlas that is based on over 20 million megapixels of sub-micron resolution, annotated, scanned images of serial sections of both primate and non-primate brains and integrated with a high-speed database for querying and retrieving data about brain structure and function. Currently featured are complete brain atlas datasets for various species, including Macaca mulatta, Chlorocebus aethiops, Felis catus, Mus musculus, Rattus norvegicus, Tyto alba and many other vertebrates. BrainMaps is currently accepting histochemical, immunocytochemical, and tracer connectivity data, preferably whole-brain. In addition, they are interested in EM, MRI, and DTI data. | aves, brain connection, callicebus moloch, c. auratus, connectivity, monodelphis, o. anatinus, tachyglossidae, brain mapping, virtual microscopy, brain atlas, non-primate, nissl stain, nissl, parvalbumin, smi-32, acetylcholinesterase, luxol fast blue, calbindin, myelin, neuroanatomy, image, brain structure, brain function, database, serial section, brain, tract tracing, coronal, horizontal, sagittal, web service, gene, FASEB list |
is used by: NIF Data Federation is used by: Integrated Datasets is used by: Integrated Nervous System Connectivity is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC) has parent organization: University of California at Davis; California; USA |
NIMH 2 P20 MH60975; NIMH R01 MH77556 |
PMID:17229579 | Acknowledgement requested | nif-0000-00093, r3d100012117 | http://www.nitrc.org/projects/brainmaps https://doi.org/10.17616/R3Q64W |
SCR_006878 | BrainMaps: An Interactive Multiresolution Brain Atlas, BrainMaps.org: High Resolution Brain Atlases, BrainMaps | 2026-02-12 09:44:25 | 78 | ||||
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NIMH DIRP Scientific and Statistical Computing Core Resource Report Resource Website |
NIMH DIRP Scientific and Statistical Computing Core (RRID:SCR_006958) | SSCC, NIMH DIRP SSCC | data or information resource, portal, topical portal | Scientific and Statistical Computing Core of the NIMH Intramural Research Program supporting functional neuroimaging research at the NIH. This includes development of new data analysis techniques, their implementation in the AFNI software, advising researchers on the analysis methods, and instructing them in the use of software tools. Support methods: A. Provision of software for analysis for FMRI data (AFNI package: http://afni.nimh.nih.gov) * AFNI has been developed for the last 10 years by Dr Cox, et al. (6 years in Milwaukee, 4 years at NIMH) * Formal and informal instruction in the use of AFNI, including outlines of the statistical methods used in the programs * Installation of AFNI on NIH computers (Mac OS X, Unix, Linux) approximately 120 NIH systems have used AFNI in the last month (80 NIMH, 20 NINDS, 20 other) * Realtime monitoring of FMRI data at scanners * Continuing development of new modules for AFNI to meet needs of NIH researchers B. Consulting with NIH researchers about FMRI data analysis issues, concerns, and methods | neuroimaging, functional neuroimaging, research, data analysis, analysis, software, tool, fmri, statistics, computing | has parent organization: NIMH Division of Intramural Research Programs | NIMH | nlx_144305 | SCR_006958 | NIMH DIRP Scientific Statistical Computing Core, Scientific and Statistical Computing Core, DIRP Scientific and Statistical Computing Core, Scientific Statistical Computing Core | 2026-02-12 09:44:29 | 0 | |||||||
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Computational Neuroanatomy Group Resource Report Resource Website |
Computational Neuroanatomy Group (RRID:SCR_007150) | CNG | data or information resource, portal, software resource, topical portal | Multidisciplinary research team devoted to the study of basic neuroscience with a specific interest in the description and generation of dendritic morphology, and in its effect on neuronal electrophysiology. In the long term, they seek to create large-scale, anatomically plausible neural networks to model entire portions of a mammalian brain (such as a hippocampal slice, or a cortical column). Achievements by the CNG include the development of software for the quantitative analysis of dendritic morphology, the implementation of computational models to simulate neuronal structure, and the synthesis of anatomically accurate, large scale neuronal assemblies in virtual reality. Based on biologically plausible rules and biophysical determinants, they have designed stochastic models that can generate realistic virtual neurons. Quantitative morphological analysis indicates that virtual neurons are statistically compatible with the real data that the model parameters are measured from. Virtual neurons can be generated within an appropriate anatomical context if a system level description of the surrounding tissue is included in the model. In order to simulate anatomically realistic neural networks, axons must be grown as well as dendrites. They have developed a