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Resource Name Proper Citation Abbreviations Resource Type Description Keywords Resource Relationships Related Condition Funding Defining Citation Availability Website Status Alternate IDs Alternate URLs Old URLs Parent Organization Resource ID Synonyms Record Last Update Mentions Count
Pediatric Terminology
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
Pediatric Terminology (RRID:SCR_010395) PEDTERM data or information resource, ontology, controlled vocabulary Terms associated with pediatrics, representing information related to child health and development from pre-birth through 21 years of age; contributed by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development. owl is listed by: BioPortal Aging nlx_157545 SCR_010395 2026-02-14 02:01:58 0
Life Extension Foundation
 
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Life Extension Foundation (RRID:SCR_010574) institution Established in 1980, the Life Extension Foundation is a nonprofit organization, whose long-range goal is to radically extend the healthy human lifespan by discovering scientific methods to control aging and eradicate disease. The largest organization of its kind in the world, the Life Extension Foundation has always been at the forefront of discovering new scientific breakthroughs for use in developing novel disease prevention and treatment protocols to improve the quality and length of human life. Through its private funding of research programs aimed at identifying and developing new therapies to slow and even reverse the aging process, the Life Extension Foundation seeks to reduce, and ultimately eliminate, such age-related killers as heart disease, stroke, cancer and Alzheimer''s disease. Long-time members are keenly aware of the scientific research that Life Extension Foundation funds to develop validated methods to slow and reverse the aging process. Less known is Life Extension''s multi-prong program to develop safer and more effective cancer therapies. One reason we focus so heavily on cancer research is that this dreaded disease represents a roadblock in our ability to develop effective means to combat aging. is parent organization of: Life Extension Aging ISNI: 0000 0001 0300 2958, nlx_41735, grid.490868.b https://ror.org/02vzd2x77 SCR_010574 2026-02-14 02:02:01 0
Leibniz Institute for Age Research
 
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1+ mentions
Leibniz Institute for Age Research (RRID:SCR_011340) institution Institute whose mission is to understand the molecular mechanisms that underlie the aging process and that lead to age-related diseases. They hope that eventually this knowledge can contribute to a more healthy aging of people. The central question they are aiming at answering is, What are the molecular mechanisms and genetic factors contributing to the evolution of cellular and organismal dysfunction during human aging? has parent organization: Fritz Lipmann Institute; Jena; Germany
is parent organization of: Dinucleotide Property Database
Aging, Age-related disease nif-0000-30559 SCR_011340 Leibniz Institute for Age Research - Fritz Lipmann Institute 2026-02-14 02:02:17 3
National Institute on Aging
 
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100+ mentions
National Institute on Aging (RRID:SCR_011438) NIA institution National institute that leads the federal government in conducting and supporting research on aging and the health and well-being of older people. The Institute seeks to understand the nature of aging and the aging process, and diseases and conditions associated with growing older, in order to extend the healthy, active years of life. In 1974, Congress granted authority to form NIA to provide leadership in aging research, training, health information dissemination, and other programs relevant to aging and older people. Subsequent amendments to this legislation designated NIA as the primary Federal agency on Alzheimer's disease research. Mission The Institute's mission is to: * Support and conduct genetic, biological, clinical, behavioral, social, and economic research on aging. * Foster the development of research and clinician scientists in aging. * Provide research resources. * Disseminate information about aging and advances in research to the public, health care professionals, and the scientific community,among a variety of audiences. Programs NIA sponsors research on aging through extramural and intramural programs. The extramural program funds research and training at universities, hospitals, medical centers, and other public and private organizations nationwide. The intramural program conducts basic and clinical research in Baltimore, MD, and on the NIH campus in Bethesda, MD. is related to: Alzheimers Disease Genetics Consortium
is related to: International Genomics of Alzheimers Project
has parent organization: NIH Blueprint for Neuroscience Research
has parent organization: National Institutes of Health
is parent organization of: IADRP
is parent organization of: CADRO
is parent organization of: Interventions Testing Program
is parent organization of: NIA Scientific Resources
is parent organization of: Dynamics of Health Aging and Body Composition (Health ABC)
is parent organization of: NIA Array Analysis
is parent organization of: Intramural Research Program
is parent organization of: Alzheimer's Disease Education and Referral Center
is parent organization of: Inside NIA: A Blog for Researchers
is parent organization of: Genetic Association Database
Aging, Alzheimer's disease Wikidata: Q5969362, nlx_inv_1005112, grid.419475.a, Crossref funder ID: 100000049, ISNI: 0000 0000 9372 4913 https://ror.org/049v75w11 SCR_011438 2026-02-14 02:02:11 162
Aging Intervention Foundation
 
