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| Resource Name | Proper Citation | Abbreviations | Resource Type |
Description |
Keywords | Resource Relationships | |||||||||||||
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Criminal Justice Drug Abuse Treatment Studies Resource Report Resource Website |
Criminal Justice Drug Abuse Treatment Studies (RRID:SCR_006996) | CJ-DATS, CJDATS | knowledge environment | A cooperative research program to explore the issues related to the complex system of offender treatment services. Nine research centers and a Coordinating Center were created in partnership with researchers, criminal justice professionals, and drug abuse treatment practitioners to form a national research infrastructure. The establishment of CJ-DATS is an outstanding example of cooperation among Federal agencies with the research community... We need to understand how to provide better drug treatment services for criminal justice offenders to alter their drug use and criminal behavior. - Dr. Nora Volkow, Director of NIDA. CJ-DATS PHASE I In 2002, NIDA launched the National Criminal Justice����������Drug Abuse Treatment Studies (CJ-DATS). CJ-DATS is a multisite research program aimed at improving the treatment of offenders with drug use disorders and integrating criminal justice and public health responses to drug involved offenders. From 2002 through 2008, CJ-DATS researchers from 9 research centers, a coordinating center, and NIDA worked together with federal, state, and local criminal justice partners to develop and test integrated approaches to the treatment of offenders with drug use disorders. The areas that were studied included: * Assessing Offender Problems * Measuring Progress in Treatment and Recovery * Linking Criminal Justice and Drug Abuse Treatment * Adolescent Interventions * HIV and Hepatitis Risk Reduction * Understanding Systems CJ-DATS PHASE II In 2008, CJ-DATS began to focus on the problems of implementing research-based practices drug treatment practices. This research concerns the organizational and systems processes involved in implementing valid, evidence-based practices to reduce drug use and drug-related recidivism for individuals in the criminal justice system. 12 CJ-DATS Research Centers are conducting implementation research in three primary domains: * Research to improve the implementation of evidence-based assessment processes for offenders with drug problems * Implementing effective treatment for drug-involved offenders * Implementing evidence-based interventions to improve an HIV continuum-of-care for offenders | drug, aids, criminal, health, hiv, offender, treatment, justice, drug abuse, drug treatment service, criminal justice offender, drug use, criminal behavior, recovery, adolescent, intervention, hepatitis |
is related to: NIDA Networking Project: Facilitating information exchange and research collaboration has parent organization: National Institute on Drug Abuse |
Drug use disorder | NIDA | nif-0000-10202 | SCR_006996 | Criminal Justice-Drug Abuse Treatment Studies | 2026-02-14 02:01:16 | 0 | ||||||
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National Institute on Drug Abuse Media Guide Resource Report Resource Website |
National Institute on Drug Abuse Media Guide (RRID:SCR_006850) | NIDA Media Guide | data or information resource, narrative resource, report | The latest findings on the science of drug abuse and addiction and commonly abused drugs, and lists resources for more information. They are committed to bringing timely, factual information on addiction and treatment to the press and public. NIDA''s Public Information and Liaison Branch (PILB) is part of NIDA''s Office of Science Policy and Communications. Linking scientists, the scientific community, and the media, PILB supports the rapid dissemination of research information to inform policy and to improve practice. NIDA''s goal is to ensure that science - not ideology or anecdote - forms the foundation of public information on drug abuse and addiction. NIDAs online MEDIA GUIDE provides answers on how to find what you need to know about drug abuse and addiction, including information on the basics (The Science of Drug Abuse and Addiction and Commonly Abused Drugs), resources (Where to Find Nationwide Trends and Statistics, NIDA Resources, and Other Government Web Sites for Health and Science Information), NIDAs history and background, a glossary and relevant contact information. NIDA is pleased to offer this guide to the important findings that are emerging as a result of research on addiction and its treatment. NIDA, part of the National Institutes of Health under the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, supports most of the world''s research on drug abuse and addiction, including basic and behavioral science research that addresses fundamental and essential questions relevant to drug abuse, ranging from its causes and consequences to its treatment and prevention. The purpose of this guide is to give journalists fast and user-friendly access