navigation strategy for virtual axons in a voxel substrate. | dendritic morphology, neuronal morphology, neuronal electrophysiology, mammalian brain, neural network, cell, model, morphology, network connectivity, basal ganglia, modeling software, hippocampus, hermissenda learning, caulescence, tree structure, neuron, virtual neural network, morphological class of neuron, virtual neuron, virtual brain, ca3 pyramidal cell, arborvitae, ca1 pyramidal cell, polymorphic cell, dg granule cell, axonal navigation, synaptic connectivity, neuroplasticity, neuroanatomy, neuroinformatics, computation, network model, neural circuit, cellular event, expression, ca3, ca1 pyramidal neuron, digital morphological reconstruction, digital reconstruction, dendrite, axon, neuronal tree, signaling pathway |
has parent organization: George Mason University: Krasnow Institute for Advanced Study is parent organization of: L-Measure is parent organization of: Hippocampus 3D Model |
NINDS ; NIMH ; NSF ; Human Brain Project |
nif-0000-00503 | http://krasnow.gmu.edu/cn3/index3.html | SCR_007150 | Computational Neuroanatomy Group at the Krasnow Institute for Advanced Study | 2026-02-12 09:44:23 | 0 | ||||||
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MRM NeAt (Neurological Atlas) Mouse Brain Database Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
MRM NeAt (Neurological Atlas) Mouse Brain Database (RRID:SCR_007053) | MRM NeAt | reference atlas, database, atlas, data or information resource, image collection | Comprehensive three-dimensional digital atlas database of the C57BL/6J mouse brain based on magnetic resonance microscopy images acquired on a 17.6-T superconducting magnet. This database consists of: Individual MRI images of mouse brains; three types of atlases: individual atlases, minimum deformation atlases and probabilistic atlases; the associated quantitative structural information, such as structural volumes and surface areas. Quantitative group information, such as variations in structural volume, surface area, magnetic resonance microscopy image intensity and local geometry, have been computed and stored as an integral part of the database. The database augments ongoing efforts with other high priority strains as defined by the Mouse Phenome Database focused on providing a quantitative framework for accurate mapping of functional, genetic and protein expression patterns acquired by a myriad of technologies and imaging modalities. You must register First (Mandatory) and then you may Download Images and Data. | phenotype, mouse, brain, computational biology, in vivo, mouse brain atlas, magnetic resonance microscopy, mouse brain morphometry, image registration, in vitro, 3d brain atlas, adult mouse, male, c57bl/6j, autosegmentation, probabilistic atlas, t2 weighted protocol |
is related to: Mouse Brain Image Visualizer (MBIV) is related to: MRM NeAt (Neurological Atlas) Mouse Brain Database Image Gallery has parent organization: University of Florida; Florida; USA is parent organization of: MRM NeAt (Neurological Atlas) Mouse Brain Database Image Gallery |
National High Magnetic Field Laboratory ; NIBIB R01 EB 0023304; NCRR P41 RR16105; NIMH P50 MH58911 |
PMID:16165303 PMID:18958199 |
Registration required | nlx_59497 | http://brainatlas.mbi.ufl.edu | SCR_007053 | Magnetic Resonance Microimaging Neurological Atlas Mouse Brain Database, MRM Neurological Atlas Mouse Brain Database, C57BL/6J Mouse Atlas, Atlas of Adult C57BL/6J Mouse Brain, MRM NeAt Mouse Brain Database | 2026-02-12 09:44:27 | 8 | ||||
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BrainML Resource Report Resource Website |
BrainML (RRID:SCR_007087) | BrainML | data repository, service resource, standard specification, storage service resource, database, narrative resource, data or information resource |
Set of standards and practices for using XML to facilitate information exchange between user application software and neuroscience data repositories. It allows for common shared library routines to handle most of the data processing, but also supports use of structures specialized to the needs of particular neuroscience communities. This site also serves as a repository for BrainML models. (A BrainML model is an XML Schema and optional vocabulary files describing a data model for electronic representation of neuroscience data, including data types, formats, and controlled vocabulary. ) It focuses on layered definitions built over a common core in order to support community-driven extension. One such extension is provided by the new NIH-supported neuroinformatics initiative of the Society for Neuroscience, which supports the development of expert-derived terminology sets for several areas of neuroscience. Under a cooperative agreement, these term lists will be made available Open Source on this site. The repository function of this site includes the following features: * BrainML models are published in searchable, browsable form. * Registered users may submit new models or new versions of existing models to accommodate data of interest. * BrainML model schema and vocabulary files are made available at fixed URLs to allow software applications to reference them. * Users can check models and/or instance documents for correct format before submitting them using an online validation service. To complement the BrainML modeling language, a set of protocols have been developed for BrainML document exchange between repositories and clients, for indexing of repositories, and for data query. |
