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Network of healthcare organizations, together with data partners in Brazil, South Korea, and Japan, to bring clinical facts on more than 250 million patients around the world. Federated model so users of this data are ensured new patients, observations, and results every day, all harmonized to standard terminology like ICD-10 and LOINC without any data wrangling required at the point of care. The raw data is not available to authors of papers and papers in medicine are being retracted.
Proper citation: trinetx (RRID:SCR_022760) Copy
http://amazonia.montp.inserm.fr/
A web interface and associated tools for easy query of public human transcriptome data by keyword, through thematic pages with list annotations. Amazonia provides a thematic entry to public transcriptomes: users may for instance query a gene on a Stem Cells page, where they will see the expression of their favorite gene across selected microarray experiments related to stem cell biology. This selection of samples can be customized at will among the 6331 samples currently present in the database. Every transcriptome study results in the identification of lists of genes relevant to a given biological condition. In order to include this valuable information in any new query in the Amazonia database, they indicate for each gene in which lists it is included. This is a straightforward and efficient way to synthesize hundreds of microarray publications., THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 16,2025.
Proper citation: AmaZonia: Explore the Jungle of Microarrays Results (RRID:SCR_008405) Copy
http://www.molecularbrain.org/
MolecularBrain is an attempt to collect, collates, analyze and present the microarray derived gene expression data from various brain regions side by side. Transcription Profile of any gene in Mouse (online) and Human Brain (not yet) can be accessed as a histogram along with links to access various aspects of that gene. The expression levels were calculated from microarray data deposited at GEO (Gene expression omnibus). The molecular brain database could be searched using the built in search tool with the terms Entrez GeneID, gene symbol, synonym or description. Gene information along with their expression values can be also accessed from the alphabetical list of gene symbols on the footer. The protocol and GEO sample information is available.
Proper citation: Molecular Brain: Transcription Profiles of Mouse and Human Brains (RRID:SCR_008689) Copy
http://neuromorphometrics.com/?page_id=23
Collection of neuroanatomically labeled MRI brain scans, created by neuroanatomical experts. Regions of interest include the sub-cortical structures (thalamus, caudate, putamen, hippocampus, etc), along with ventricles, brain stem, cerebellum, and gray and white matter and sub-divided cortex into parcellation units that are defined by gyral and sulcal landmarks.
Proper citation: Manually Labeled MRI Brain Scan Database (RRID:SCR_009604) Copy
Collection of transmembrane protein datasets containing experimentally derived topology information from the literature and from public databases. Web interface of TOPDB includes tools for searching, relational querying and data browsing, visualisation tools for topology data.
Proper citation: Topology Data Bank of Transmembrane Proteins (RRID:SCR_007964) Copy
http://locustdb.genomics.org.cn/
The migratory locust (Locusta migratoria) is an orthopteran pest and a representative member of hemimetabolous insects. Its transcriptomic data provide invaluable information for molecular entomology study of the insect and pave a way for comparative studies of other medically, agronomically, and ecologically relevant insects. This first transcriptomic database of the locust (LocustDB) has been developed, building necessary infrastructures to integrate, organize, and retrieve data that are either currently available or to be acquired in the future. It currently hosts 45,474 high quality EST sequences from the locust, which were assembled into 12,161 unigenes. This database contains original sequence data, including homologous/orthologous sequences, functional annotations, pathway analysis, and codon usage, based on conserved orthologous groups (COG), gene ontology (GO), protein domain (InterPro), and functional pathways (KEGG). It also provides information from comparative analysis based on data from the migratory locust and five other invertebrate species, such as the silkworm, the honeybee, the fruitfly, the mosquito and the nematode. LocustDB also provides information from comparative analysis based on data from the migratory locust and five other invertebrate species, such as the silkworm, the honeybee, the fruitfly, the mosquito and the nematode. It starts with the first transcriptome information for an orthopteran and hemimetabolous insect and will be extended to provide a framework for incorporation of in-coming genomic data of relevant insect groups and a workbench for cross-species comparative studies.
