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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 9 showing 161 ~ 180 out of 548 results
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  • RRID:SCR_016465

    This resource has 10+ mentions.

https://nrrl.ncaur.usda.gov/

Center that collects, deposits, maintains bacteria and fungi, and facilitates microbiological research to advance agricultural production, food safety, public health, and economic development. Housed within the Mycotoxin Prevention and Applied Microbiology Research Unit at the National Center for Agricultural Utilization Research in Peoria, Illinois.

Proper citation: NRRL ARS Culture Collection (RRID:SCR_016465) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_016461

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

https://www.mirri.org/

Microbial stock center. Collaborative platform for the pan-European research infrastructure for microbial resources. Provides access to microorganisms, their derivatives, associated data and services for research, development and application.

Proper citation: MIRRI (RRID:SCR_016461) Copy   


http://gcm.wfcc.info/

Database and information retrieval, analysis, and visualization system for microbial resources to help culture collections to manage, disseminate and share the information related to their holdings. Provides an interface for the scientific and industrial communities to access the microbial resource information.

Proper citation: Global Catalogue of Microorganisms (RRID:SCR_016460) Copy   


https://www.ie-freiburg.mpg.de/

Interdisciplinary research institute that conducts basic research in modern immunobiology, developmental biology and epigenetics.

Proper citation: Max Planck Institiute of Immunobiology and Epigenetics; Freiburg; Germany (RRID:SCR_017170) Copy   


http://www.kennedykrieger.org/kki_2nd_inside.jsp?pid=3

Kennedy Krieger Institute is an institution dedicated to improving the lives of children and adolescents with pediatric developmental disabilities through patient care, special education, research, and professional training. Kennedy Kriegers clinical programs offer an interdisciplinary approach in treatment tailored to the individual needs of each child. Services include over 40 outpatient clinics; neurobehavioral, rehabilitation, and pediatric feeding disorders inpatient units; plus several home and community programs providing services to assist families. At Kennedy Krieger, there is no shortage of clinical programs to meet the specialized needs of children and adolescents with developmental disabilities. More than 35 different outpatient clinics, three inpatient units, several home and community programs and clinical laboratories all address the specific conditions of children with a wide range of disorders. Kennedy Krieger is recognized for its range of services in areas including autism, cerebral palsy, spina bifida, neurorehabilitation and feeding disorders. Kennedy Krieger school, is a nationally recognized Blue Ribbon School of Excellence, and is a leader in providing model programs of innovative education for children, adolescents and young adults with a wide range of learning, emotional, physical, neurological, and developmental disabilities. Faculty at Kennedy Krieger are among some of the worlds leading experts in this field and are attuned to the special needs of this population. These faculty have made crucial medical discoveries leading to innovative treatments and have improved the lives of individuals with disabilities. In addition to providing evaluation, rehabilitation, educational services and cutting edge research on behalf of children with brain related disabilities, Kennedy Krieger also provides professional training by renowned experts dedicated to increasing the number of qualified specialists in the United States and abroad. Children treated at Kennedy Krieger are seen by a variety of health care professionals working together in one or more of the Institutes clinical disciplines or departments. These highly trained professionals work directly with the Institutes medical staff to provide coordinated, interdisciplinary care tailored to the special needs of each child. This interdisciplinary approach puts Kennedy Krieger at the forefront in providing patient care for individuals with multiple developmental disabilities. Additionally, Kennedy Krieger Institutes Department of Special Education includes a number of programs that offer service to children with disabilities in a variety of settings. Kennedy Krieger School programs offer special education and related services to students aged 3-21 in three day-school settings and in partnership settings within public schools. For your convenience, a list of diagnoses/disorders treated at Kennedy Krieger Institute has been compiled to provide helpful related information for each diagnosis/disorder and include definitions, symptoms, treatment programs available at Kennedy Krieger, research being conducted at Kennedy Krieger, press releases, Potential articles and links to other helpful additional resources and websites outside the Institute.

Proper citation: Kennedy Krieger Institute: Diagnoses/Disorders (RRID:SCR_013260) Copy   


http://www.viprbrc.org/brc/home.do?decorator=vipr

Provides searchable public repository of genomic, proteomic and other research data for different strains of pathogenic viruses along with suite of tools for analyzing data. Data can be shared, aggregated, analyzed using ViPR tools, and downloaded for local analysis. ViPR is an NIAID-funded resource that support the research of viral pathogens in the NIAID Category A-C Priority Pathogen lists and those causing (re)emerging infectious diseases. It provides a dedicated gateway to SARS-CoV-2 data that integrates data from external sources (GenBank, UniProt, Immune Epitope Database, Protein Data Bank), direct submissions, analysis pipelines and expert curation, and provides a suite of bioinformatics analysis and visualization tools for virology research.

