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http://narc.wustl.edu/narc/default.aspx
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented August 22, 2016. The Neurologic AIDS Research Consortium (NARC) is supported by the National Institutes of Health to design and carry out clinical trials to improve the therapy for HIV induced neurologic disease, and neurologic conditions associated with the AIDS virus. This consortium was established in 1993 when the NARC grant submitted by David B. Clifford, M.D. of Washington University School of Medicine was funded by the National Institute of Neurologic Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) to establish the consortium. Since that time the grant has supported studies of the natural history of neurologic performance in advanced AIDS, treatment of HIV associated peripheral neuropathy, progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy, and cytomegalovirus.
Proper citation: Neurologic AIDS Research Consortium (RRID:SCR_005019) Copy
http://krasnow1.gmu.edu/cn3/hippocampus3d/
Data files for a high resolution three dimensional (3D) structure of the rat hippocampus reconstructed from histological sections. The data files (supplementary data for Ropireddy et al., Neurosci., 2012 Mar 15;205:91-111) are being shared on the Windows Live cloud space provided by Microsoft. Downloadable data files include the Nissl histological images, the hippocampus layer tracings that can be visualized alone or superimposed to the corresponding Nissl images, the voxel database coordinates, and the surface rendering VRML files. * Hippocampus Nissl Images: The high resolution histological Nissl images obtained at 16 micrometer inter-slice distance for the Long-Evans rat hippocampus can be downloaded or directly viewed in a browser. This dataset consists of 230 jpeg images that cover the hippocampus from rostral to caudal poles. This image dataset is uploaded in seven parts as rar files. * Hippocampus Layer Tracings: The seven hippocampus layers ''ML, ''GC'', ''HILUS'' in DG and ''LM'', ''RAD'', ''PC'', ''OR'' in CA were segmented (traced) using the Reconstruct tool which can be downloaded from Synapse web. This tool outputs all the tracings for each image in XML format. The XML tracing files for all these seven layers for each of the above Nissl images are zipped into one file and can be downloaded. * Hippocampus VoxelDB: The 3D hippocampus reconstructed is volumetrically transformed into 16 micrometer sized voxels for all the seven layers. Each voxel is reported according to multiple coordinate systems, namely in Cartesian, along the natural hippocampal dimensions, and in reference to the canonical brain planes. The voxel database file is created in ascii format. The single voxel database file was split into three rar archive files. Please note that the three rar archive files should be downloaded and decompressed in a single directory in order to obtain the single voxel data file (Hippocampus-VoxelDB.txt). * 3D Surface Renderings: This is a rar archive file with a single VRML file containing the surface rendering of DG and CA layers. This VRML file can be opened and visualized in any VRML viewer, e.g. the open source software view3dscene. * 3D Hippocampus Movie: This movie contains visualization of the 3D surface renderings of CA (blue) and DG (red) inner and outer boundaries; neuronal embeddings of DG granule and CA pyramidal dendritic arbors; potential synapses between CA3b interneuron axon and pyramidal dendrite, and between CA2 pyramidal axon and CA pyramidal dendrites.
Proper citation: Hippocampus 3D Model (RRID:SCR_005083) Copy
http://www.musicianbrain.com/#index
The human brain has the remarkable ability to adapt in response to changes in the environment over the course of a lifetime. This is the mechanism for learning, growth, and normal development. Similar changes or adaptations can also occur in response to focal brain injuries, e.g., partially-adapted neighboring brain regions or functionally-related brain systems can either substitute for some of the lost function or develop alternative strategies to overcome a disability. Through ongoing research, the Music and Neuroimaging Laboratory''s mission is to: * Reveal the perceptual and cognitive aspects of music processing including the perception and memory for pitch, rhythmic, harmonic, and melodic stimuli. * Investigate the use of music and musical stimuli as an interventional tool for educational and therapeutic purposes. * Reveal the behavioral and neural correlates of learning, skill acquisition, and brain adaptation in response to changes in the environment or brain injury in the developing and adult brain. * Reveal the determinants and facilitators for recovery from brain injury. Project topics include: Aphasia Therapy, Singing and Speaking, Tone Deafness / Congenital Amusia, Motor Recovery Studies, Music and Emotions, Music and Autism, Children and Music Making, Brain Stimulation, Adult Musician Studies, Absolute Pitch Studies, Acute Stroke Studies
Proper citation: Music and Neuroimaging Laboratory (RRID:SCR_005447) Copy
https://github.com/neitzlab/sbfsem-tools
Data analysis and 3D visualization for connectomics and serial electron microscopy. This toolbox provides missing 3D visualization and analysis tools for cylinder-based annotations. Integration with contour, skeleton based annotations and common morphology file formats is also supported.
Proper citation: SBFSEM-tools (RRID:SCR_017350) Copy
https://github.com/SilverLabUCL/SilverLab-Microscope-Software
Software for use with compact Acousto-Optic Lens Microscope (AOLM) developed in the Silver Lab at UCL. Written in LabVIEW. Performs multiple imaging modes and protocols including Z-stacks, multi-plane, single-plane, sub-volume, patches and points. It comes with tools for visualising data acquired with system.
