Searching the RRID Resource Information Network

Our searching services are busy right now. Please try again later

  • Register
X
Forgot Password

If you have forgotten your password you can enter your email here and get a temporary password sent to your email.

X

Leaving Community

Are you sure you want to leave this community? Leaving the community will revoke any permissions you have been granted in this community.

No
Yes
X
Forgot Password

If you have forgotten your password you can enter your email here and get a temporary password sent to your email.

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.

Search

Type in a keyword to search

On page 4 showing 61 ~ 80 out of 346 results
Snippet view Table view Download 346 Result(s)
Click the to add this resource to a Collection

http://cancer.osu.edu/research/cancerresearch/sharedresources/ltb/Pages/index.aspx

The OSU Comprehensive Cancer Center Leukemia Tissue Bank Shared Resource (LTBSR) facilitates the successful translation of basic leukemia research to the clinical setting via an extensive repository of tissue samples and accompanying pathologic, cytogenetic and clinical data for ready correlation of clinical and biological results. The LTBSR, which is an NCI-sponsored biorepository, has more than 40,000 vials of cryopreserved viable cells and 13,000 vials of matched frozen plasma and/or serum samples from more than 4,000 patients treated for leukemia and other malignancies. Committed to furthering translational research efforts for OSUCCC - James members and the cancer research community, the LTBSR provides investigators with training and technical support as well as procurement, processing, storage, retrieval and distribution of clinical research materials. In many cases, the LTBSR serves as the central processing lab for multi-site trials in which the principal investigator is an OSUCCC - James member. The LTBSR's goals are to: * Provide a central collection, processing and a state-of-the-art repository for samples collected from leukemia patients treated on OSUCCC - James protocols, and * Provide materials to investigators involved in collaborative studies with OSU, who examine relevant cellular and molecular properties of leukemia and correlate these properties with clinical or population-based outcomes.

Proper citation: Ohio State Leukemia Tissue Bank (RRID:SCR_000529) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_016752

    This resource has 50+ mentions.

https://github.com/mikelove/tximport

Software R package for importing pseudoaligned reads into R for use with downstream differential expression analysis. Used for import and summarize transcript level estimates for transcript and gene level analysis.

Proper citation: tximport (RRID:SCR_016752) Copy   


http://interactome.baderlab.org/

Project portal for the Human Reference Protein Interactome Project, which aims generate a first reference map of the human protein-protein interactome network by identifying binary protein-protein interactions (PPIs). It achieves this by systematically interrogating all pairwise combinations of predicted human protein-coding genes using proteome-scale technologies.

Proper citation: Human Reference Protein Interactome Project (RRID:SCR_015670) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_022278

    This resource has 10+ mentions.

https://software.broadinstitute.org/cancer/cga/polysolver

Software tool for HLA typing based on whole exome sequencing data and infers alleles for three major MHC class I genes. Enables accurate inference of germline alleles of class I HLA-A, B and C genes and subsequent detection of mutations in these genes using inferred alleles as reference.

Proper citation: Polysolver (RRID:SCR_022278) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_022828

    This resource has 100+ mentions.

https://cytotrace.stanford.edu/

Software tool that predicts differentiation state of cells from single cell RNA sequencing data. Used for predicting differentiation states from scRNA-seq data.

Proper citation: CytoTRACE (RRID:SCR_022828) Copy   


http://www.cpctr.net/

THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Doumented on September 23,2022. The National Cancer Institute initially established the Cooperative Prostate Cancer Tissue Resource (CPCTR) to provide prostate cancer tissue samples with clinical annotation to researchers. The Resource provides access to formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded primary prostate cancer tissue with associated clinical and follow-up data for research studies, particularly studies focused on translating basic research findings into clinical application. Fresh-frozen tissue is also available with limited clinical follow up information since these are more recent cases. The Resource database contains pathologic and clinical information linked to a large collection of prostate tissue specimens that is available for research. Researchers can determine whether the Resource has the tissues and patient data they need for their individual research studies. Consultation and interpretive services: Assistance is available from trained CPCTR pathologists. The CPCTR can provide consultative assistance in staining interpretation, and scoring, on a collaborative basis. Fresh Frozen and Paraffin Tissue: The resource has over 7,000 annotated cases (including 7,635 specimens and 38,399 annotated blocks). Tissue Microarrays (TMA): The CPCTR has slides from prostate cancer TMAs with associated clinical data. The information provided for each case on the arrays (derived from radical prostatectomy specimens) includes: age at diagnosis, race, PSA at diagnosis, tumor size, TNM stage, Gleason score and grade, and vital status and other variables.

