SciCrunch Registry is a curated repository of scientific resources, with a focus on biomedical resources, including tools, databases, and core facilities - visit SciCrunch to register your resource.
https://scicrunch.org/scicrunch/data/source/nlx_154697-5/search?q=*
A virtual database currently indexing clinical trials databases including EU Clinical Trials Register and Clinicaltrials.gov.
Proper citation: Integrated Clinical Trials (RRID:SCR_005969) Copy
https://scicrunch.org/scicrunch/data/source/nlx_154697-7/search?q=*
Virtual database currently indexing interaction between genes and diseases from Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man (OMIM) and Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD).
Proper citation: Integrated Gene-Disease Interaction (RRID:SCR_006173) Copy
http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/science-blogs/
Wired Science Blogs is new network of all-star science bloggers.
Proper citation: Wired Science Blogs (RRID:SCR_006479) Copy
http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/neurophilosophy
Blog about molecules, minds and everything in between, written by Mo, a molecular and developmental neurobiologist turned science writer. He aims to produce well-written and easily accessible articles about all aspects of neuroscience, so that he might help to improve public understanding of it. This blog has been featured for two consecutive years in the Open Lab annual anthologies of the best science blogging. AFTER four years at ScienceBlogs.com, Neurophilosophy has moved to a new home. It is now hosted by The Guardian.
Proper citation: Neurophilosophy (RRID:SCR_006514) Copy
http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/science+content/video
Articles published by guardian.co.uk Science about: Science + Video
Proper citation: The Guardian: Science Videos (RRID:SCR_006597) Copy
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on May 4th,2023. It was integrated with Antibody Registry. The JCN antibody database is a listing of all antibodies used in JCN papers from 2006 onward. The catalog numbers and vendor information is included for all antibodies listed, and with a new collaboration with NIF''''s AntibodyRegistry, a unique identifier is also listed for each antibody. The Journal of Comparative Neurology requires rigorous characterization for all antibodies that are used in JCN papers. The antibodies in the The Journal of Comparative Neurology antibody database have in nearly all cases been described and characterized adequately according to the provided guidelines. This information can be used to identify a particular target immunohistochemically or to design an experiment using the antibody information. If you are looking for an antibody to identify a particular target immunohistochemically, this list is a good place to begin your search. We suggest you then look up the paper in which the antibody was used, to make sure that it will meet your needs and to verify its characterization. (The characterization of antibodies in JCN papers often goes well beyond the material published by the manufacturer, so that examining this information before you order an antibody can be very useful.) While we do not guarantee that these antibodies will identify only the intended target (that is a function of the actual experiment and controls), this is the most carefully verified list of antibodies that we are aware of, and we wanted to share this resource with our readers and authors.
Proper citation: Journal of Comparative Neurology Antibody database (RRID:SCR_006470) Copy
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK1116/
Provides clinically relevant and medically actionable information for inherited conditions in standardized journal-style format, covering diagnosis, management, and genetic counseling for patients and their families. Searchable book of expert-authored, peer-reviewed disease descriptions presented in standardized format and focused on clinically relevant and medically actionable information on diagnosis, management, and genetic counseling of patients and families with specific inherited conditions.
Proper citation: GeneReviews (RRID:SCR_006560) Copy
A database of elecrophysiological properties text-mined from the biomedical literature as a function of neuron type. Specifically, NeuroElectro seeks to extract information about the electrophysiological properties (e.g. resting membrane potentials and membrane time constants) of diverse neuron types from the existing literature and place it into a centralized database. There are 252 neurons currently available, with the naming convention established in NeuroLex.
Proper citation: neuroelectro (RRID:SCR_006274) Copy
Blog that provides an on-line forum where the members of the MacArthur Foundation Research Network on Law and Neuroscience can share their ideas and interact with not only other researchers but also with the interested public more generally. One of the main goals of the blog is to provide a resource with information about cutting edge research at the cross-roads of neuroscience, law, and philosophy.
Proper citation: Law and Neuroscience (RRID:SCR_006155) Copy
A database of federally funded biomedical research projects conducted at universities, hospitals, and other research institutions that provides a central point of access to reports, data, and analyses of NIH research. The RePORTER has replaced the CRISP database. The database, maintained by the Office of Extramural Research at the National Institutes of Health, includes projects funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services (SAMHSA), Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), Food and Drug Administration (FDA), Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDCP), Agency for Health Care Research and Quality (AHRQ), and Office of Assistant Secretary of Health (OASH).