to the latest scientific information but it is useful for anyone interested in how to access accurate information about drug abuse and addiction. In more than three decades as a researcher, I have seen the impact that science and health journalists have had in bringing scientific research to the public. It is through information that Americans gain hope and understanding. I have come to know many of you over the years and remain committed to releasing scientific information as quickly as possible for rapid dissemination to the public. Please keep this guide nearby as a useful tool and let us know how NIDA''s public liaison staff can help you reach your information and deadline needs. A PDF version is available for download. | drug of abuse, prevention, research, substance-related disorder, treatment, drug abuse, substance abuse, publication | has parent organization: National Institute on Drug Abuse | Substance-related disorder | NIDA | nif-0000-23843 | SCR_006850 | 2026-02-14 02:01:17 | 0 | |||||||
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NeuroPedia Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
NeuroPedia (RRID:SCR_001551) | NeuroPedia | data or information resource, database | A neuropeptide encyclopedia of peptide sequences (including genomic and taxonomic information) and spectral libraries of identified MS/MS spectra of homolog neuropeptides from multiple species. | proteomics, peptide, neuropeptide, mass spectrometry assay, peptide sequence, spectrum, homolog | has parent organization: Center for Computational Mass Spectrometry | NCRR P41-RR024851; NIDA 5K01DA23065; NINDS R01 NS24553; NIDA R01 DA04271; NIMH R01 MH077305; NHLBI P01 HL58120 |
PMID:21821666 | Free, Freely available | nlx_152894 | SCR_001551 | NeuroPedia: Neuropeptide database and spectra library | 2026-02-14 02:05:35 | 12 | |||||
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PolymiRTS Resource Report Resource Website 100+ mentions |
PolymiRTS (RRID:SCR_003389) | PolymiRTS | data or information resource, database | Database of naturally occurring DNA variations in microRNA (miRNA) seed regions and miRNA target sites. MicroRNAs pair to the transcripts of protein-coding genes and cause translational repression or mRNA destabilization. SNPs and INDELs in miRNAs and their target sites may affect miRNA-mRNA interaction, and hence affect miRNA-mediated gene repression. The PolymiRTS database was created by scanning 3'UTRs of mRNAs in human and mouse for SNPs and INDELs in miRNA target sites. Then, the potential downstream effects of these polymorphisms on gene expression and higher-order phenotypes are identified. Specifically, genes containing PolymiRTSs, cis-acting expression QTLs, and physiological QTLs in mouse and the results of genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of human traits and diseases are linked in the database. The PolymiRTS database also includes polymorphisms in target sites that have been supported by a variety of experimental methods and polymorphisms in miRNA seed regions. | polymorphism, microrna, human, disease, trait, snp, indel, pathway, genetic variant, gene expression, phenotype, chromosome, chromosome location, bio.tools, FASEB list |
is listed by: OMICtools is listed by: bio.tools is listed by: Debian has parent organization: University of Tennessee Health Science Center; Tennessee; USA |
PhRMA Foundation ; UT Center for Integrative and Translational Genomics ; NICHD HD052472; NIAAA AA014425; NIDA DA021131; NINR NR009270; NIAID AI081050; NIAID AI019782; American Heart Association 0830134N; United States Department of Defense W81XHW-05-01-0227 |
PMID:24163105 PMID:22080514 |
Free, Available for download, Freely available | nif-0000-03324, biotools:polymirts, OMICS_00391 | https://bio.tools/polymirts | http://compbio.utmem.edu/miRSNP/ | SCR_003389 | Polymorphism in microRNA Target Site, PolymiRTS Database, Polymorphism in microRNAs and their TargetSites | 2026-02-14 02:06:12 | 149 | |||
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Pediatric Imaging Neurocognition and Genetics Resource Report Resource Website 50+ mentions |
Pediatric Imaging Neurocognition and Genetics (RRID:SCR_008953) | PING | data or information resource, database | A large multi-site pediatric MRI and genetics data resource to facilitate studies of the genomic landscape of the developing human brain. It includes information about the developing mental and emotional functions of the children to understand the genetic basis of individual differences in brain structure and connectivity, cognition, and personality. Investigators on the project are studying 1400 children between the ages of 3 and 20 years so that links between genetic variation and developing patterns of brain connectivity can be examined. Investigators interested in the effects of a particular gene will be able to search the database for any brain areas or connections between areas that differ as a function of variation in a particular gene, and also to determine if the genes appear to affect the course of