Proper citation: CPCTR: Cooperative Prostate Cancer Tissue Resource (RRID:SCR_000803) Copy   


http://www.bionet.umn.edu/tpf/home.html

Procure and distribute human tissue and other biological samples in support of basic, translational, and clinical cancer research at the University of Minnesota. The TPF is a centralized resource with standardized patient consent, sample collection, processing, storage, quality control, distribution, and electronic record maintenance. Since the 1996 inception of the TPF, over 61,000 tissue samples including well-preserved samples of malignant and benign tumors, organ-matched normal tissue, and other types of diseased tissues, have been collected from surgical specimens obtained at the University of Minnesota Medical Center-Fairview (UMMC-F) University Campus. Surgical pathologists are intellectually engaged in TPF functions, providing researchers with specimen-oriented medical consultation to facilitate research productivity. Prior to surgery, TPF personnel identify and consent patients for procurement of tissue, blood, urine, saliva, and ascites fluid. Within the integrated working environment of the surgical pathology laboratory, freshly obtained tissues not needed for diagnosis are selected and provided by pathologists to TPF personnel. Tissue samples are then assigned an independent code and processed. TPF staff can also work with researchers to individualize the procurement of tissues to fit specific research needs.

Proper citation: University of Minnesota Tissue Procurement Facility (RRID:SCR_004270) Copy   


http://acsr.ucsf.edu/

A biorepository for HIV-infected human biospecimens from a wide spectrum of HIV-related or associated diseases, including cancer, and from appropriate HIV-negative controls. The ACSR has formalin-fixed paraffin embedded biospecimens, fresh frozen biospecimens, malignant cell suspensions, fine needle aspirates, and cell lines from patients with HIV-related malignancies. It also contains serum, plasma, urine, bone marrow, cervical and anal specimens, saliva, semen, and multi-site autopsy speicmens from patients with HIV-related malignancies including those who have participated in clinical trials. The ACSR has an associated databank that contains prognostic, staging, outcome and treatment data on patients from whom tissues were obtained. The ACSR database contains more than 300,000 individual biospecimens with associated clinical information. Biospecimens are entered into the ACSR database by processing type, disease category, and number of cases defined by disease category.

Proper citation: AIDS and Cancer Specimen Resource (RRID:SCR_004216) Copy   


http://www.nsabp.pitt.edu/NSABP_Pathology.asp

The NSABP (National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project) Tissue Bank is the central repository of tissue samples (stained and unstained slides, tissue blocks, and frozen tissue specimens) collected from clinical trials conducted by the NSABP. The main scientific aim of the NSABP Division of Pathology is to develop clinical context-specific prognostic markers and predictive markers that predict response to or benefit from specific therapeutic modality. To achieve this aim, the laboratory collects the tumor and adjacent normal tissues from cancer patients enrolled into the NSABP trials through its membership institutions, and maintain these valuable materials with clinical follow-up information and distribute them to qualified approved investigators. Currently, specimens from more than 90,000 cases of breast and colon cancer are stored and maintained at the bank. Paraffin embedded tumor specimens are available from NSABP trials. We currently do not bank frozen tissues. All blocks are from patients enrolled in prospective NSABP treatment protocols and complete clinical follow up information as well as demographic information is available. Depending on the project, unstained tissue sections of 4-micrometer thickness, tissue microarrays, or stained slides are provided to the investigators in a blinded study format. Any investigators with novel projects that conform to the research goals of NSABP may apply for the tissue. Please refer to the NSABP Tissue Bank Policy to determine if your project conforms to these goals. Priority is given to NSABP membership institutions who regularly submit tissue blocks.