Proper citation: National Institutes of Health Research Portfolio Online Reporting Tool (RRID:SCR_006874) Copy
https://neuinfo.org/mynif/search.php?q=*&t=indexable&list=cover&nif=nlx_154697-2
A virtual database of annotations made by 50 database providers (April 2014) - and growing (see below), that map data to publication information. All NIF Data Federation sources can be part of this virtual database as long as they indicate the publications that correspond to data records. The format that NIF accepts is the PubMed Identifier, category or type of data that is being linked to, and a data record identifier. A subset of this data is passed to NCBI, as LinkOuts (links at the bottom of PubMed abstracts), however due to NCBI policies the full data records are not currently associated with PubMed records. Database providers can use this mechanism to link to other NCBI databases including gene and protein, however these are not included in the current data set at this time. (To view databases available for linking see, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK3807/#files.Databases_Available_for_Linking ) The categories that NIF uses have been standardized to the following types: * Resource: Registry * Resource: Software * Reagent: Plasmid * Reagent: Antibodies * Data: Clinical Trials * Data: Gene Expression * Data: Drugs * Data: Taxonomy * Data: Images * Data: Animal Model * Data: Microarray * Data: Brain connectivity * Data: Volumetric observation * Data: Value observation * Data: Activation Foci * Data: Neuronal properties * Data: Neuronal reconstruction * Data: Chemosensory receptor * Data: Electrophysiology * Data: Computational model * Data: Brain anatomy * Data: Gene annotation * Data: Disease annotation * Data: Cell Model * Data: Chemical * Data: Pathways For more information refer to Create a LinkOut file, http://neuinfo.org/nif_components/disco/interoperation.shtm Participating resources ( http://disco.neuinfo.org/webportal/discoLinkoutServiceSummary.do?id=4 ): * Addgene http://www.addgene.org/pgvec1 * Animal Imaging Database http://aidb.crbs.ucsd.edu * Antibody Registry http://www.neuinfo.org/products/antibodyregistry/ * Avian Brain Circuitry Database http://www.behav.org/abcd/abcd.php * BAMS Connectivity http://brancusi.usc.edu/ * Beta Cell Biology Consortium http://www.betacell.org/ * bioDBcore http://biodbcore.org/ * BioGRID http://thebiogrid.org/ * BioNumbers http://bionumbers.hms.harvard.edu/ * Brain Architecture Management System http://brancusi.usc.edu/bkms/ * Brede Database http://hendrix.imm.dtu.dk/services/jerne/brede/ * Cell Centered Database http://ccdb.ucsd.edu * CellML Model Repository http://www.cellml.org/models * CHEBI http://www.ebi.ac.uk/chebi/ * Clinical Trials Network (CTN) Data Share http://www.ctndatashare.org/ * Comparative Toxicogenomics Database http://ctdbase.org/ * Coriell Cell Repositories http://ccr.coriell.org/ * CRCNS - Collaborative Research in Computational Neuroscience - Data sharing http://crcns.org * Drug Related Gene Database https://confluence.crbs.ucsd.edu/display/NIF/DRG * DrugBank http://www.drugbank.ca/ * FLYBASE http://flybase.org/ * Gene Expression Omnibus http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/ * Gene Ontology Tools http://www.geneontology.org/GO.tools.shtml * Gene Weaver http://www.GeneWeaver.org * GeneDB http://www.genedb.org/Homepage * Glomerular Activity Response Archive http://gara.bio.uci.edu * GO http://www.geneontology.org/ * Internet Brain Volume Database http://www.cma.mgh.harvard.edu/ibvd/ * ModelDB http://senselab.med.yale.edu/modeldb/ * Mouse Genome Informatics Transgenes ftp://ftp.informatics.jax.org/pub/reports/MGI_PhenotypicAllele.rpt * NCBI Taxonomy Browser http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Taxonomy/taxonomyhome.html * NeuroMorpho.Org http://neuromorpho.org/neuroMorpho * NeuronDB http://senselab.med.yale.edu/neurondb * SciCrunch Registry http://neuinfo.org/nif/nifgwt.html?tab=registry * NIF Registry Automated Crawl Data http://lucene1.neuinfo.org/nif_resource/current/ * NITRC http://www.nitrc.org/ * Nuclear Receptor Signaling Atlas http://www.nursa.org * Olfactory Receptor DataBase http://senselab.med.yale.edu/ordb/ * OMIM http://omim.org * OpenfMRI http://openfmri.org * PeptideAtlas http://www.peptideatlas.org * RGD http://rgd.mcw.edu * SFARI Gene: AutDB https://gene.sfari.org/autdb/Welcome.do * SumsDB http://sumsdb.wustl.edu/sums/ * Temporal-Lobe: Hippocampal - Parahippocampal Neuroanatomy of the Rat http://www.temporal-lobe.com/ * The Cell: An Image Library http://www.cellimagelibrary.org/ * Visiome Platform http://platform.visiome.neuroinf.jp/ * WormBase http://www.wormbase.org * YPED http://medicine.yale.edu/keck/nida/yped.aspx * ZFIN http://zfin.org
Proper citation: Integrated Manually Extracted Annotation (RRID:SCR_008876) Copy
http://www.nia.nih.gov/research/blog
Blog intended for grantees of the National Institute on Aging (NIA) at the NIH, as well as applicants for funding, those with an application in mind, application reviewers, and students pursuing careers in research on aging and Alzheimer's disease.