brain development at some point during childhood. A data exploration tool has been created for mapping and analyzing MRI data sets collected for PING and related developmental studies. Approved investigators will be able to view raw image sets and derived 3D brain maps of MRI and DTI data, conduct hypothesis testing, and graph brain area measures as they change across the time course of development. PING Cores * Coordinating Core: Functions include project management, screening of participants and maintaining the database * Neuroimaging Core: applying a standardized high-resolution structural MRI protocol involving 3-D T1-weighted scans, a T2-weighted volume, and a set of diffusion-weighted scans with multiple b values and diffusion directions, scans to estimate MRI relaxation rates, and gradient echo EPI scans for resting state fMRI. Importantly, adaptive motion compensation, using ����??PROMO����??, a novel real-time motion correction algorithm will be used. Specific PING protocols for each scanner manufacturer: ** PING MRI Protocol - GE ** PING MRI Protocol - Philips ** PING MRI Protocol - Siemens * Assessment Core: Cognitive assessments for the PING project are conducted using the NIH Toolbox for Cognition. * Genomics Core: functions as a central repository for receipt of saliva samples collected for each study participant. Once received, samples are catalogued, maintained, and DNA is extracted using state-of-the-field laboratory techniques. Ultimately, genome-wide genotyping is performed on the extracted DNA using the Illumina Human660W-Quad BeadChip. PING involves 10 sites throughout the country including UCSD, University of Hawaii, Scripps Genomics, UCLA, UC Davis, Kennedy Krieger Institute/Johns Hopkins, Sacker Institute/Cornell University, University of Massachusetts, Massachusetts General Hospital/Harvard, and Yale. Families who may want to participate in the study, or others who want to know more about it, may email questions to ping (at) ucsd.edu. | pediatric, neuroimaging, genetics, child, early adult human, adolescent, genetic variant, magnetic resonance imaging, brain, gene, brain structure, connectivity, function, brain development, cognition, experimental protocol, saliva, dna, diffusion tensor imaging, image, genotype, dicom, imaging genomics, magnetic resonance, nifti, FASEB list |
is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC) is related to: NIH Toolbox - Assessment of Neurological and Behavioral Function has parent organization: University of California at San Diego; California; USA has parent organization: Multimodal Imaging Laboratory |
NIDA ; ARRA ; NICHD |
Data Use Agreement required. | nlx_151904 | http://www.nitrc.org/projects/ping | http://ping.chd.ucsd.edu/ | SCR_008953 | PING Study, Pediatric Imaging Neurocognition and Genetics (PING) | 2026-02-14 02:06:36 | 76 | ||||
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Zebrafish - SCORE Imaging: Specimen in a Corrected Optical Rotational Enclosure Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
Zebrafish - SCORE Imaging: Specimen in a Corrected Optical Rotational Enclosure (RRID:SCR_001300) | SCORE imaging | data or information resource, narrative resource | Narrative resource describing a visual data analysis and collection approach that takes advantage of the cylindrical nature of the zebrafish allowing for an efficient and effective method for image capture called, Specimen in a Corrected Optical Rotational Enclosure (SCORE) Imaging. To achieve a non-distorted image, zebrafish were placed in a fluorinated ethylene propylene (FEP) tube with a surrounding, optically corrected imaging solution: water. By similarly matching the refractive index of the housing (FEP tubing) to that of the inner liquid and outer liquid (water), distortion was markedly reduced, producing a crisp imagable specimen that is able to be fully rotated 360 degrees. A similar procedure was established for fixed zebrafish embryos using convenient, readily available borosilicate capillaries surrounded by 75% glycerol. The method described could be applied to chemical genetic screening and other, related high-throughput methods within the fish community and among other scientific fields. | format, authoring tool, embryo, microscopy, publishing format, image |
is listed by: FORCE11 has parent organization: Mayo Clinic Minnesota; Minnesota; USA has parent organization: University of Minnesota Twin Cities; Minnesota; USA |
NIGMS GM63904; NIDA DA14546 |
PMID:20528262 | nif-0000-07749 | SCR_001300 | Specimen in a Corrected Optical Rotational Enclosure imaging | 2026-02-14 02:06:59 | 11 | ||||||
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JAX Animal Behavior System Resource Report Resource Website |