Proper citation: National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project Tissue Bank (RRID:SCR_004506) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_005750

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://omniBiomarker.bme.gatech.edu

omniBiomarker is a web-application for analysis of high-throughput -omic data. Its primary function is to identify differentially expressed biomarkers that may be used for diagnostic or prognostic clinical prediction. Currently, omniBiomarker allows users to analyze their data with many different ranking methods simultaneously using a high-performance compute cluster. The next release of omniBiomarker will automatically select the most biologically relevant ranking method based on user input regarding prior knowledge. The omniBiomarker workflow * Data: Gene Expression * Algorithms: Knowledge-Driven Gene Ranking * Differentially expressed Genes * Clinical / Biological Validation * Knowledge: NCI Thesaurus of Cancer, Cancer Gene Index * back to Algorithms

Proper citation: omniBiomarker (RRID:SCR_005750) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_003409

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

https://cabig.nci.nih.gov/tools/caTRIP

THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE documented June 4, 2013. Allows users to query across a number of caBIG data services, join on common data elements (CDEs), and view results in a user-friendly interface. With an initial focus on enabling outcomes analysis, caTRIP allows clinicians to query across data from existing patients with similar characteristics to find treatments that were administered with success. In doing so, caTRIP can help inform treatment and improve patient care, as well as enable the searching of available tumor tissue, enable locating patients for clinical trials, and enable investigating the association between multiple predictors and their corresponding outcomes such as survival caTRIP relies on the vast array of open source caBIG applications, including: * Tumor Registry, a clinical system that is used to collect endpoint data * cancer Text Information Extraction System (caTIES), a locator of tissue resources that works via the extraction of clinical information from free text surgical pathology reports. while using controlled terminologies to populate caBIG-compliant data structures * caTissue CORE, a tissue bank repository tool for biospecimen inventory, tracking, and basic annotation * Cancer Annotation Engine (CAE), a system for storing and searching pathology annotations * caIntegrator, a tool for storing, querying, and analyzing translational data, including SNP data Requires Java installation and network connectivity.

Proper citation: caTRIP (RRID:SCR_003409) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_003299

    This resource has 100+ mentions.

http://protege.stanford.edu

Protege is a free, open-source platform that provides a growing user community with a suite of tools to construct domain models and knowledge-based applications with ontologies. At its core, Protege implements a rich set of knowledge-modeling structures and actions that support the creation, visualization, and manipulation of ontologies in various representation formats. Protege can be customized to provide domain-friendly support for creating knowledge models and entering data. Further, Protege can be extended by way of a plug-in architecture and a Java-based Application Programming Interface (API) for building knowledge-based tools and applications. An ontology describes the concepts and relationships that are important in a particular domain, providing a vocabulary for that domain as well as a computerized specification of the meaning of terms used in the vocabulary. Ontologies range from taxonomies and classifications, database schemas, to fully axiomatized theories. In recent years, ontologies have been adopted in many business and scientific communities as a way to share, reuse and process domain knowledge. Ontologies are now central to many applications such as scientific knowledge portals, information management and integration systems, electronic commerce, and semantic web services. The Protege platform supports two main ways of modeling ontologies: * The Protege-Frames editor enables users to build and populate ontologies that are frame-based, in accordance with the Open Knowledge Base Connectivity protocol (OKBC). In this model, an ontology consists of a set of classes organized in a subsumption hierarchy to represent a domain's salient concepts, a set of slots associated to classes to describe their properties and relationships, and a set of instances of those classes - individual exemplars of the concepts that hold specific values for their properties. * The Protege-OWL editor enables users to build ontologies for the Semantic Web, in particular in the W3C's Web Ontology Language (OWL). An OWL ontology may include descriptions of classes, properties and their instances. Given such an ontology, the OWL formal semantics specifies how to derive its logical consequences, i.e. facts not literally present in the ontology, but entailed by the semantics. These entailments may be based on a single document or multiple distributed documents that have been combined using defined OWL mechanisms (see the OWL Web Ontology Language Guide). Protege is based on Java, is extensible, and provides a plug-and-play environment that makes it a flexible base for rapid prototyping and application development.