format, development, information, mechanism, metaformat, model, neuroinformatics, neuroscience, standard, terminology, validation, vocabulary, xml, data sharing, xml schema compact syntax, xml schema, interoperability, semantics |
is used by: Neurodatabase.org has parent organization: Weill Cornell Medical College; New York; USA |
Human Brain Project ; NIMH MH/NS57153; NINDS MH/NS57153 |
Public, The community can contribute to this resource | nif-0000-21070 | http://brainml.org | SCR_007087 | BrainML.org | 2026-02-12 09:44:38 | 0 | |||||
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National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) Human Genetics Initiative Resource Report Resource Website |
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) Human Genetics Initiative (RRID:SCR_007436) | data or information resource, database, software resource | The Connectivity Map aims to generate a detailed map that links gene patterns associated with disease to corresponding patterns produced by drug candidates and a variety of genetic manipulations. The Connectivity Map is the most comprehensive effort yet for using genomics in a drug-discovery framework. It allows researchers to screen compounds against genome-wide disease signatures, rather than a pre-selected set of target genes. Drugs are paired with diseases using sophisticated pattern-matching methods with a high level of resolution and specificity. To build a Connectivity Map, the Broad Institute brings together molecular biologists, genomics specialists, computational scientists, pharmacologists, chemists and chemical biologists, as well as expertise from across the breadth and depth of medicine.Connectivity map is a large public database of signatures of drugs and genes, and pattern-matching tools to detect similarities among these signatures.The parent site for the Broad Institute at MIT has a software library of software applications developed for use in genetic analysis. | gene, genome, small molecule | has parent organization: Broad Institute | NIMH | nif-0000-00629 | SCR_007436 | NIMH Human Genetics Initiative | 2026-02-12 09:44:27 | 0 | ||||||||
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ModelDB Resource Report Resource Website 100+ mentions |
ModelDB (RRID:SCR_007271) | ModelDB | data repository, service resource, storage service resource, database, data or information resource | Curated database of published models so that they can be openly accessed, downloaded, and tested to support computational neuroscience. Provides accessible location for storing and efficiently retrieving computational neuroscience models.Coupled with NeuronDB. Models can be coded in any language for any environment. Model code can be viewed before downloading and browsers can be set to auto-launch the models. The model source code has to be available from publicly accessible online repository or WWW site. Original source code is used to generate simulation results from which authors derived their published insights and conclusions. | repository, collection, network, neuron, computational, neuroscience, model, simulation, neural, data |
is used by: NIF Data Federation lists: ModelRun is listed by: 3DVC is listed by: Biositemaps is listed by: Integrated Models is related to: SimToolDB is related to: NeuronDB is related to: NeuronVisio is related to: Integrated Manually Extracted Annotation is related to: Allen Institute for Brain Science has parent organization: Yale University; Connecticut; USA works with: MicrocircuitDB |
NIMH ; NINDS ; NCI ; Human Brain Project ; NIDCD P01 DC004732; NIDCD R01 DC009977 |
PMID:15218350 PMID:15055399 PMID:8930855 |
Free, Freely available, Acknowledgement requested | nif-0000-00004, r3d100011330 | https://doi.org/10.17616/R3P61F | SCR_007271 | Model_DB, Model Database, Model DB, Model-DB | 2026-02-12 09:44:40 | 304 | ||||
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Cognitive and Emotional Health Project: The Healthy Brain Resource Report Resource Website |