Proper citation: Migratory Locust EST Database (RRID:SCR_008201) Copy
https://epilepsy.uni-freiburg.de/freiburg-seizure-prediction-project
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on April 29,2025. Electroencephalogram (EEG) data recorded from invasive and scalp electrodes. The EEG database contains invasive EEG recordings of 21 patients suffering from medically intractable focal epilepsy. The data were recorded during an invasive pre-surgical epilepsy monitoring at the Epilepsy Center of the University Hospital of Freiburg, Germany. In eleven patients, the epileptic focus was located in neocortical brain structures, in eight patients in the hippocampus, and in two patients in both. In order to obtain a high signal-to-noise ratio, fewer artifacts, and to record directly from focal areas, intracranial grid-, strip-, and depth-electrodes were utilized. The EEG data were acquired using a Neurofile NT digital video EEG system with 128 channels, 256 Hz sampling rate, and a 16 bit analogue-to-digital converter. Notch or band pass filters have not been applied. For each of the patients, there are datasets called ictal and interictal, the former containing files with epileptic seizures and at least 50 min pre-ictal data. the latter containing approximately 24 hours of EEG-recordings without seizure activity. At least 24 h of continuous interictal recordings are available for 13 patients. For the remaining patients interictal invasive EEG data consisting of less than 24 h were joined together, to end up with at least 24 h per patient. An interdisciplinary project between: * Epilepsy Center, University Hospital Freiburg * Bernstein Center for Computational Neuroscience (BCCN), Freiburg * Freiburg Center for Data Analysis and Modeling (FDM).
Proper citation: Electroencephalogram Database: Prediction of Epileptic Seizures (RRID:SCR_008032) Copy
http://cardiogenomica.altervista.org/CARDIOGENOMICS/CardioGenomics%20Homepage.htm
The primary goal of the CardioGenomics PGA is to begin to link genes to structure, function, dysfunction and structural abnormalities of the cardiovascular system caused by clinically relevant genetic and environmental stimuli. The principal biological theme to be pursued is how the transcriptional network of the cardiovascular system responds to genetic and environmental stresses to maintain normal function and structure, and how this network is altered in disease. This PGA will generate a high quality, comprehensive data set for the functional genomics of structural and functional adaptation of the cardiovascular system by integrating expression data from animal models and human tissue samples, mutation screening of candidate genes in patients, and DNA polymorphisms in a well characterized general population. Such a data set will serve as a benchmark for future basic, clinical, and pharmacogenomic studies. Training and education are also a key focus of the CardioGenomics PGA. In addition to ongoing journal clubs and seminars, the PGA will be sponsoring symposia at major conferences, and developing workshops related to the areas of focus of this PGA. Information regarding upcoming events can be found in the Events section of this site, and information about training and education opportunities sponsored by CardioGenomics can be found on the Teaching and Education page. The CardioGenomics project came to a close in 2005. This server, cardiogenomics.med.harvard.edu, remains online in order to continue to distribute data that was generated by investigators under the auspices of the CardioGenomics Program for Genomic Applications (PGA). :Sponsors: This resource is supported by The National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute (NHLBI) of the NIH., THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 16,2025.
Proper citation: CardioGenomics (RRID:SCR_007248) Copy
An ontology of bioinformatics operations (tool, application, or workflow functions), types of data including identifiers, topics (application domains), and data formats. The applications of EDAM are within organizing tools and data, finding suitable tools in catalogues, and integrating them into complex applications or workflows. Semantic annotations with EDAM are applicable to diverse entities such as for example Web services, databases, programmatic libraries, standalone tools and toolkits, interactive applications, data schemas, data sets, or publications within bioinformatics. Annotation with EDAM may also contribute to data provenance, and EDAM terms and synonyms can be used in text mining. EDAM - and in particular the EDAM Data sub-ontology - serves also as a markup vocabulary for bioinformatics data on the Semantic Web.
Proper citation: EDAM Ontology (RRID:SCR_006620) Copy
https://github.com/vital-ai/vital-documentation/wiki/Vital-AI-Ontology
Ontology for the four consensus human vital signs: blood pressure, body temperature, respiration rate, pulse rate. It provides a controlled structured vocabulary for describing vital signs measurement data, the various processes of measuring vital signs, and the various devices and anatomical entities participating in such measurements.
Proper citation: Vital Signs Ontology (RRID:SCR_001422) Copy
https://www.mousephenotype.org/imits/
This resource has been replaced by GenTaR. Software tool for the planning of all IMPC mouse production. Allows IMPC production centers to record the progress of mouse production, cre-excision and to summarise the progress of phenotype data collection and transfer to the IMPC DCC. Stores all the mutation molecular structures made for the IKMC, catalogs of all IKMC products.