Proper citation: Protege (RRID:SCR_003299) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_003336

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://edoctoring.ncl.ac.uk/Public_site/

Online educational tool that brings challenging clinical practice to your computer, providing medical education that is engaging, challenging and interactive. While there is no substitute for real-life direct contact with patients or colleagues, research has shown that interactive online education can be a highly effective and enjoyable method of learning many components of clinical medicine, including ethics, clinical management, epidemiology and communication skills. eDoctoring offers 25 simulated clinical cases, 15 interactive tutorials and a virtual library containing numerous articles, fast facts and video clips. Their learning material is arranged in the following content areas: * Ethical, Legal and Social Implications of Genetic Testing * Palliative and End-of-Life Care * Prostate Cancer Screening and Shared Decision-Making

Proper citation: eDoctoring (RRID:SCR_003336) 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://amp.pharm.mssm.edu/LJP/

Interactive on line tool where signatures are tagged with user selected metadata and external transcript signatures are projected onto network. Browser to visualize signatures from breast cancer cell lines treated with single molecule perturbations.

Proper citation: LINCS Joint Project - Breast Cancer Network Browser (RRID:SCR_016181) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_016285

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

https://github.com/jbelyeu/SV-plaudit

Software for rapidly curating structural variant (SVs) predictions. SV-plaudit provides a pipeline for creating image views of genomic intervals, automatically storing them in the cloud, deploying a website to view/score them, and retrieving scores for analysis.

Proper citation: SV-plaudit (RRID:SCR_016285) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_016489

http://amp.pharm.mssm.edu/DGB/

Web based application to assist researchers with identifying drugs and small molecules that are predicted to maximally influence expression of mammalian gene of interest. Used to identify drugs and small molecules to regulate expression of target genes for research purpose only. Application for ranking drugs to modulate specific gene based on transcriptomic signatures.

Proper citation: Drug Gene Budger (RRID:SCR_016489) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_016919

    This resource has 100+ mentions.

https://github.com/dpeerlab/phenograph

Software tool as clustering method designed for high dimensional single cell data. Algorithmically defines phenotypes in high dimensional single cell data. Used for large scale analysis of single cell heterogeneity.

Proper citation: Phenograph (RRID:SCR_016919) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_018693

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://pinet-server.org

Web platform for downstream analysis and visualization of proteomics data. Server that facilitates integrated annotation, analysis and visualization of quantitative proteomics data, with emphasis on PTM networks and integration with LINCS library of chemical and genetic perturbation signatures in order to provide further mechanistic and functional insights. Primary input for server consists of set of peptides or proteins, optionally with PTM sites, and their corresponding abundance values.

Proper citation: piNET (RRID:SCR_018693) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_018737

    This resource has 1000+ mentions.

https://cistrome.shinyapps.io/timer/

Web server for comprehensive analysis of tumor infiltrating immune cells. Web tool for systematical analysis of immune infiltrates across diverse cancer types. Allows users to input function specific parameters, with resulting figures dynamically displayed to access tumor immunological, clinical, and genomic features.

Proper citation: TIMER (RRID:SCR_018737) 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.

Can't find the RRID you're searching for? X
  1. SPARC Anatomical Working Group Resources

    Welcome to the SPARC SAWG Resources search. From here you can search through a compilation of resources used by SPARC SAWG and see how data is organized within our community.

  2. Navigation

    You are currently on the Community Resources tab looking through categories and sources that SPARC SAWG 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.

  3. Logging in and Registering

    If you have an account on SPARC SAWG then you can log in from here to get additional features in SPARC SAWG such as Collections, Saved Searches, and managing Resources.

  4. Searching

    Here is the search term that is being executed, you can type in anything you want to search for. Some tips to help searching:

    1. Use quotes around phrases you want to match exactly
    2. You can manually AND and OR terms to change how we search between words
    3. You can add "-" to terms to make sure no results return with that term in them (ex. Cerebellum -CA1)
    4. You can add "+" to terms to require they be in the data
    5. Using autocomplete specifies which branch of our semantics you with to search and can help refine your search
  5. Save Your Search

    You can save any searches you perform for quick access to later from here.

  6. Query Expansion

    We recognized your search term and included synonyms and inferred terms along side your term to help get the data you are looking for.

  7. Collections

    If you are logged into SPARC SAWG you can add data records to your collections to create custom spreadsheets across multiple sources of data.

  8. Sources

    Here are the sources that were queried against in your search that you can investigate further.

  9. Categories

    Here are the categories present within SPARC SAWG that you can filter your data on

  10. Subcategories

    Here are the subcategories present within this category that you can filter your data on

  11. Further Questions

    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.

X