Proper citation: Virus Pathogen Resource (ViPR) (RRID:SCR_012983) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_013187

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://www.ritsumei.ac.jp/~akitaoka/index-e.html

This portal describes Professor Kitaoka Akiyoshi''s research in the science of visual illusions. Working as an associate professor at the Ritsumeiken University, Department of Psychology, he is one of the few researchers in Japan to be actively researching in this field of study. Professor Kitaoka defines an illusion as a misperception of a real object, adding that defining what is real is a difficult task that depends on recognition and epistemology. An illusion is formed when the perceived characteristics of the object differ from the physical characteristics. Professor Kitaoka first started studying visual illusions when working at the Tokyo Metropolitan Institute for Neuroscience, before coming to RU. He currently researches geometrical, color, lightness, and motion illusions and visual completion, and has become a prominent expert in the field, publishing a wide range of articles on the subject as well as the popular books Trick Eyes, Trick Eyes 2, Trick Eyes Graphics, and the Handbook of the Science of Illusion. To create his illusions, Professor Kitaoka uses graphic design software such as CorelDRAW, Adobe Illustrator, and the drawing software included in Microsoft Word in addition to making use of programming languages like Borland Delphi (Pascal). All of the images set out to test hypotheses that serve to advance his study of illusions and their applications for other visual functions. The goal of his research is to test visual mechanisms through visual illusions.

Proper citation: Akiyoshis illusion pages (RRID:SCR_013187) Copy   


http://www.articleofthefuture.com/about

A web application which provides interactive and in depth reading of online scientific articles published in Elsevier. While reading an article, users can access interactive data sources such as Protein Viewer and Google Maps as well as links to references and databases. Prototypes for seven different scientific areas are currently available for more specific research, but all scientific disciplines are represented within Article of the Future.

Proper citation: Article of the Future (RRID:SCR_013812) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_014551

    This resource has 1000+ mentions.

Ratings or validation data are available for this resource

http://www.olympus-lifescience.com/en/software/cellsens/

Software suite for image acquisition and analysis. The software can be paired with high-quality cameras to maximize output quality and export it for sharing and research applications.

Proper citation: Olympus cellSens Software (RRID:SCR_014551) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_014893

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

https://www.gvkbio.com/

Collection of databases with standalone databases, which gives opportunity for customers to integrate the data into their internal tools and databases, as well as online databases, that are available to the customers from a dedicated website where an individual can query and export the data in the selected format. The standalone database topics include medicinal chemistry, drugs and target class based compounds. The online databases are comprised of three major compilations: GVK BIO Online Structure Activity Relation Database (GOSTAR), GVK BIO Biomarker Database (GOBIOM), and Clinical Trial Outcome Database (CTOD).

Proper citation: GVKBIO databases (RRID:SCR_014893) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_014890

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://www.chemnavigator.com/

Database of commercially accessible screening compounds from international chemistry suppliers. iResearchLibrary is updated on a weeky basis and offers support for creating internal screening libraries containing commercially accessible compounds, developing exploratory and targeted libraries, selecting commercially accessible compounds for SAR, lead expansion, and hit follow-up projects, and using structures for pharmacophore searching, virtual screening and other computational work.

Proper citation: iResearch Library (RRID:SCR_014890) Copy   


http://derc.yale.edu

University-affiliated center that promotes research in diabetes and related metabolic and endocrine disorders at Yale University.

Proper citation: Yale Diabetes Research Center (RRID:SCR_015142) Copy   


https://www.niddk.nih.gov/research-funding/research-programs/kidney-disease-centers

Research program whose aim is to make state-of-the art technologies and resources accessible to a broad spectrum of investigators pursuing studies in kidney research areas.

Proper citation: O'Brien Kidney Centers (RRID:SCR_015270) Copy   


https://www.med.upenn.edu/idom/

NIDDK center that serves diabetes-oriented investigators from University of Pennsylvania as well as additional institutions from the mid-Atlantic region. The Penn DRC represents many basic science and clinical departments at Penn and the other institutions, and supports research in diabetes and obesity via Scientific Cores, a Pilot and Feasibility Grant Program, and a series of seminars, retreats, and other academic enrichment activities.

Proper citation: University of Pennsylvania Diabetes Research Center (RRID:SCR_015732) 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   


http://digestivediseasescenters.org/content/ddrc-emory-university-overview

THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on July 5th,2023. Center for pathobiology research development.

Proper citation: Emory Epithelial Pathobiology Research Development Center (RRID:SCR_015916) Copy   


http://images.nigms.nih.gov/

Database of scientific photos, illustrations, and videos made available by the National Institute of General Medical Sciences.