Cognitive and Emotional Health Project: The Healthy Brain (RRID:SCR_007390) | CEHP | data or information resource, portal, database, topical portal | Trans-NIH project to assess the state of longitudinal and epidemiological research on demographic, social and biologic determinants of cognitive and emotional health in aging adults and the pathways by which cognitive and emotional health may reciprocally influence each other. A database of large scale longitudinal study relevant to healthy aging in 4 domains was created based on responses of investigators conducting these studies and is available for query. The four domains are: * Cognitive Health * Emotional Health * Demographic and Social Factors * Biomedical and Physiologic Factors | healthy aging, cognitive health, demographics, longitudinal study, aging study, late adult human, cognition, emotion, adult human, longitudinal, epidemiology, psychosocial, questionnaire, social factor, physiologic factor | has parent organization: National Institutes of Health | Cognitive impairment, Emotional disorder, Aging | NIA ; NIMH ; NINDS |
nif-0000-00421 | SCR_007390 | Cognitive and Emotional Health Project (CEHP), Cognitive Emotional Health Project: The Healthy Brain, Cognitive Emotional Health Project, Cognitive and Emotional Health Project | 2026-02-12 09:44:41 | 0 | ||||||
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Olfactory Receptor DataBase Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Olfactory Receptor DataBase (RRID:SCR_007830) | ORDB | analysis service resource, data repository, service resource, production service resource, storage service resource, database, data analysis service, data or information resource | Database of vertebrate olfactory receptors genes and proteins. It supports sequencing and analysis of these receptors by providing a comprehensive archive with search tools for this expanding family. The database also incorporates a broad range of chemosensory genes and proteins, including the taste papilla receptors (TPRs), vomeronasal organ receptors (VNRs), insect olfaction receptors (IORs), Caenorhabditis elegans chemosensory receptors (CeCRs), and fungal pheromone receptors (FPRs). ORDB currently houses chemosensory receptors for more than 50 organisms. ORDB contains public and private sections which provide tools for investigators to analyze the functions of these very large gene families of G protein-coupled receptors. It also provides links to a local cluster of databases of related information in SenseLab, and to other relevant databases worldwide. The database aims to house all of the known olfactory receptor and chemoreceptor sequences in both nucleotide and amino acid form and serves four main purposes: * It is a repository of olfactory receptor sequences. * It provides tools for sequence analysis. * It supports similarity searches (screens) which reduces duplicate work. * It provides links to other types of receptor information, e.g. 3D models. The database is accessible to two classes of users: * General public www users have full access to all the public sequences, models and resources in the database. * Source laboratories are the laboratories that clone olfactory receptors and submit sequences in the private or public database. They can search any sequence they deposited to the database against any private or public sequence in the database. This user level is suited for laboratories that are actively cloning olfactory receptors. | fungal, pheromone receptor, gene, chemosensory, chemosensory receptor, g protein-coupled receptor, olfaction receptor, protein, receptor, taste papilla receptor, vomeronasal organ receptor, olfactory receptor, nucleotide, amino acid, chemoreceptor sequence, olfactory receptor sequence, chemoreceptor, sequence |
is used by: NIF Data Federation is listed by: 3DVC is related to: Odor Molecules DataBase is related to: Integrated Manually Extracted Annotation has parent organization: Yale School of Medicine; Connecticut; USA |
Aging | Human Brain Project ; NIMH ; NIA ; NICD ; NINDS ; Multidisciplinary University Research Initiative ; National Aeronautics and Space Administration ; NIDCD RO1 DC 009977; NIDCD P01 DC 04732; NLM G08 LM05583 |
PMID:11752336 PMID:9847223 PMID:9218144 |
Public, Private, Acknowledgement requested, The community can contribute to this resource | nif-0000-03213 | SCR_007830 | Olfactory Receptors Database | 2026-02-12 09:44:44 | 4 | ||||
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NIMH Interdisciplinary Behavioral Science Center Resource Report Resource Website |
NIMH Interdisciplinary Behavioral Science Center (RRID:SCR_008085) | IBSC | data or information resource, portal, topical portal | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on February 07, 2013. A framework for understanding human cognition, grounded in principles specifying the character of human cognitive processes, and constrained by properties, of the underlying neural mechanisms. The Center will exploit this framework to guide formulation of explicit, testable models of normal and disordered cognition, including models of the development of cognitive functions and of their disintegration as a result of brain damage or disease. This site is intended as a public service and as a focal point for exchange of ideas among the participants in the Interdisciplinary Behavioral Science Center (IBSC). Public areas of the