Proper citation: Silver Lab Microscopy Software (RRID:SCR_017456) Copy
https://github.com/mne-tools/mne-bids/
Software Python package to link Brain Imaging Data Structure and MNE-Python software for analyzing neurophysiology data with goal to make analyses faster to code, more robust to errors, and easily shareable with colleagues. Provides programmable interface for BIDS datasets in electrophysiology with MNE-Python. Used for organizing electrophysiological data into BIDS format and facilitating their analysis.
Proper citation: MNE-BIDS (RRID:SCR_018766) Copy
Set of measures intended for use in large-scale genomic studies. Facilitate replication and validation across studies. Includes links to standards and resources in effort to facilitate data harmonization to legacy data. Measurement protocols that address wide range of research domains. Information about each protocol to ensure consistent data collection.Collections of protocols that add depth to Toolkit in specific areas.Tools to help investigators implement measurement protocols.
Proper citation: Phenotypes and eXposures Toolkit (RRID:SCR_006532) Copy
Software tool as robust preprocessing pipeline for functional MRI.Used for preprocessing of diverse fMRI data.
Proper citation: fMRIPrep (RRID:SCR_016216) Copy
https://www.rarediseasesnetwork.org/cms/create/researchers/biorepository
Biorepository of samples collected from patients with ALS, ALS-frontotemporal dementia (ALS-FTD), primary lateral sclerosis (PLS), progressive muscular atrophy (PMA), hereditary spastic paraplegia (HSP) and multisystem proteinopathy (MSP). Used by Consortium members and the scientific community to advance therapeutic development through study of the relationship between clinical phenotype and underlying genotype, and also through the discovery and development of biomarkers.
Proper citation: CReATE (RRID:SCR_016436) Copy
Project to create network based understanding of biology by cataloging changes in gene expression and other cellular processes when cells are exposed to genetic and environmental stressors. Program to develop therapies that might restore pathways and networks to their normal states. Has LINCS Data Coordination and Integration Center and six Data and Signature Generation Centers: Drug Toxicity Signature Generation Center, HMS LINCS Center, LINCS Center for Transcriptomics, LINCS Proteomic Characterization Center for Signaling and Epigenetics, MEP LINCS Center, and NeuroLINCS Center.
Proper citation: LINCS Project (RRID:SCR_016486) Copy
Web tool to search multiple public variant databases simultaneously and provide a unified interface to facilitate the search process. Used for integration of human and model organism genetic resources to facilitate functional annotation of the human genome. Used for analysis of human genes and variants by cross-disciplinary integration of records available in public databases to facilitate clinical diagnosis and basic research.
Proper citation: MARRVEL (RRID:SCR_016871) Copy
http://pklab.med.harvard.edu/scde/pagoda.links.html
Software tool for analyzing transcriptional heterogeneity to detect statistically significant ways in which measured cells can be classified. Used to resolve multiple, potentially overlapping aspects of transcriptional heterogeneity by testing gene sets for coordinated variability among measured cells.
Proper citation: PAGODA (RRID:SCR_017099) Copy
https://github.com/FeeLab/seqNMF
Software tool for unsupervised discovery of sequential structure. Used to detect sequences in neural data generated by internal behaviors, such as animal thinking or sleeping. Used for unsupervised discovery of temporal sequences in high dimensional datasets in neuroscience without reference to external markers.
Proper citation: seqNMF (RRID:SCR_017068) Copy
http://www.bri.ucla.edu/research/resources
Brain bank resources which include postmortem human frozen brain tissue and matched cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and blood available for scientists to search for etiopathogeneses of human disease. The National Neurological Research Specimen Bank and the Multiple Sclerosis Human Neurospecimen Bank maintains a collection of quick frozen and formalin fixed postmortem human brain tissue and frozen cerebrospinal fluid from patients with neurological diseases, including Alzheimer's Disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, depressive disorder/suicide, and epilepsy, among others. Diagnoses are documented by clinical medical records and gross/microscopic neuropathology. The Neuropathology Laboratory at the UCLA Medical Center maintains a bank of frozen, formalin and paraformaldehyde-fixed and paraffin-embedded postmortem human brain tissues and frozen cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) from patients who die with Alzheimer's disease and other dementing and degenerative illnesses, as well as control materials removed in a similar fashion from patients who are neurologically normal.
Proper citation: Brain Research Institute Biobank Resources (RRID:SCR_008756) Copy
http://mayoresearch.mayo.edu/mayo/research/dickson_lab/
A brain bank and laboratory focused on memory and motor disorders. Brains are sent to the laboratory for diagnosis and research for the State of Florida Alzheimer Disease Initiative and for the Society for Progressive Supranuclear Palsy. As part of this brain banking function, fixed and frozen brain samples are obtained at autopsy and sent to the laboratory for diagnostic evaluation and for various types of research studies. The major types of analyses performed on the brain samples include neuro-histology, immunohistochemistry, confocal microscopy, electron microscopy and image analysis, as well as immunoassays. The latter are based upon Western blotting and enzyme linked immunoassays. The laboratory has a specific interest in the interface between normal aging and Alzheimer's disease, as well as in non-Alzheimer's degenerative disorders such as Lewy body dementia, corticobasal degeneration, progressive supranuclear palsy and frontotemporal dementia. The primary focus of research on aging is neuropathologic characterization of brains of individuals who had been prospectively and longitudinally evaluated during life. These studies aim to determine differences in a range of biologic parameters in brains of people with normal cognitive, mild cognitive impairment and dementia. Their focus on Parkinson's disease is to identify preclinical Parkinson's disease in order to develop means for early diagnosis.