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Aging Intervention Foundation (RRID:SCR_008288) funding resource A 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that gives out grants created to develop new therapies to control and reverse the causes of aging, as well as treat and prevent the diseases of aging. The goal is to eventually control the processes of aging, reverse their effects, and stay younger longer and ultimately create indefinite youthful, happy and productive lifespan using innovative scientific methods that are under development today in biotech companies and research labs around the world. The foundation also offers education on what we can do now to stay younger, live longer and be happier while new therapies are being developed. Aging nif-0000-24032 SCR_008288 AIF 2026-02-14 02:01:39 0
Central Brain Tumor Registry of the United States
 
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10+ mentions
Central Brain Tumor Registry of the United States (RRID:SCR_008748) CBTRUS nonprofit organization Voluntary, non-profit organization dedicated to collecting and disseminating statistical data. Resource for gathering and disseminating epidemiologic data on all primary benign and malignant brain and other CNS tumors. human, brain, tumor, cancer, central nervous system, epidemiology, incidence, survival, diagnosis, treatment, benign, malignant, registry, epidemiological data, aggregator, clinical, statistics, population, histology, age, gender, race, hispanic, mortality Brain tumor, Aging American Brain Tumor Association ;
National Brain Tumor Society ;
Pediatric Brain Tumor Foundation ;
NCI contract HHSN261201000576P
PMID:23095881 Application required., The community can contribute to this resource grid.492337.8, ISNI: 0000 0004 0484 2205, nlx_143889 https://ror.org/03849s113 SCR_008748 2026-02-14 02:01:46 26
AD Clinical Trials Database
 
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AD Clinical Trials Database (RRID:SCR_005863) data or information resource, clinical database, database A database of Alzheimer's disease and dementia clinical trials currently in progress at centers throughout the U.S. alzheimer's disease, cause, clinical trial, cure, dementia, treatment, database, clinical database has parent organization: Alzheimer's Disease Education and Referral Center Aging Public nif-0000-10344 SCR_005863 2026-02-14 02:01:10 0
Interagency Modeling and Analysis Group
 
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Interagency Modeling and Analysis Group (RRID:SCR_007432) group The purpose of IMAG is to bring together program officers who have a shared interest in applying modeling and analysis methods to biomedical systems. The meetings are formatted to facilitate an open discussion of what is currently being supported, and for planning future directions in these areas. At each meeting, time is allotted to hear focused presentations from one or two participants to discuss issues relating to modeling and analysis across the government agencies. Discussions also occur online, and participants are informed of talks, conferences and other activities of interest to the group. The NIH BISTIC, (Biomedical Information Science and Technology Consortium), is very supportive of IMAG and serves as the larger body at NIH for disseminating IMAG activities. Associated agencies: NIH: Center for Scientific Review, National Cancer Institute, National Center for Research Resources, National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, National Human Genome Research Institute, National Institute on Aging, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders, National Institute on Drug Abuse, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, National Institute of General Medical Sciences, National Institute of Mental Health, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National Library of Medicine NSF (National Science Foundation): Directorate for Biological Sciences, Directorate for Computer and Information Science and Engineering, Directorate for Engineering, Directorate for Mathematical and Physical Sciences NASA (National Aeronautics and Space Administration): Human Research Program DOE (Department of Energy), Office of Advanced Scientific Computing Research, Office of Biological and Environmental Research DOD (Department of Defense): Air Force Office of Scientific Research (AFOSR), Army, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, Office of Naval Research, Telemedicine and Advanced Technology Research Center, USDA (United States Department of Agriculture), USDVA (Unites States Department of Veteran Affairs) Soliciting programs: Predictive Multiscale Models of the Physiome in Health and Disease (MSM Physiome) Initiative; and Multi-Scale Modeling (MSM) InitiativeKey words: MRI, Imaging, human. national institutes of health, modeling, funding is listed by: 3DVC
has parent organization: National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering
Aging nif-0000-00562 SCR_007432 IMAG 2026-02-14 02:01:26 0
Institute of Aging - CIHR
 
