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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 4 showing 61 ~ 80 out of 203 results
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  • RRID:SCR_014804

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

https://github.com/HussainiLab/BatchTINTV3

GUI created by the Taub Institute in order to create an end-user friendly batch processing solution to complement Axona's new command line modification of TINT. This GUI allows the user to define a directory. Within this directory it will be continuously (unless closed) searching for new files to analyze via TINT.

Proper citation: BatchTINT (RRID:SCR_014804) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_015846

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://www.iu.edu/~beca/

Visualization and analysis software for interactive visual exploration and mining of fiber-tracts and brain networks with their genetic determinants and functional outcomes. BECA includes an fMRI and Diseases Analysis version as well as a Genome Explorer version.

Proper citation: BECA (RRID:SCR_015846) Copy   


http://health.usf.edu/byrd/adrc/index.htm

A statewide consortium dedicated to Alzheimer's disease research to better understand the disease and related memory disorders. It includes Alzheimer's researchers and clinicians from institutions across Florida such as USF Health, Mayo Clinic Jacksonville, and Mount Sinai Medical Center. The purpose of the ADRC is to assist institutions in developing an infrastructure (cores) that can be used for various research projects with the goal of better understanding Alzheimer's disease and related disorders. The Florida ADRC is comprised of six cores, three projects and three pilot projects among other collaborations that utilize these cores.

Proper citation: Florida Alzheimer's Disease Research Center (RRID:SCR_004940) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_021721

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

https://github.com/kukionfr/VAMPIRE_open

Software tool for analysis of cell and nuclear morphology from fluorescence or bright field images. Enables profiling and classification of cells into shape modes based on equidistant points along cell and nuclear contours. Robust method to quantify cell morphological heterogeneity.

Proper citation: VAMPIRE (RRID:SCR_021721) Copy   


http://ncrad.iu.edu/

Cell repository for Alzheimer's disease that collects and maintains biological specimens and associated data. Its data is derived from large numbers of genetically informative, phenotypically well-characterized families with multiple individuals affected with Alzheimer's disease, as well as individuals for case-control studies.

Proper citation: National Cell Repository for Alzheimer's Disease (RRID:SCR_007313) Copy   


http://www.nia.nih.gov/research/nonhuman-primate-tissue-bank-handbook

A repository of tissue collected from nonhuman primate (NHP) species under contractual arrangement with Wisconsin National Primate Research Center (WI NPRC). NIA''''s Nonhuman Primate Tissue Bank collects and archives tissue from necropsies performed at primate centers nationwide. The goal is to collect various tissues from aged monkeys with smaller amounts of the same tissues from young and middle-aged monkeys. Tissue will be provided as: (1) fresh frozen, stored at ����?��������??80 degrees Celsius; (2) formalin fixed; or (3) fresh frozen tissue in OCT medium.Most frozen tissues are provided in approximately 1 gram of tissue per vial. Fixed tissue is available as slides (sections) from paraffin-embedded blocks. Slides can be stained if requested. Tissue from NIA''''s Nonhuman Primate Tissue Bank is available to investigators at academic and nonprofit research institutions who are engaged in funded research on aging. The project name and funding source must accompany all orders. The NIA will not be able to ship non-human primate tissue outside of the United States or US territories. Investigators at for-profit entities are not eligible to purchase tissue from NIA''''s Nonhuman Primate Tissue Bank unless it is for a Small Business Innovation Research grant from NIA. NIA provides the health information as given by the donor site and cannot guarantee other aspects of the health status not explicitly stated in the Vital Statistics Information Sheet. Concerns about the specific health status of donor animals should be indicated on the order form.

Proper citation: NIA Nonhuman Primate Tissue Bank (RRID:SCR_007324) Copy   


http://senselab.med.yale.edu/odormapdb

OdorMapDB is designed to be a database to support the experimental analysis of the molecular and functional organization of the olfactory bulb and its basis for the perception of smell. It is primarily concerned with archiving, searching and analyzing maps of the olfactory bulb generated by different methods. The first aim is to facilitate comparison of activity patterns elicited by odor stimulation in the glomerular layer obtained by different methods in different species. It is further aimed at facilitating comparison of these maps with molecular maps of the projections of olfactory receptor neuron subsets to different glomeruli, especially for gene targeted animals and for antibody staining. The main maps archived here are based on original studies using 2-deoxyglucose and on current studies using high resolution fMRI in mouse and rat. Links are also provided to sites containing maps by other laboratories. OdorMapDB thus serves as a nodal point in a multilaboratory effort to construct consensus maps integrating data from different methodological approaches. OdorMapDB is integrated with two other databases in SenseLab: ORDB, a database of olfactory receptor genes and proteins, and OdorDB, a database of odor molecules that serve as ligands for the olfactory receptor proteins. The combined use of the three integrated databases allows the user to identify odor ligands that activate olfactory receptors that project to specific glomeruli that are involved in generating the odor activity maps.