Proper citation: National Institute of General Medical Sciences Image Gallery (RRID:SCR_003480) Copy   


http://caties.cabig.upmc.edu/

The Cancer Text Information Extraction System (caTIES) provides tools for de-identification and automated coding of free-text structured pathology reports. It also has a client that can be used to search these coded reports. The client also supports Tissue Banking and Honest Broker operations. caTIES focuses on two important challenges of bioinformatics * Information extraction (IE) from free text * Access to tissue. Regarding the first challenge, information from free-text pathology documents represents a vital and often underutilized source of data for cancer researchers. Typically, extracting useful data from these documents is a slow and laborious manual process requiring significant domain expertise. Application of automated methods for IE provides a method for radically increasing the speed and scope with which this data can be accessed. Regarding the second challenge, there is a pressing need in the cancer research community to gain access to tissue specific to certain experimental criteria. Presently, there are vast quantities of frozen tissue and paraffin embedded tissue throughout the country, due to lack of annotation or lack of access to annotation these tissues are often unavailable to individual researchers. caTIES has three goals designed to solve these problems: * Extract coded information from free text Surgical Pathology Reports (SPRs), using controlled terminologies to populate caBIG-compliant data structures. * Provide researchers with the ability to query, browse and create orders for annotated tissue data and physical material across a network of federated sources. With caTIES the SPR acts as a locator to tissue resources. * Pioneer research for distributed text information extraction within the context of caBIG. caTIES focuses on IE from SPRs because they represent a high-dividend target for automated analysis. There are millions of SPRs in each major hospital system, and SPRs contain important information for researchers. SPRs act as tissue locators by indicating the presence of tissue blocks, frozen tissue and other resources, and by identifying the relationship of the tissue block to significant landmarks such as tumor margins. At present, nearly all important data within SPRs are embedded within loosely-structured free-text. For these reasons, SPRs were chosen to be coded through caTIES because facilitating access to information contained in SPRs will have a powerful impact on cancer research. Once SPR information has been run through the caTIES Pipeline, the data may be queried and inspected by the researcher. The goal of this search may be to extract and analyze data or to acquire slides of tissue for further study. caTIES provides two query interfaces, a simple query dashboard and an advanced diagram query builder. Both of these interfaces are capable of NCI Metathesaurus, concept-based searching as well as string searching. Additionally, the diagram interface is capable of advanced searching functionalities. An important aspect of the interface is the ability to manage queries and case sets. Users are able to vet query results and save them to case sets which can then be edited at a later time. These can be submitted as tissue orders or used to derive data extracts. Queries can also be saved, and modified at a later time. caTIES provides the following web services by default: MMTx Service, TIES Coder Service

Proper citation: caTIES - Cancer Text Information Extraction System (RRID:SCR_003444) Copy   


http://prrs.wanprc.org/

It provides the communications/database network needed for efficient acquisition and sharing of existing captive primates and primate-related resources by investigators and institutions both nationally and internationally. The overall goal of this service is to maximize the use of existing captive primates, thereby reducing the total number of primates needed for research, and in turn, helping to promote the conservation of primate populations in the wild. Services Provided PRRS services include 1) Referral Service, an immediate, staff-operated service designed to match investigator inquiries/requests to the available resource listings maintained in the PRRS master database; 2) CURRENT LISTINGS, a twice-monthly newsletter listing current availability of, as well as needs for, primates, tissues, equipment, and services; 3) ANNUAL RESOURCE GUIDE (ARG), an annual publication that lists subscribing suppliers of primates, laboratories, equipment, and commercial services such as transportation and quarantine facilities; and 4) Web site, an interactive site that includes the full text of CURRENT LISTINGS as well as online forms for posting resource availabilities/needs and listing updates, the current ARG, a diagram of primate taxonomy with illustrative photographs, online renewal and feedback forms, general service information, and links to other sites of interest to the primate research community. The PRRS also maintains a database of colonies, primates, and primate materials to which notices of availability and need can be referred. Services are available without charge to government-supported researchers and other scientists in the United States and abroad using primates in their work. Sponsors: The PRRS is made possible by grant RR-01240 from the National Center for Research Resources, National Institutes of Health.

Proper citation: Primate Resource Referral Service (RRID:SCR_002828) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_002789

    This resource has 10+ mentions.

http://www.dana.org

A private philanthropy with principal interests in brain science, immunology, and education. The portal provides general information about the brain and current brain research, links to validated sites related brain disorders, education resources and lesson plans, and support for the training of in-school arts specialists. The Dana Foundation science and health grants support brain research in neuroscience and immunology and their interrelationship in human health and disease. The grant sections include brain and immuno-imaging, clinical neuroscience research, human immunology and neuroimmunology. The Foundation also occasionally sponsors workshops and forums for working scientists, as well as offering funding for selected young researchers to continue their education or to attend seminars and workshops elsewhere.

Proper citation: Dana Foundation (RRID:SCR_002789) Copy   



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