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100+ mentions
Institute of Aging - CIHR (RRID:SCR_007405) institution IA (CHIR, Canada) supports research that promotes healthy aging and addresses causes, prevention, screening, diagnosis, treatment, support systems, and palliation for a wide range of conditions associated with aging. :funding resource, grants : has parent organization: Canadian Institutes of Health Research
is parent organization of: Canadian Consortium on Neurodegeneration in Aging
Aging GRID: grid.459197.7; ISNI: 0000 0001 2220 3034; Crossref Funder ID: 501100000026;, nif-0000-00470 https://ror.org/044mbfr67
http://www.cihr-irsc.gc.ca/e/8602.html
SCR_007405 IA 2026-02-14 02:01:32 271
CADRO
 
Resource Report
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1+ mentions
CADRO (RRID:SCR_004046) CADRO data or information resource, controlled vocabulary A classification system developed by the National Institute on Aging and the Alzheimer's Association that can be used to integrate and compare Alzheimer's disease (AD) research portfolios from public and private organizations supporting AD research in the US and abroad. The CADRO was constructed as a three-tier classification system organized around seven major categories: five in research and two resource-related: * Category A. Molecular Pathogenesis and Pathophysiology of Alzheimer's Disease * Category B. Diagnosis, Assessment and Disease Monitoring * Category C. Translational Research and Clinical Interventions * Category D. Epidemiology * Category E. Care, Support and Health Economics of Alzheimer's Diseases * Category F. Research Resources * Category G. Consortia and Public Private Partnerships * Category H. Alzheimer's Disease - Related Dementias Using information from project abstracts and research aims, the above categories were stratified into research topics and these were further divided into research themes. The three levels of classification are meant to enable a fine-grained portfolio analysis that can inform strategic planning and funding decisions. The CADRO was developed as a dynamic portfolio analysis tool that can be used to: (i) capture the changing landscape of AD research funded by different organizations, (ii) identify opportunities for coordination of support for AD research, and (iii) identify funding gaps as well as areas of overlap within and across organizations. late adult human, alzheimer, aging is used by: IADRP
has parent organization: Alzheimers Association
has parent organization: National Institute on Aging
Alzheimer's disease, Aging NIA nlx_158474 http://www.nia.nih.gov/research/dn/cadro-outline
http://www.nia.nih.gov/research/dn/common-alzheimers-disease-research-ontology-cadro
http://www.nia.nih.gov/sites/default/files/cadro_outline_-_january_2013.pdf
SCR_004046 Common Alzheimer''s Disease Research Ontology, Common Alzheimer's Disease Research Ontology (CADRO) 2026-02-14 02:00:35 2
American Federation for Aging Research
 
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1+ mentions
American Federation for Aging Research (RRID:SCR_000806) AFAR non profit organization A non-profit organization that supports the advance of healthy aging through biomedical research. funding resource, healthy aging, late adult human, biotechnology Aging Crossref funder ID: 100005366, Wikidata: Q4743745, nlx_144115, grid.427612.4, ISNI: 0000 0001 0395 8845 https://ror.org/000r61a05 SCR_000806 2026-02-14 01:59:49 5
Stein Institute for Research on Aging News
 
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Stein Institute for Research on Aging News (RRID:SCR_003760) Stein Institute News data or information resource, narrative resource, blog A list of articles published related to aging produced by the Center for Healthy Aging, Stein Institute for Research on Aging. late adult human has parent organization: Stein Institute for Research on Aging Aging, Healthy aging Public nlx_157989 SCR_003760 2026-02-14 02:05:50 0
Alameda County Health and Ways of Living Study
 