JAX Animal Behavior System (RRID:SCR_023721) | JABS | software resource | Video based phenotyping platform for laboratory mouse. Provides complete details of software and hardware, including 3D designs used for data collection. Data acquisition system consists of video collection hardware and software, behavior labeling and active learning app, and online database for sharing classifiers. Hardware and software solution collects high quality data for behavior analysis. | OpenBehavior, data acquisition system, integrated mouse phenotyping platform, behavior analysis, | is listed by: OpenBehavior | Jackson Laboratory Directors Innovation Fund ; NIDA DA041668; NIDA DA048634 |
DOI:10.1101/2022.01.13.476229 | Free, Available for download, Freely available | SCR_023721 | 2026-02-14 02:05:08 | 0 | |||||||
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Antibody Watch Resource Report Resource Website |
Antibody Watch (RRID:SCR_027424) | knowledge base | Text mining antibody specificity from literature. Helps researchers identify potential problems with antibody specificity. By mining the scientific literature and linking findings to Research Resource Identifiers (RRIDs), it provides alerts on antibodies that may yield unreliable results, supporting reproducibility in biomedical research. | Text mining antibody specificity, identify potential problems with antibody specificity, identify potential problems, antibody specificity, antibody, scientific literature, | Ministry of Science and Technology ; Taiwan ; NIDDK U24DK097771; NIDA U24DA039832 |
PMID:34043624 | Free, Freely available | SCR_027424 | 2026-02-14 02:10:01 | 0 | |||||||||
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Substructure Index-based Approximate Graph Alignment Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
Substructure Index-based Approximate Graph Alignment (RRID:SCR_003434) | SAGA | software application, software resource | SAGA (Substructure Index-based Approximate Graph Alignment) is a tool for querying a biological graph database to retrieve matches between subgraphs of molecular interactions and biological networks. SAGA implements an efficient approximate subgraph matching algorithm that can be used for a variety of biological graph matching problems such as the pathway matching SAGA uses to compare pathways in KEGG and Reactome. You can also use SAGA to find matches in literature databases that have been parsed into semantic graphs. In this use of SAGA, portions of PubMed have been parsed into graphs that have nodes representing gene names. A link is drawn between two genes if they are discussed in the same sentence (indicating there is potential association between the two genes). SAGA lets you match graphs between different databases even though the content is distinct and the databases organize pathways in different ways. This cross-database matching is achieved by SAGA's flexible approximate subgraph matching model that computes graph similarity, and allows for node gaps, node mismatches, and graph structural differences. Comparing pathways from different databases can be a useful precursor to pathway data integration. SAGA is very efficient for querying relatively small graphs, but becomes prohibitory expensive for querying large graphs. Large graph data sets are common in many emerging database applications, and most notably in large-scale scientific applications. To fully exploit the wealth of information encoded in graphs, effective and efficient graph matching tools are critical. Due to the noisy and incomplete nature of real graph datasets, approximate, rather than exact, graph matching is required. Furthermore, many modern applications need to query large graphs, each of which has hundreds to thousands of nodes and edges. TALE is an approximate subgraph matching tool for matching graph queries with a large number of nodes and edges. TALE employs a novel indexing technique that achieves a high pruning power and scales linearly with the database size. | gene, algorithm, alignment, biological, graph, interaction, literature, molecular, pathway, query, reactome, structural, subgraph, substructure, tool, graph similarity |
is listed by: Biositemaps has parent organization: National Center for Integrative Biomedical Informatics has parent organization: University of Michigan; Ann Arbor; USA |
Microsoft ; NIDA 1-U54-DA021519-01A1 |
PMID:17110368 | Access free via the web; Binaries are also freely available. If you use SAGA for any work that leads to a publication you must cite paper. | nif-0000-33157 | SCR_003434 | SAGA (Substructure Index-based Approximate Graph Alignment), SAGA - Substructure Index-based Approximate Graph Alignment, SAGA: A Fast and Flexible Graph Matching Tool | 2026-02-15 09:18:30 | 24 | |||||
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FINDTHECAT Resource Report Resource Website |
FINDTHECAT (RRID:SCR_016036) | software application, software resource | Software that conducts a jspsych test for response time evaluation. Used in the ABCD Study. | psych, jspsych, psychology, response, time, evaluation, task, test, abcd, adolescent | NIDA U24 DA041123 | Free, Available for download | SCR_016036 | 2026-02-15 09:21:45 | 0 | ||||||||||
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stroop-task Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