Proper citation: iMITS (RRID:SCR_016552) Copy
https://dsigdb.tanlab.org/DSigDBv1.0/
Online database provides collection of gene sets based on quantitative inhibition and/or drug-induced gene expression changes data of drugs and compounds. Allows users to search, view and download drugs/compounds and gene sets.
Proper citation: DSigDB (RRID:SCR_026202) Copy
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented August 23, 2016. This interface is for exploring data collected as part of the NIF Neurodegenerative Disease Ontology project. Not generally intended for public consumption yet, but people are welcome to look - large caveat emptor applies. Sponsors: This resource is part of the NIF project.
Proper citation: OBD-PKB Interface (RRID:SCR_002882) Copy
https://bioconductor.org/packages/FlowSorted.Blood.450k/
Illumina HumanMethylation data on sorted blood cell populations.
Proper citation: FlowSorted.Blood.450k R package (RRID:SCR_018003) Copy
http://www.cbrc.jp/htbin/show_tffactor_mw
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on July 13, 2016.
A dataset about transcriptional regulation in eukaryotic cells, including data such as transcription factors and their binding sites and profiles. Resource is in Chinese.
Proper citation: TFFACTOR (RRID:SCR_000519) Copy
Interactive database and user interface providing online access to validated alternative methods for U.S. regulatory and other contexts of use. Central hub and unified resource of validated alternative methods that enhances accessibility to validation study reports, data, protocols / SOPs, and information on regulatory guidance.Users can filter searches by alternative method types, defined approaches, Test Method Endpoint, and regulatory guidance.
Proper citation: Collection of Alternative Methods for Regulatory Application (CAMERA) (RRID:SCR_027893) Copy
http://connectivity.brain-map.org/
Map of neural connections in mouse brain, built on an array of transgenic mice genetically engineered to target specific cell types. In addition to the connectivity data, information about the transgenic mouse lines and genetic tracers is available. Consists of high resolution 2-D projectivity image data that can be viewed side-by-side with the associated reference atlas and other reference datasets. Enables 3-D visualization and spatial/ontological search of connectivity models through a combination of manual and informatics analyses.
Proper citation: Allen Mouse Brain Connectivity Atlas (RRID:SCR_008848) Copy
http://connectivity.brain-map.org/transgenic
Data detailing transgene expression in Cre and other driver lines for adult and developing brain. Experiments include colorimetric in situ hybridization, fluorescent in situ hybridization and other histological methods. Expression maps of transgenic Cre and other driver lines in mice.
Proper citation: Allen Brain Atlas expression map of Cre and other drivers (RRID:SCR_017510) Copy
Harvard University''s central service for sharing and preserving work. In addition to the scholarly journal articles targeted by Harvard''s several open access resolutions, DASH maybe used to self-archive manuscripts and materials. DASH supports a variety of file formats, and users are encouraged to deposit related materials with manuscripts (including data, images, audio and video files, etc.) When users deposit their work in DASH, it becomes visible to colleagues around the world by virtue of metadata harvesting, Google Scholar, and other indexing services. Higher visibility leads to higher rates of citation and impact. When users post early versions of their work, before publication, they establish intellectual priority sooner. Users act in their own best interests by taking part in the University''s mission to share and preserve the knowledge produced there. Because Harvard now has a prior, non-exclusive license to faculty journal articles in schools with open access policies, those faculty members are required to act accordingly when publishing journal articles, either by attaching an addendum to their publication agreement or obtaining a waiver. They then must deposit the publication in DASH.
Proper citation: Digital Access to Scholarship at Harvard (RRID:SCR_004122) Copy
Platform for Traumatic Brain Injury relevant data. System was developed to share data across entire TBI research field and to facilitate collaboration between laboratories and interconnectivity between informatics platforms. FITBIR implements interagency Common Data Elements for TBI research and provides tools and resources to extend data dictionary. Established submission strategy to ensure high quality and to provide maximum benefit to investigators. Qualified researchers can request access to data stored in FITBIR and/or data stored at federated repositories.
Proper citation: Federal Interagency Traumatic Brain Injury Research Informatics System (RRID:SCR_006856) Copy
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