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Alameda County Health and Ways of Living Study (RRID:SCR_008889) Health and Ways of Living Study data or information resource, data set Data set from a long-term population-based prospective study of non-institutionalized residents (aged 21 or older, or aged 16-21 and older if married) in Alameda County, California investigating social and behavioral risk factors for morbidity, mortality, functioning and health. Questions were asked on marital and life satisfaction, parenting, physical activities, employment, health status, and childhood experiences. Demographic information on age, race, height, weight, education, income, and religion was also collected. Included with this dataset is a separate file (part 2) containing mortality data. With the aging of this cohort, data are becoming increasingly valuable for examining the life-long cumulative effects of social and behavioral factors on a well-characterized population. The first wave collected information for 6,928 respondents (including approximately 500 women aged 65 years and older) on chronic health conditions, health behaviors, social involvements, and psychological characteristics. The 1974 questionnaire was sent to 6,246 living subjects who had responded in 1965, and were able to be located. The third wave provides a follow-up of 2,729 original 1965 and 1974 respondents and examines health behaviors such as alcohol consumption and smoking habits, along with social activities. Also included is information on health conditions such as diabetes, osteoporosis, hormone replacement, and mental illness. Another central topic investigated is activities of daily living (including self-care such as dressing, eating, and shopping), along with use of free time and level of involvement in social, recreational, religious, and environmental groups. The fourth wave is a follow-up to the 1994 panel and examines changes in functional abilities such as self-care activities, employment, involvement in community activities, visiting friends/family, and use of free time since 1994. * Dates of Study: 1965-1999 * Sample Size: 1965: 6,928; 1974: 4,864; 1994: 2,729; 1995: 2,569, 1999: 2,123 * Study Features: Longitudinal Links: * 1965 ICPSR, http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/06688 * 1974 ICPSR, http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/06838 * 1994 and 1995 ICPSR, http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/03083 * 1999 ICPSR, http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/04432#summary longitudinal, adult, adolescent, social, behavior, risk factor, morbidity, mortality, functioning, health, woman, late adult human, chronic health condition, psychological characteristic, questionnaire, activities of daily living, chronic illness, community involvement, health behavior, health care service, independent living, living arrangement, mental health, physical condition, social behavior, social life, social network, survey data is listed by: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR)
is related to: National Archive of Computerized Data on Aging (NACDA)
has parent organization: University of Michigan; Ann Arbor; USA
Households in Alameda County, California., Aging NIA 5 R37 AG11375-03 Public nlx_151356 SCR_008889 Alameda County [California] Health and Ways of Living Study, Alameda County Health Ways Living Study 2026-02-14 02:07:32 0
Early Indicators of Later Work Levels Disease and Death (EI) - Union Army Samples Public Health and Ecological Datasets
 