stroop-task (RRID:SCR_016033) | software application, software resource | Software that conducts the Stroop Color Task. Used in the ABCD Study. | stroop, task, color, vision, abcd, adolesence, study | NIDA U24 DA041123 | Free, Available for download | SCR_016033 | 2026-02-15 09:21:31 | 1 | ||||||||||
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OmicsGAN Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
OmicsGAN (RRID:SCR_022976) | software application, software resource | Software generative adversarial network to integrate two omics data and their interaction network to generate one synthetic data corresponding to each omics profile that can result in better phenotype prediction. Used to capture information from interaction network as well as two omics datasets and fuse them to generate synthetic data with better predictive signals. | integrate two omics data, interaction network, generate one synthetic data corresponding to each omics profile, phenotype prediction | NSF III1755761; NIGMS R01GM113952; NIDA DK097771 |
PMID:34415323 | Free, Available for download, Freely available | SCR_022976 | Omics Generative Adversarial Network | 2026-02-15 09:23:07 | 1 | ||||||||
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Comprehensive Drug Self-administration and Discrimination Bibliographic Databases Resource Report Resource Website |
Comprehensive Drug Self-administration and Discrimination Bibliographic Databases (RRID:SCR_000707) | data or information resource, database, bibliography | Database of bibliographic details of over 9,000 references published between 1951 and the present day, and includes abstracts, journal articles, book chapters and books replacing the two former separate websites for Ian Stolerman's drug discrimination database and Dick Meisch's drug self-administration database. Lists of standardized keywords are used to index the citations. Most of the keywords are generic drug names but they also include methodological terms, species studied and drug classes. This index makes it possible to selectively retrieve references according to the drugs used as the training stimuli, drugs used as test stimuli, drugs used as pretreatments, species, etc. by entering your own terms or by using our comprehensive lists of search terms. Drug Discrimination Drug Discrimination is widely recognized as one of the major methods for studying the behavioral and neuropharmacological effects of drugs and plays an important role in drug discovery and investigations of drug abuse. In Drug Discrimination studies, effects of drugs serve as discriminative stimuli that indicate how reinforcers (e.g. food pellets) can be obtained. For example, animals can be trained to press one of two levers to obtain food after receiving injections of a drug, and to press the other lever to obtain food after injections of the vehicle. After the discrimination has been learned, the animal starts pressing the appropriate lever according to whether it has received the training drug or vehicle; accuracy is very good in most experiments (90 or more correct). Discriminative stimulus effects of drugs are readily distinguished from the effects of food alone by collecting data in brief test sessions where responses are not differentially reinforced. Thus, trained subjects can be used to determine whether test substances are identified as like or unlike the drug used for training. Drug Self-administration Drug Self-administration methodology is central to the experimental analysis of drug abuse and dependence (addiction). It constitutes a key technique in numerous investigations of drug intake and its neurobiological basis and has even been described by some as the gold standard among methods in the area. Self-administration occurs when, after a behavioral act or chain of acts, a feedback loop results in the introduction of a drug or drugs into a human or infra-human subject. The drug is usually conceptualized as serving the role of a positive reinforcer within a framework of operant conditioning. For example, animals can be given the opportunity to press a lever to obtain an infusion of a drug through a chronically-indwelling venous catheter. If the available dose of the drug serves as a positive reinforcer then the rate of lever-pressing will increase and a sustained pattern of responding at a high rate may develop. Reinforcing effects of drugs are distinguishable from other actions such as increases in general activity by means of one or more control procedures. Trained subjects can be used to investigate the behavioral and neuropharmacological basis of drug-taking and drug-seeking behaviors and the reinstatement of these behaviors in subjects with a previous history of drug intake (relapse models). Other applications include evaluating novel compounds for liability to produce abuse and dependence and for their value in the treatment of drug dependence and addiction. The bibliography is updated about four times per year. | drug, drug-seeking behavior, drug-taking behavior, abstract, behavior, behavioral neuropharmacology, discrimination, non-human vertebrate, publication, relapse, self-administration, substance-related disorder, book, journal article | has parent organization: University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston; Texas; USA | NIDA DA-04376 | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-00090 | http://www.drugrefs.org/ | SCR_000707 | Drug Self-administration and Discrimination Bibliographic Databases | 2026-02-16 09:45:19 | 0 | ||||||