site provide information about the Center as a whole and about the various projects in the Center, as well as web-accessible documents and tools that we are making available as a public service. A fundamental tenet is that cognition is an emergent phenomenon, arising from the interactions of cooperating processing elements organized into specialized populations. One aim of the center will be to investigate the utility of explicit models that are formulated in terms of this approach, addressing many aspects of cognition including semantic knowledge, language processing, cognitive control, perception, learning and memory. A second aim will also investigate the principles that are embodied in the models, including principles of learning, processing and representation. Learning will be a central focus, since it plays a crucial role in cognitive development, acquisition of skills, formation of memories, and remediation of cognitive functions. A third aim of the Center will be to incorporate constraints from neuroscience. Findings from neuroscience will guide the specification of the principles and the formulation of domain-specific details of particular models, and will provide target experimental observations against which to assess the adequacy of the models. In addition, the Center will make use of neurophysiological methods in animals and functional brain imaging in humans to test predictions and generate additional data needed to constrain and inform model development. The Center will provide training funds for interdisciplinary research fellowships, to train junior scientists in the convergent use of behavioral, computational, and neuroscience methodologies. The outcome of the Centers efforts will be a fuller characterization of the nature of human cognitive processes, a clearer formulation of the underlying principles, and a more complete understanding of normal and disordered functions across many domains of cognition. This Center includes eight projects dedicated to various aspects of cognition and various general issues that arise in the effort to build explicit models that capture different aspects of cognition, and also includes an administrative core to help foster integration and provide computing resources. * Project 1: Functional and Neural Organization of Semantic Memory * Project 2: Interactive Processes in Language: Lexical Processing * Project 3: Interactive Processes in Language: Sentence Processing * Project 4: Mechanisms of Cognitive Control * Project 5: Interactive Processes in Perception: Neurophysiology of Figure-Ground Organization * Project 6: Basic Mechanisms and Cooperating Systems in Learning Memory * Project 7: Age and Experience Dependent Processes in Learning * Project 8: Theoretical Foundations * Core: Integration, Computational Resources, and Administration | human, cognition, cognition, neural mechanism, learning, interdisciplinary, behavioral, semantic knowledge, language processing, cognitive control, perception, memory, learning, processing, representation, cognitive development, model development, brain damage, functional brain imaging | has parent organization: Carnegie Mellon University; Pennsylvania; USA | Normal cognition, Disordered cognition | NIMH | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-10757 | SCR_008085 | 2026-02-12 09:44:36 | 0 | ||||||
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Allen Human Brain Atlas: BrainSpan (Atlas of the Developing Brain) Resource Report Resource Website 100+ mentions |
Allen Human Brain Atlas: BrainSpan (Atlas of the Developing Brain) (RRID:SCR_008083) | BrainSpan | data or information resource, atlas, reference atlas, expression atlas | Atlas of developing human brain for studying transcriptional mechanisms involved in human brain development. Consists of RNA sequencing and exon microarray data profiling up to sixteen cortical and subcortical structures across full course of human brain development, high resolution neuroanatomical transcriptional profiles of about 300 distinct structures spanning entire brain for four midgestional prenatal specimens, in situ hybridization image data covering selected genes and brain regions in developing and adult human brain, reference atlas in full color with high resolution anatomic reference atlases of prenatal (two stages) and adult human brain along with supporting histology, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) data. | anatomic, gene expression, molecular neuroanatomy, in situ hybridization, human, medial prefrontal cortex, primary visual cortex, hippocampus, amygdala, ventral striatum, postnatal, development, brain development, transcription, brain, rna sequencing, exon microarray, developmental stage, male, female, mrna transcript, developing human, adult human, fetal brain, fetus, histology, transcriptome, magnetic resonance imaging, diffusion tensor imaging, annotation, neuroanatomy, prenatal, development, fiber tract, microarray, mri, dti, methylation, microrna, mrf |