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1+ mentions
Early Indicators of Later Work Levels Disease and Death (EI) - Union Army Samples Public Health and Ecological Datasets (RRID:SCR_008921) Early Indicators of Later Work Levels Disease and Death, EI project data or information resource, data set A dataset to advance the study of life-cycle interactions of biomedical and socioeconomic factors in the aging process. The EI project has assembled a variety of large datasets covering the life histories of approximately 39,616 white male volunteers (drawn from a random sample of 331 companies) who served in the Union Army (UA), and of about 6,000 African-American veterans from 51 randomly selected United States Colored Troops companies (USCT). Their military records were linked to pension and medical records that detailed the soldiers������?? health status and socioeconomic and family characteristics. Each soldier was searched for in the US decennial census for the years in which they were most likely to be found alive (1850, 1860, 1880, 1900, 1910). In addition, a sample consisting of 70,000 men examined for service in the Union Army between September 1864 and April 1865 has been assembled and linked only to census records. These records will be useful for life-cycle comparisons of those accepted and rejected for service. Military Data: The military service and wartime medical histories of the UA and USCT men were collected from the Union Army and United States Colored Troops military service records, carded medical records, and other wartime documents. Pension Data: Wherever possible, the UA and USCT samples have been linked to pension records, including surgeon''''s certificates. About 70% of men in the Union Army sample have a pension. These records provide the bulk of the socioeconomic and demographic information on these men from the late 1800s through the early 1900s, including family structure and employment information. In addition, the surgeon''''s certificates provide rich medical histories, with an average of 5 examinations per linked recruit for the UA, and about 2.5 exams per USCT recruit. Census Data: Both early and late-age familial and socioeconomic information is collected from the manuscript schedules of the federal censuses of 1850, 1860, 1870 (incomplete), 1880, 1900, and 1910. Data Availability: All of the datasets (Military Union Army; linked Census; Surgeon''''s Certificates; Examination Records, and supporting ecological and environmental variables) are publicly available from ICPSR. In addition, copies on CD-ROM may be obtained from the CPE, which also maintains an interactive Internet Data Archive and Documentation Library, which can be accessed on the Project Website. * Dates of Study: 1850-1910 * Study Features: Longitudinal, Minority Oversamples * Sample Size: ** Union Army: 35,747 ** Colored Troops: 6,187 ** Examination Sample: 70,800 ICPSR Link: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/06836 late adult human, male, caucasian, african-american, veteran, military, medical, socioeconomic, civil war, american civil war, cause of death, census data, demographic, disease, health status, labor force, medical record, midlife, military pension, pension, military recruitment, military service, mortality rate, nineteenth century, nutrition, socioeconomic status, twentieth century, union army, census is related to: National Archive of Computerized Data on Aging (NACDA)
has parent organization: University of Chicago; Illinois; USA
Aging NIA PO1 AG10120;
NSF SBR 9114981
Publicly available from ICPSR; copies on CD-ROM may be obtained from the CPE, Which also maintains an interactive Internet Data Archive and Documentation Library. nlx_151822 http://www.cpe.uchicago.edu/ SCR_008921 Public Health and Ecological Datasets, Aging of Veterans of the Union Army, Early Indicators of Later Work Levels Disease and Death ������?? Union Army Samples 2026-02-14 02:07:59 1
MIALAB - Resting State Data
 
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MIALAB - Resting State Data (RRID:SCR_008914) data or information resource, data set An MRI data set that demonstrates the utility of a mega-analytic approach by identifying the effects of age and gender on the resting-state networks (RSNs) of 603 healthy adolescents and adults (mean age: 23.4 years, range: 12-71 years). Data were collected on the same scanner, preprocessed using an automated analysis pipeline based in SPM, and studied using group independent component analysis. RSNs were identified and evaluated in terms of three primary outcome measures: time course spectral power, spatial map intensity, and functional network connectivity. Results revealed robust effects of age on all three outcome measures, largely indicating decreases in network coherence and connectivity with increasing age. Gender effects were of smaller magnitude but suggested stronger intra-network connectivity in females and more inter-network connectivity in males, particularly with regard to sensorimotor networks. These findings, along with the analysis approach and statistical framework described, provide a useful baseline for future investigations of brain networks in health and disease. fmri, functional connectivity, resting-state, independent component analysis, connectome, adolescent, adult, mri, resting state network, connectivity, dataset has parent organization: MIALAB - Medical Image Analysis Lab Aging NRC Bilatgrunn ;
NIBIB 1R01-EB006841;
NIBIB 1R01- EB005846;
NIBIB 2R01-EB000840;
NIBIB 1 P20 RR021938-01;
DOE DE-FG02-08ER64581;
NIMH 1R01-MH072681-01;
John Templeton Foundation grant 12456;
NIAAA 1P20 AA017068;
NINDSR21NS064464 ;
NIDA1 R03 DA022435-01A1 ;
NIDA1 R03 DA024212-01A1 ;
NIDA KO1-DA021632-02
PMID:21442040 nlx_151552 SCR_008914 Medical Image Analysis Laboratory - Resting State Data, MIA Laboratory - Resting State Data, Medical Image Analysis Lab - Resting State Data, Medical Image Analysis (MIA) Laboratory - Resting State Data 2026-02-14 02:07:55 10
Puerto Rican Elderly: Health Conditions
 