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DeepNeuro Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
DeepNeuro (RRID:SCR_016911) | software resource, software toolkit | Software Python package for neuroimaging data. Framework to design and train neural network architectures. Used in medical imaging community to ensure consistent performance of networks across variable users, institutions, and scanners. | Design and train neural network architectures, medical imaging, neuroimaging data, neuroimaging |
uses: Python Programming Language is related to: Massachusetts General Hospital has parent organization: Harvard University; Cambridge; United States |
NIDA T90 DA022759; NIDA R90 DA023427; NIH Blueprint for Neuroscience Research ; NIBI ; NIBIB T32 EB1680; NCI U01 CA154601; NCI U24 CA180927; NCI U24 CA180918; NIBIB P41 EB015896 |
PMID:32578020 | Free, Available for download, Freely available | SCR_016911 | 2026-02-16 09:49:07 | 2 | ||||||||
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Subcellular Location Image Finder Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Subcellular Location Image Finder (RRID:SCR_006723) | SLIF | data or information resource, database, image | SLIF finds fluorescence microscope images in on-line journal articles, and indexes them according to cell line, proteins visualized, and resolution. Images can be accessed via the SLIF Web database. SLIF takes on-line papers and scans them for figures that contain fluorescence microscope images (FMIs). Figures typically contain multiple FMIs, to SLIF must segment these images into individual FMIs. When the FMI images are extracted, annotations for the images (for instance, names of proteins and cell-lines) are also extracted from the accompanying caption text. Protein annotation are also used to link to external databases, such as the Gene Ontology DB. The more detailed process includes: segmentation of images into panels; panel classification, to find FMIs; segmentation of the caption, to find which portions of the caption apply to which panels; text-based entity extraction; matching of extracted entities to database entries; extraction of panel labels from text and figures; and alignment of the text segments to the panels. Extracted FMIs are processed to find subcellular location features (SLFs), and the resulting analyzed, annotated figures are stored in a database, which is accessible via SQL queries. | fluorescence, annotation, cell, journal, microscope, protein, subcellular, image, cell line, fluorescence microscope, information retrieval, data mining |
is listed by: Biositemaps has parent organization: Carnegie Mellon University; Pennsylvania; USA |
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Tobacco Settlement Fund ; National Center for Integrative Biomedical Informatics ; NIGMS R01 GM078622; NIDA U54 DA021519 |
PMID:17990497 | nif-0000-10308 | SCR_006723 | SLIF - Subcellular Location Image Finder | 2026-02-16 09:46:47 | 1 | ||||||
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OKCAM: Ontology-based Knowledgebase for Cell Adhesion Molecules Resource Report Resource Website |
OKCAM: Ontology-based Knowledgebase for Cell Adhesion Molecules (RRID:SCR_010696) | OKCAM | data or information resource, database, knowledgebase | OKCAM (Ontology-based Knowledgebase for Cell Adhesion Molecules) is an online resource for human genes known or predicted to be related to the processes of cell adhesion. These genes include members of the cadherin, immunoglobulin/FibronectinIII (IgFn), integrin, neurexin, neuroligin, and catenin families. Totally 496 human CAM genes were compiled and annotated. We have mapped these genes onto a novel cell adhesion molecule ontology (CAMO) that provides a hierarchical description of cell adhesion molecules and their functions. It is intended to provide a means to facilitate better and better understanding of the global and specific properties of CAMs through their genomic features, regulatory modes, expression patterns and disease associations become clearer. You may browse by CAM ontology, Chromosomes and Full Gene list. | cell adhesion molecule, gene, cell adhesion, molecule, cadherin, immunoglobulin, fibronectiniii, integrin, neurexin, neuroligin, catenin, chromosome |
has parent organization: Peking University; Beijing; China is parent organization of: CAMO - Cell Adhesion Molecule Ontology |
China Scholarship Council ; NCI P50CA/DA84718; NIDA P50CA/DA84718; China National High-tech 863 Programs 2006AA02A312; China National High-tech 863 Programs 2006AA02Z334; China National High-tech 973 Programs 2007CB946904 |