is used by: BICCN is related to: NIH Blueprint NHP Atlas is related to: Allen Developing Mouse Brain Atlas is related to: Developmental Human Brain Atlas Ontology (DHBA) has parent organization: Allen Institute for Brain Science is parent organization of: BrainSpan is parent organization of: BrainSpan |
Neurodevelopmental disorder, Neuropsychiatric disease, Schizophrenia, Epilepsy, Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's disease, Neurological disease, Autism | NIMH RC2 MH089921; NIMH RC2 MH090047; NIMH RC2 MH089929 |
Free, Freely available | nif-0000-10626 | http://www.developinghumanbrain.org/ | SCR_008083 | BrainSpan - Atlas of the Developing Human Brain, BrainSpan: Atlas of the Developing Human Brain, NIMH Transcriptional Atlas of Human Brain Development | 2026-02-12 09:44:37 | 398 | ||||
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Sullivan Lab Evidence Project Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Sullivan Lab Evidence Project (RRID:SCR_000753) | SLEP | data or information resource, database | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 23,2022. Database of genetic and gene expression data from the published literature on psychiatric disorders. Users can search the accumulated data to find the evidence in support of the involvement of a particular genomic region with a set of important psychiatric disorders, ADHD, autism, bipolar disorder, eating disorder, major depressive disorder, schizophrenia, and smoking behavior. It contains findings from manual reviews of 144 papers in psychiatric genetics, 136 primary reports and 8 meta-analyses. Disorders covered include schizophrenia (44 papers), autism (24 papers), bipolar disorder (24 papers), smoking behavior (24 papers), major depressive disorder and neuroticism (14 papers), ADHD (8 papers), eating disorders (3 papers), and a combined schizophrenia-bipolar phenotype (3 papers). The unbiased searches integrated into SLEP include genomewide linkage (117 papers), genomewide association (15 papers), copy number variation (9 papers), and gene expression studies of post-mortem brain tissue (3 meta-analyses courtesy of the Stanley Foundation). In total, SLEP captures 3,741 findings from these 144 papers. SLEP also contains over 70,000 SignPosts. These annotations derive from many different sources and are designed to try to capture current state of knowledge about disease associations in the human genome. SignPosts can be searched simultaneously with the psychiatric genetics literature in order to integrate these two bodies of knowledge. The SignPosts include: accumulated GWAS findings from the human genetics literature, the OMIM database, candidate gene association study literature, CNV location and frequency data, SNPs that influence gene expression in brain, genes expressed in brain, genes with evidence of imprinting and random monoalleleic expression, genes mutated in breast or colorectal cancer, and pathway data from BioCyc. | eating disorder, gene, gene expression, adhd, autism, bipolar disorder, brain, breast, cancer, colorectal, combined schizophrenia-bipolar, disease, genomic region, imprinting, major depressive disorder, meta-analysis, monoalleleic, mutation, neuroticism, post-mortem, psychiatric disorder, schizophrenia, smoking behavior, tissue, molecular neuroanatomy resource | Eating disorder, Bipolar disorder, Brain, Breast cancer, Colorectal cancer, Combined schizophrenia-bipolar disease, Genomic region, Imprinting, Major depressive disorder, schizophrenia, Smoking behavior, Autism, Attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder | NIMH MH097281 | PMID:18548508 | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-10439 | SCR_000753 | 2026-02-11 10:56:06 | 3 | ||||||
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BraVa Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
BraVa (RRID:SCR_001407) | BraVa | data or information resource, database | A database of digital reconstructions of the human brain arterial arborizations from 61 healthy adult subjects along with extracted morphological measurements. The arterial arborizations include the six major trees stemming from the circle of Willis, namely: the left and right Anterior Cerebral Arteries (ACAs), Middle Cerebral Arteries (MCAs), and Posterior Cerebral Arteries (PCAs). | digital reconstruction, morphometric analysis, cerebrum, arterial vasculature, magnetic resonance angiography, adult human, morphology, artery, arborization, circle of willis, cerebral artery, male, female, magnetic resonance |
is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC) is related to: Bravissima has parent organization: George Mason University: Krasnow Institute for Advanced Study |
Healthy | NINDS NS39600; NIBIB EB001955; NINDS NS061770; NIMH P20 MH52176 |
PMID:23727319 | Free, Freely Available | nlx_152630 | http://www.nitrc.org/projects/breva | SCR_001407 | 2026-02-11 10:56:13 | 8 |
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