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Puerto Rican Elderly: Health Conditions (RRID:SCR_008916) PREHCO data or information resource, data set A dataset that provides researchers and policy makers information about issues affecting the elderly population in Puerto Rico: health status, housing arrangements, functional status, transfers, labor history, migration, income, childhood characteristics, health insurance, use of health services, marital history, mistreat, sexuality, etc. It investigates the characteristics of older adults (aged 60+) through an island-wide cross-sectional sample survey of target individuals and their surviving spouses. The sampling frame was constructed on the basis of an advance release of the 2000 US Census. The population for the study consists of the elderly population (60+) in households in Puerto Rico. The sample design used a multistage probabilistic sample by cluster. All elderly adults who lived in the selected households were eligible. If more than one person was in the target population, one 60+ adult was the target and one was the spouse. Respondents 80+ and males in couples who were both 80+ were oversampled. There were 4,293 targets aged 60+ and 1,444 spouses (all ages) in the first wave. Types of data include demographic; household composition; marital history; Cantrill Scale; mini-mental (designed to measure cognitive capacity of Spanish-speaking Latinos with low levels of education and to provide early indications of dementia); self-reported health status; diagnosed health conditions; childhood conditions; transfers; labor history; migration; housing; assets; Activities of Daily Living; Instrumental Activities of Daily Living; medicines; health insurance and use of health services; family structure; sexuality; anthropometric measures. Project innovations include: (1) the design and test of a new tool for assessing cognition among Spanish speaking elderly of low levels of education, (2) a symptoms section to assess the validity of selected self reported conditions, (3) a modification of the Cantrill''s Ladder Scale, (4) protocols for physical measurements to assess current, as well as past, conditions, and (5) the use of GIS and GPS in the fieldwork supervision and to geocoding the survey data. At this moment PREHCO has completed a second wave to become a longitudinal study. The questionnaire included questions regarding the changing conditions (health, residential, social and economic) of those individuals who responded the first questionnaire. The new questionnaire included novel components: vignettes for health status self-report, a new improved section on disability and dependency, and on labor force participation. We also expanded the section of anthropometry by adding a few measurements and physical efficiency tests. Those participants deceased or institutionalized were interviewed using a proxy. Data Availability: First and second wave data are available for public use through BADGIR, the online data archive at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, at: http://nesstar.ssc.wisc.edu/ * Dates of Study: 2002-2003, 2004-2006 * Study Features: Longitudinal, International, Minority Oversampling, Anthropometric measures * Sample Size: 5,336 longitudinal, international, minority oversampling, anthropometric measure, late adult human, questionnaire, puerto rico, health, residence, social, economic, self-report, disability, dependency, labor force has parent organization: University of Wisconsin-Madison; Wisconsin; USA
has parent organization: University of Puerto Rico; Puerto Rico; USA
Late adult human, Aging NIA RO1 AG1620901A2 Public nlx_151829 SCR_008916 Puerto Rican Elderly: Health Conditions (PREHCO), Health Conditions of Elderly Puerto Ricans (PREHCO) 2026-02-14 02:07:32 0
Neuroimage Analysis Center
 
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Neuroimage Analysis Center (RRID:SCR_008998) NAC biomedical technology research center, training resource Biomedical Technology Resource Center that develops image processing and analysis techniques for basic and clinical neurosciences. The NAC research approach emphasizes both specific core technologies and collaborative application projects. The core activity of the center is the development of algorithms and techniques for postprocessing of imaging data. New segmentation techniques aid identification of brain structures and disease. Registration methods are used for relating image data to specific patient anatomy or one set of images to another. Visualization tools allow the display of complex anatomical and quantitative information. High-performance computing hardware and associated software techniques further accelerate algorithms and methods. Digital anatomy atlases are developed for the support of both interactive and algorithmic computational tools. Although the emphasis of the NAC is on the dissemination of concepts and techniques, specific elements of the core software technologies have been made available to outside researchers or the community at large. The NAC's core technologies serve the following major collaborative projects: Alzheimer's disease and the aging brain, morphometric measures in schizophrenia and schizotypal disorder, quantitative analysis of multiple sclerosis, and interactive image-based planning and guidance in neurosurgery. One or more NAC researchers have been designated as responsible for each of the core technologies and the collaborative projects. brain, neuroimaging, image processing, image analysis, postprocessing, segmentation, registration, algorithm, technique, brain structure, visualization, neurosurgery has parent organization: Harvard Medical School; Massachusetts; USA Alzheimer's disease, Aging, Schizophrenia, Schizotypal disorder, Multiple Sclerosis, Neurosurgery NIBIB P41 EB015902;
NCRR P41 RR13218
nlx_152643 SCR_008998 Neuroimaging Analysis Center 2026-02-14 02:07:24 8
Cross-Sectional and Longitudinal Aging Study
 