Proper citation: Mayo Clinic Jacksonville: Neuropathology and Microscopy (RRID:SCR_008753) Copy
http://trans.nih.gov/bmap/index.htm
The Brain Molecular Anatomy Project is a trans-NIH project aimed at understanding gene expression and function in the nervous system. BMAP has two major scientific goals: # Gene discovery: to catalog of all the genes expressed in the nervous system, under both normal and abnormal conditions. # Gene expression analysis: to monitor gene expression patterns in the nervous system as a function of cell type, anatomical location, developmental stage, and physiological state, and thus gain insight into gene function. In pursuit of these goals, BMAP has launched several initiatives to provide resources and funding opportunities for the scientific community. These include several Requests for Applications and Requests for Proposals, descriptions of which can be found in this Web site. BMAP is also in the process of establishing physical and electronic resources for the community, including repositories of cDNA clones for nervous system genes, and databases of gene expression information for the nervous system. Most of the BMAP initiatives so far have focused on the mouse as a model species because of the ease of experimental and genetic manipulation of this organism, and because many models of human disease are available in the mouse. However, research in humans, other mammalian species, non-mammalian vertebrates, and invertebrates is also being funded through BMAP. For the convenience of interested investigators, we have established this Web site as a central information resource, focusing on major NIH-sponsored funding opportunities, initiatives, genomic resources available to the research community, courses and scientific meetings related to BMAP initiatives, and selected reports and publications. When appropriate, we will also post initiatives not directly sponsored by BMAP, but which are deemed relevant to its goals. Posting decisions are made by the Trans-NIH BMAP Committee
Proper citation: BMAP - Brain Molecular Anatomy Project (RRID:SCR_008852) Copy
https://github.com/BRAINSia/BRAINSTools/tree/master/BRAINSDemonWarp
A command line program for image registration by using different methods including Thirion and diffeomorphic demons algorithms. The function takes in a template image and a target image along with other optional parameters and registers the template image onto the target image. The resultant deformation fields and metric values can be written to a file. The program uses the Insight Toolkit (www.ITK.org) for all the computations, and can operate on any of the image types supported by that library. This a an ITK based implementation of various forms of Thirion Demons based registration (including diffeomorphic demons registration originating from Tom Vercauteren at INRIA ).
Proper citation: BRAINSDemonWarp (RRID:SCR_009524) Copy
Data repository for neuroimaging data in DlCOM and NIFTI formats. It allows users to search for and freely download publicly available data sets relating to normal subjects and those with diagnoses such as: schizophrenia, ADHD, autism, and Parkinson's disease.XNAT-based image registry that supports both NIfTI and DICOM images to promote re-use and integration of NIH funded data.
Proper citation: NITRC-IR (RRID:SCR_004162) Copy
The National Institute of Mental Health Data Archive (NDA) makes available human subjects data collected from hundreds of research projects across many scientific domains. Research data repository for data sharing and collaboration among investigators. Used to accelerate scientific discovery through data sharing across all of mental health and other research communities, data harmonization and reporting of research results. Infrastructure created by National Database for Autism Research (NDAR), Research Domain Criteria Database (RDoCdb), National Database for Clinical Trials related to Mental Illness (NDCT), and NIH Pediatric MRI Repository (PedsMRI).
Proper citation: NIMH Data Archive (RRID:SCR_004434) Copy
http://caintegrator-info.nci.nih.gov/rembrandt
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on April 28,2023. REMBRANDT is a data repository containing diverse types of molecular research and clinical trials data related to brain cancers, including gliomas, along with a wide variety of web-based analysis tools that readily facilitate the understanding of critical correlations among the different data types. REMBRANDT aims to be the access portal for a national molecular, genetic, and clinical database of several thousand primary brain tumors that is fully open and accessible to all investigators (including intramural and extramural researchers), as well as the public at-large. The main focus is to molecularly characterize a large number of adult and pediatric primary brain tumors and to correlate those data with extensive retrospective and prospective clinical data. Specific data types hosted here are gene expression profiles, real time PCR assays, CGH and SNP array information, sequencing data, tissue array results and images, proteomic profiles, and patients'''' response to various treatments. Clinical trials'''' information and protocols are also accessible. The data can be downloaded as raw files containing all the information gathered through the primary experiments or can be mined using the informatics support provided. This comprehensive brain tumor data portal will allow for easy ad hoc querying across multiple domains, thus allowing physician-scientists to make the right decisions during patient treatments., THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 16,2025.
Proper citation: Repository of molecular brain neoplasia data (RRID:SCR_004704) Copy
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