Proper citation: Olfactory Bulb Odor Map DataBase (OdorMapDB) (RRID:SCR_007287) Copy   


http://www.grc.nia.nih.gov/branches/blsa/blsanew.htm

America''s longest-running scientific study of human aging, begun in 1958. BLSA scientists are learning what happens as people age and how to sort out changes due to aging from those due to disease or other causes. More than 1,400 men and women are study volunteers. They range in age from their 20s to their 90s. This study is currently recruiting healthy seniors over 70.

Proper citation: Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging (BLSA) (RRID:SCR_013148) Copy   


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

A Matlab tool to perform statistical analysis on cortical thickness signals on brain surfaces obtained from Freesurfer. It is used for multi-resolutional analysis of such cortical thickness signals and detecting group differences. It is based on the Spectral Graph Wavelet Transform (SGWT) toolbox and provides plug and play methods for deriving Wavelet Multiscale Descriptor (WMD), cortical thickness smoothing using SGWT, Multivariate General Linear Model (MGLM), and False Discovery Rate (FDR).

Proper citation: Wisconsin Cortical Thickness Analysis (CTA) Toolbox (RRID:SCR_014180) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_019101

https://delaney.shinyapps.io/CAIRN/

Web tool to graph all copy number alterations present in segment file. Custom data is permitted. Allows to display copy number alterations which overlap user specified region, to quantify number of amplified CNAs and deleted CNAs. Visualization tool to explore copy number alterations discovered in published cancer datasets. Intended to help oncology community observe of relative rates of amplification, deletion, and mutation of interesting genes and regions.

Proper citation: CAIRN (RRID:SCR_019101) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_017221

    This resource has 10+ mentions.

https://exrna-atlas.org

Software tool as data and metadata repository of Extracellular RNA Communication Consortium. Atlas includes small RNA sequencing and qPCR derived exRNA profiles from human and mouse biofluids. All RNAseq datasets are processed using version 4 of exceRpt small RNAseq pipeline. Atlas accepts submissions for RNAseq or qPCR data.

Proper citation: exRNA Atlas (RRID:SCR_017221) Copy   


Issue

https://www.nature.com/articles/nprot.2014.042

Software tool as scripts for calculating NMR chemical shifts. Warning - this group of Python scripts used to process NMR data, described in Willoughby et al, 2014, has been found to contain bug. Please see PMID:31591889.

Proper citation: Willoughby–Hoye Python Scripts A-D (RRID:SCR_017562) Copy   


http://www.nitrc.org/projects/sri24/

An MRI-based atlas of normal adult human brain anatomy, generated by template-free nonrigid registration from images of 24 normal control subjects. The atlas comprises T1, T2, and PD weighted structural MRI, tissue probability maps (GM, WM, CSF), maximum-likelihood tissue segmentation, DTI-based measures (FA, MD, longitudinal and transversal diffusivity), and two labels maps of cortical regions and subcortical structures. The atlas is provided at 1mm isotropic image resolution in Analyze, NIFTI, and Nrrd format. We are also providing an experimental packaging for use with SPM8.

Proper citation: SRI24 Atlas: Normal Adult Brain Anatomy (RRID:SCR_002551) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_009015

    This resource has 100+ mentions.

https://www.accordtrial.org/public

Study testing whether strict glucose control lowers the risk of heart disease and stroke in adults with type 2 diabetes. In addition the study is exploring: 1) Whether in the context of good glycemic control the use of different lowering lipid drugs will further improve these outcomes and 2) If strict control of blood pressure will also have additional beneficial effects on reducing cardiovascular disease. The design was a randomized, multicenter, double 2 X 2 factorial trial in 10,251 patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus. It was designed to test the effects on major CVD events of intensive glycemia control, of fibrate treatment to increase HDL-cholesterol and lower triglycerides (in the context of good LDL-C and glycemia control), and of intensive blood pressure control (in the context of good glycemia control), each compared to an appropriate control. All 10,251 participants were in an overarching glycemia trial. In addition, one 2 X 2 trial addressed the lipid question in 5,518 of the participants and the other 2 X 2 trial addressed the blood pressure question in 4,733 of the participants. The glycemia trial was terminated early due to higher mortality in the intensive compared with the standard glycemia treatment strategies. The results were published in June 2008 (N Eng J Med 2008;358:2545-59). Study-delivered treatment for all ACCORD participants was stopped on June 30, 2009, and the participants were assisted as needed in transferring their care to a personal physician. The lipid and blood pressure results (as well as the microvascular outcomes and eye substudy results) were published in 2010. All participants are continuing to be followed in a non-treatment observational study.