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Cross-Sectional and Longitudinal Aging Study (RRID:SCR_008903) CALAS data or information resource, data set A data set designed to provide a cross-sectional description of health, mental, and social status of the oldest-old segment of the elderly population in Israel, and to serve as a baseline for a multiple-stage research program to correlate demographic, health, and functional status with subsequent mortality, selected morbidity, and institutionalization. Study data are based on a sample of Jewish subjects aged 75+, alive and living in Israel on January 1, 1989, randomly selected from the National Population Register (NPR), a complete listing of the Israeli population maintained by the Ministry of the Interior. The NPR is updated on a routine basis with births, deaths, and in and out migration, and corrected by linkage with census data. The sample was stratified by age (five 5-year age groups: 75-79, 80-84, 85-89, 90-94, 95+), sex, and place of birth (Israel, Asia-Africa, Europe-America). One hundred subjects were randomly selected in each of the 30 strata. However, there were less than 100 individuals of each sex aged 95+ born in Israel, so all were selected for the sample. The total group included 2,891 individuals living both in the community and in institutions. A total of 1,820 (76%) of the 75-94 age group were interviewed during 1989-1992. An additional cognitive exam (Folstein) and a 24-hour dietary recall interview were added in the second round. Kibbutz Residents Sample The kibbutz is a social and economic unit based on equality among members, common property and work, collaborative consumption, and democracy in decision making. There are 250 kibbutzim in Israel, and their population constitutes about 3% of the country''s total population. All kibbutz residents in the country aged 85+, both members and parents, were selected for interviewing, of whom 80.4% (n=652) were interviewed. A matched sample aged 75-84 was selected, and 85.9% (n=674) were successfully interviewed. The original interview took approximately two hours to administer, and collected extensive information concerning the socio-demographic, physical, health, functioning, life events (including Holocaust), depression, mental status, and social network characteristics of the sample. The questionnaire used for kibbutz residents in the follow-up interview is identical to that utilized in the national random sample. Data Availability: Mortality data for both the national and kibbutz samples are available for analysis as a result of the linkage to the NPR file updated as of June 2000. The fieldwork for first follow up was completed as of September 1994 and for the second follow up as of December 2002. The data file of the three phases of the study is ready for analysis. * Dates of Study: 1989-1992 * Study Features: Longitudinal, International * Sample Size: 2,891 late adult human, israel, cognition, jewish, diet, interview, social, economic, kibbutz, socio-demographic, physical, health, functioning, life event, depression, mental status, social network, questionnaire has parent organization: Tel Aviv University; Ramat Aviv; Israel
has parent organization: National Library of Medicine
Kibbutz Resident, Matched Resident, Israel resident, Aging NIA Public nlx_151821 SCR_008903 Cross-Sectional and Longitudinal Aging Study (CALAS) 2026-02-14 02:07:24 0
Matlab Health and Socio-Economic Survey
 
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Matlab Health and Socio-Economic Survey (RRID:SCR_008942) MHSS data or information resource, data set A data set of the health and socioeconomic factors that affect the elderly in Matlab, a region of rural Bangladesh. The survey captures measurements and statistics such as adult survival, health status, health care utilization, resource flows between generations and the impact of community services and infrastructure on adult health care. Data was collected through surveys that touch on four topics: household and individual information; determinants of natural fertility; migration out of the community; and community and provider survey of healthcare and education infrastructure. survey, bangladesh, adult, birth control, child development, culture, fertility, health behavior, health care, health care facility, health care service, health services utilization, health status, household budget, household expenditure, housing condition, infant feeding, reproductive history, school, social network, socioeconomic status, traditional medicine, women's health care, socioeconomic, behavior, family, community, household, woman, female, pregnancy status, outmigrant, family planning, international, questionnaire, clinical, interview, research, data is listed by: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR)
has parent organization: National Archive of Computerized Data on Aging (NACDA)
Aging NIA P01AG11952 Public, Data and documentation may be used for academic and public policy research purposes only nlx_151854 SCR_008942 Matlab Health and Socioeconomic Survey, Matlab Health and Socioeconomic Survey (MHSS), Matlab Health and Socio-Economic Survey (MHSS) 2026-02-14 02:07:59 0
Longitudinal Study of Elderly Mexican American Health
 