PMID:18790807 | nlx_81469 | SCR_010696 | OKCAM: Ontology-based Knowledgebase for Human Cell Adhesion Molecules | 2026-02-16 09:47:51 | 0 | ||||||
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Brain Architecture Project Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
Brain Architecture Project (RRID:SCR_004283) | data or information resource, topical portal, portal | Evolving portal that will provide interactive tools and resources to allow researchers, clinicians, and students to discover, analyze, and visualize what is known about the brain's organization, and what the evidence is for that knowledge. This project has a current experimental focus: creating the first brainwide mesoscopic connectivity diagram in the mouse. Related efforts for the human brain currently focus on literature mining and an Online Brain Atlas Reconciliation Tool. The primary goal of the Brain Architecture Project is to assemble available knowledge about the structure of the nervous system, with an ultimate emphasis on the human CNS. Such information is currently scattered in research articles, textbooks, electronic databases and datasets, and even as samples on laboratory shelves. Pooling the knowledge across these heterogeneous materials - even simply getting to know what we know - is a complex challenge that requires an interdisciplinary approach and the contributions and support of the greater community. Their approach can be divided into 4 major thrusts: * Literature Curation and Text Mining * Computational Analysis * Resource Development * Experimental Efforts | central nervous system, connectivity, mapping, model, neuroanatomy, organism, post-mortem, structure, nervous system, structure, human, mouse, brain, zebra finch, addiction gene, addiction |
is used by: BICCN lists: Allen Institute for Brain Science lists: University of California at Los Angeles; California; USA is related to: Mouse Brain Architecture Project is related to: BICCN Anatomy and Morphology Project is related to: Allen Institute for Brain Science has parent organization: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory is parent organization of: Human Brain Connectivity Database is parent organization of: OBART is parent organization of: Zebrafinch Brain Architecture Project is parent organization of: Mouse Brain Architecture Project |
W. M. Keck Foundation ; NIMH ; NIDA ; Crick-Clay Professorship in Biomathematics at CSHL ; Mathers Foundation ; Simons Foundation |
Free, Public | nlx_143664 | SCR_004283 | BrainArchitecture.org, BrainArchitecture | 2026-02-16 09:46:20 | 14 | |||||||
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redcap-importer Resource Report Resource Website |
redcap-importer (RRID:SCR_016032) | data acquisition software, software application, data processing software, software resource | Software that automates the process of retrieving and converting data to the format of a RedCap table and allows selection of directories and files for import. | automate, process, retrvinig, converting, data, format, research, electronic, data, capture, table, selection, directory, import | is related to: University of California at San Diego; California; USA | NIDA U24 DA041123 | Free, Available for download | SCR_016032 | 2026-02-16 09:48:56 | 0 | |||||||||
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geocoding Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
geocoding (RRID:SCR_016007) | software application, data processing software, data analytics software, data analysis software, software resource | Software that uses a geo-location database to determine individuals' residential environment in Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study. It performs queries given individuals' residential history in longitude and latitude. | software, data, analysis, geo-location, residential, environment, abcd, study |
has parent organization: University of California at San Diego; California; USA works with: ABCD Study |
NIDA U24 DA041123 | Free, Available for download | SCR_016007 | ABCD geocoding, ABCD geocoding project, geocoding project | 2026-02-16 09:48:55 | 23 | ||||||||
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Lyngby Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Lyngby (RRID:SCR_007143) | Lyngby | data analysis software, software application, data processing software, software resource | Matlab toolbox for the analysis of functional neuroimages (PET, fMRI). The toolbox contains a number of models: FIR-filter, Lange-Zeger, K-means clustering among others, visualizations and reading of neuroimaging files. | functional, statistical, fmri, pet, matlab, neuroimaging |
is listed by: Biositemaps has parent organization: THOR Center for Neuroinformatics |
Human Brain Project ; Danish Research Council ; European Union ; BIOMED2 ; MAPAWAMO ; NASA ; NSF ; DOE ; NIDA R01 DA09246; NIMH P20 MH57180 |
Free, Non-commercial | nif-0000-00324 | SCR_007143 | Lyngby Toolbox, Lyngby - A Toolbox for Functional Neuroimaging | 2026-02-17 10:01:12 | 2 |
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