Proper citation: ACCORD (RRID:SCR_009015) Copy   


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

A Matlab implementation for efficient permutation testing by using matrix completion.

Proper citation: Efficient Permutation Testing (RRID:SCR_014104) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_004389

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://cbl.uh.edu/ORION/research/software

ORION is our neuron reconstruction software package developed for the morphological reconstruction of neurons from confocal and multiphoton microscopy data. It accepts raw neuron stack data as input and it is capable of reconstructing the neuron structure, visualizing the output, and exporting the reconstruction in a variety of formats. We are developing tools that will enable Neuroscientists to explore single neuron function via sophisticated image analysis. Advanced optical imaging can produce both structural and functional data and is at the forefront of experimentally exploring the fast, small-scale dynamics of living neurons. Further, compartmental modeling of neuronal function enables rapid testing of hypotheses and estimating experimentally inaccessible parameters. Combining these two techniques will afford unprecedented capabilities in the study of single neuron function. Our software utility bridges the two Neuroscience techniques by rapidly, accurately, and robustly generating, from structural image data, a cylindrical morphology model suitable for simulating neuronal function.

Proper citation: ORION Software (RRID:SCR_004389) Copy   


http://www.rand.org/labor/FLS/IFLS.html

A dataset of an on-going multi-level longitudinal survey in Indonesia that collects extensive information on socio-economic and demographic characteristics of respondents, as well as extremely comprehensive interviews with local leaders about community services and facilities. The survey is ideally suited for research on topics related to important dynamic aging processes such as the transition from self-sufficiency to dependency, the decline from robust health to frailty, labor force and earning dynamics, wealth accumulation and decumulation, living arrangements and intergenerational transfers. The first wave of IFLS was fielded in 1993 and collected information on over 30,000 individuals living in 7,200 households. The sample covers 321 communities in 13 provinces in Indonesia and is representative of about 83% of the population. These households were revisited in 1997 (IFLS2), 2000 (IFLS3), and 2007-8 (IFLS4). A 25% sub-sample of households was re-interviewed in 1998 (IFLS2+). Special attention is paid to the measurement of health, including the measurement of anthropometry, blood pressure, lung capacity, a mobility test and collection of dry blood spots by a nurse or doctor. In addition to comprehensive life history data on education, work, migration, marriage and child bearing, the survey collects very detailed information on economic status of individuals and households. Links with non co-resident family members are spelled out in conjunction with information on borrowing and transfers. Information is gathered on participation in community activities and in public assistance programs. Measurement of health is a major focus of the survey. In addition to detailed information about use of private and public health services along with insurance status, respondents provide a self-reported assessment of health status. Detailed information on the local economy and prices of goods and services are also collected. These data may be matched with the individual and household-level data. Considerable attention has been placed on minimizing attrition in IFLS. In each re-survey, about 95% of households have been re-contacted. Around 10-15% of respondents have moved from the location in which they were interviewed in the previous wave. In addition, individuals who split-off from the original households have been followed. They have added around 1,000 households to the sample in 1997 and about 3,000 households in 2000. Data Availability: IFLS1 data are available through ICPSR as study number 6706. Data from subsequent waves of the IFLS can be accessed from the RAND project Website. * Dates of Study: 1993-2008 * Study Features: Longitudinal, International, Anthropometric Measures, Biomarkers * Sample Size: ** 1993: 22,000 (IFLS1) ** 1997: 33,000 (IFLS2) ** 1998: 10,000 (IFLS2+) ** 2000: 37,000 (IFLS3) ** 2008: 44,103 (IFLS4) Links: * IFLS1 ICPSR: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/06706 * IFLS ICPSR: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/00184