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Longitudinal Study of Elderly Mexican American Health (RRID:SCR_008941) HEPESE data or information resource, data set A dataset of a longitudinal study of over 3,000 Mexican-Americans aged 65 or over living in five southwestern states. The objective is to describe the physical and mental health of the study group and link them to key social variables (e.g., social support, health behavior, acculturation, migration). To the extent possible, the study was modeled after the existing EPESE studies, especially the Duke EPESE, which included a large sample if African-Americans. Unlike the other EPESE studies that were restricted to small geographic areas, the Hispanic EPESE aimed at obtaining a representative sample of community-dwelling Mexican-American elderly residing in Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado, and California. Approximately 85% of Mexican-American elderly reside in these states and data were obtained that are generalizable to roughly 500,000 older people. The final sample of 3,050 subjects at baseline is comparable to those of the other EPESE studies. Data Availability: Waves I to IV are available through the National Archive of Computerized Data on Aging (NACDA), ICPSR. Also available through NACDA is the ����??Resource Book of the Hispanic Established Populations for the Epidemiologic Studies of the Elderly����?? which offers a thorough review of the data and its applications. All subjects aged 75 or older were interviewed for Wave V and 902 new subjects were added. Hemoglobin A1c test kits were provided to subjects who self-reported diabetes. Approximately 270 of the kits were returned for analyses. Wave V data are being validated and reviewed. A tentative timeline for the archiving of Wave V data is November 2006. Wave VI interviewing and data collection is scheduled to begin in Fall 2006. * Dates of Study: 1993-2006 * Study Features: Longitudinal, Minority oversamples, Anthropometric Measures * Sample Size: ** 1993-4: 3,050 (Wave I) ** 1995-6: 2,438 (Wave II) ** 1998-9: 1,980 (Wave III) ** 2000-1: 1,682 (Wave IV) ** 2004-5: 2,073 (Wave V) ** 2006-7: (Wave VI) Links: * ICPSR Wave 1: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/2851 * ICPSR Wave 2: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/3385 * ICPSR Wave 3: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/4102 * ICPSR Wave 4: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/4314 * ICPSR Wave 5: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/25041 * ICPSR Wave 6: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/29654 longitudinal, minority, anthropometric measure, mexican-american, questionnaire, physical health, mental health, functional impairment, risk factor, mortality, morbidity, late adult human, southwestern united states, arizona, california, colorado, new mexico, texas, iadl, adl, living arrangement, blood pressure, social support, family, stress, life event, employment, health, acculturation, religion, social involvement, global health rating, self-esteem, medical condition, performance-oriented mobility assessment, ces-d, height, weight, cognition, health care services utilization, behavior, income, financial strain, medication, insurance coverage, migration, interview, hemoglobin a1c test, demographics, ethnicity, health behavior, health problem, health status, hispanic, latino american, life expectancy, quality of life is listed by: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR)
is related to: Established Populations for Epidemiologic Studies of the Elderly
has parent organization: University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston
has parent organization: National Archive of Computerized Data on Aging (NACDA)
Aging, Diabetes NIA RO1 AG10939 Public nlx_151848 http://www.utmb.edu/pmch/hepese/, http://pmch.utmb.edu/sponsoredprograms/sp_populationhealth.aspxhttp://www.utexas.edu/cola/centers/prc/research/profiles/angellongitudinal/ SCR_008941 Longitudinal Study of Mexican-American Elderly Health (The Hispanic EPESE), Hispanic Established Populations for Epidemiologic Studies of the Elderly, Longitudinal Study of Mexican-American Elderly Health, Hispanic EPESE 2026-02-14 02:07:32 1

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