Proper citation: Indonesia Family Life Survey (RRID:SCR_005695) Copy   


http://lasurvey.rand.org/

A dataset of a panel study of a representative sample of all neighborhoods and households in Los Angeles County, with poor neighborhoods and families with children oversampled, for investigating the social and economic determinants of health and race and ethnic disparities. The study follows neighborhoods over time, as well as children and families. Two waves have been conducted to date, in 2000-2001 (L.A.FANS 1) and again beginning in 2006 through early 2009 (L.A. FANS 2). L.A.FANS-2 will significantly enhance the utility of the L.A.FANS data for studies of adult health disparities by: 1) Replicating self-reported health measures from L.A.FANS-1 and collecting new self-reports on treatment, health behaviors, functional limitations, quality and quantity of sleep, anxiety, health status vignettes, and changes in health status since the first interview; 2) Collecting physiological markers of disease and health status, including diabetes, hypertension, obesity, lung function, immune function, and cardiovascular disease; and 3) Expanding the data collected on adults'' work conditions, stressful experiences, and social ties. Wherever possible, L.A.FANS uses well-tested questions or sections from national surveys, such as the Health and Retirement Study (HRS), Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID), National Longitudinal Surveys (NLS), and National Health Interview Survey (NHIS), and other urban surveys, such as the Project on Human Development in Chicago Neighborhoods, to facilitate comparisons. Data Availability: Public use data, study design, and questionnaire content from L.A.FANS are available for downloading. Researchers can also apply for a restricted use version of the L.A.FANS-1 data that contain considerable contextual and geographically-referenced information. Application procedures are described at the project Website. L.A.FANS-2 fieldwork was completed at the end of 2008. The PIs anticipate L.A.FANS-2 public use data will be released in summer 2009. * Dates of Study: 2000-2008 * Study Features: Longitudinal, Minority Oversamples, Anthropometric Measures, Biospecimens * Sample Size: ** 2000-1: 2,548 (L.A.FANS 1) ** 2006-8: ~3,600 (L.A.FANS 2) Link: * ICPSR: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/00172

Proper citation: Los Angeles Family and Neighborhood Survey (RRID:SCR_008923) Copy   


http://www.alz.washington.edu/

A clinical research, neuropathological research and collaborative research database that uses data collected from 29 NIA-funded Alzheimer's Disease Centers (ADCs). The database consists of several datasets, and searches may be done on the entire database or on individual datasets. Any researcher, whether affiliated with an ADC or not, may request a data file for analysis or aggregate data tables. Requested aggregate data tables are produced and returned as soon as the queue allows (usually within 1-3 days depending on the complexity).

Proper citation: National Alzheimer's Coordinating Center (RRID:SCR_007327) Copy   


http://www.nia.nih.gov/research/intramural-research-program/dynamics-health-aging-and-body-composition-health-abc

A study that characterizes the extent of change in body composition in older men and women, identifies clinical conditions accelerating these changes, and examines the health impact of these changes on strength, endurance, disability, and weight-related diseases of old age. The study population consists of 3,075 persons age 70-79 at baseline with about equal numbers of men and women. Thirty-three percent of the men are African-Americans as are 46% of the women. All persons in the study were selected to be free of disability in activities of daily living and free of functional limitation (defined as any difficulty walking a quarter of a mile or any difficulty walking up 10 steps without resting) at baseline. The core yearly examination for HEALTH ABC includes measurement of body composition by dual energy x-ray absorptio��������metry (DXA), walking ability, strength, an interview that includes self-report of limitations, a medication survey, and weight (Measurements in the Health ABC Study). Provision has been made for banking of blood specimens and extracted DNA (HealthABC repository). Study investigators are open to collaboration especially for measures focused on obesity and associated weight-related health conditions including osteoporosis, osteoarthritis, pulmonary function, cardiovascular disease, vascular disease, diabetes and glucose intolerance, and depression. The principal goals of the HEALTH ABC are: # To assess the association of baseline body weight, lean body mass, body fat, and bone mineral content, in relation to weight history, with: incident functional limitation; incidence and change in severity of weight-related health conditions; recovery of physical function after an acute event; baseline measures of strength, fitness and physical performance; gender, ethnicity and socioeconomic status # To access the contribution of episodes of severe acute illness in healthier older persons to changes in body weight, bone mineral content, lean body mass and body fat, and the relationship of these episodes to risk of functional limitation and recovery. # To assess the impact of weight-related co-morbid illness on the risk of functional limitation and recovery. # To assess the ways in which physiologic mediators of change in body composition influence and are influenced by changes in health in older adults and contribute to change in body composition; to understand how changes in body composition affect weight-related cardiovascular disease risk factors such as lipids, blood pressure and glucose tolerance. # To assess the interdependency of behavioral factors, such as nutrition and physical activity, co-morbid health conditions, and their association with change in body composition in old age. # To provide a firm scientific basis for understanding issues related to weight recommendations in old age through increased knowledge of the potential trade-offs between weight and risk of functional limitation, disability, morbidity and death; to provide information critical for developing effective strategies for the maintenance of health in older persons.

Proper citation: Dynamics of Health Aging and Body Composition (Health ABC) (RRID:SCR_008813) Copy   



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