Proper citation: Inside NIA: A Blog for Researchers (RRID:SCR_012812) Copy
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmedhealth/
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE.Documented on September 9, 2022. A consumer health database that provides up-to-date information on diseases, conditions, injuries, drugs, supplements, treatment options, and healthy living, with a special focus on comparative effectiveness research from institutions around the world. PubMed Health includes * consumer guides summarizing comparative effectiveness research * fact sheets on diseases and conditions * information on drugs and supplements * encyclopedic overviews of health topics * links to external Web sites PubMed Health has a special focus on comparative effectiveness research, in particular that research which evaluates the available evidence of the benefits and harms of different treatment options for different groups of people. In Comparative Effectiveness Research, experts often synthesize the evidence from dozens, or even hundreds, of individual studies.
Proper citation: PubMed Health (RRID:SCR_000512) Copy
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on July 7th, 2019. BAMS is an online resource for information about neural circuitry. The BAMS Nested Regions view focuses on the major brain regions and their relationships.
Proper citation: BAMS Nested Regions (RRID:SCR_000238) Copy
Blogs for all things chemistry, hosted by Chemical & Engineering News (C&EN) magazine, where you will find blogs written by both C&EN staff and non-staff contributors on topics ranging from jobs to natural products chemistry to safety to the businesses of chemistry. CENtral Science currently includes the following blogs: * Artful Science: C&EN science writer Sarah Everts peers in to the laboratories that help museums and galleries authenticate, conserve, and restore art and artifacts. * Cleantech Chemistry: C&EN business writer Melody Voith looks at the business and technology strategies of companies that hope to serve the world's need for renewable energy, sustainable agriculture, clean water, and non-polluting manufacturing and transportation, among other cleantech sectors. * IYC 2011: CENtral Science's home for all things IYC 2011. * Just Another Electron Pusher: Contributors Christine Herman and Glenn Ernst profile people who've pursued professions away from the bench. They also write about their own personal quests for satisfying jobs that use their degrees but may not involve running any %$@& columns. * Newscripts: The companion blog to the like-named weekly C&EN column. Written primarily by C&EN science writers Lauren Wolf and Beth Halford, with contributions from the C&EN staff. * Terra Sigillata: Molecular cancer pharmacologist David Kroll writes about natural products, focusing on chemistry and pharmaceutical issues. * The Chemical Notebook: C&EN business writer Alex Tullo shares interesting tidbits from his reporter's notebook. * The Editor's Blog: The companion blog to the weekly print column by editor-in-chief Rudy Baum and deputy editor-in-chief Maureen Rouhi. * The Haystack: C&EN business writer Lisa Jarvis and science writer Carmen Drahl weed through pharma's molecular mountain to pluck out the drug developments worth noting. Also features frequent contributions from SeeArrOh, a Ph.D chemist working in industry. * The Safety Zone: C&EN science writer Jyllian Kemsley and safety consultant Russ Phifer cover chemical safety issues in academic and industrial research labs and in manufacturing. * Transition States: A blog about undergrads, by undergrads. Chiral Jones, a senior working on organic chemistry, and Sidechain Bob, a junior in the field of chemical biology, tell their stories of the graduate school experience. Over time, some blogs will retire and others will be added. Their blog network is intentionally a small one, and bloggers are added on an invitation basis. Proposals or blog suggestions may be submitted. It's not a community without your voice, so please contribute either as a commenter or a blogger.
Proper citation: CENtral Science (RRID:SCR_000652) Copy
http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/
Wired Science covers what's new on the front lines of science, from deep space to DNA sequencing.
Proper citation: Wired Science (RRID:SCR_000649) Copy
http://genomics.senescence.info/species/
Curated database of aging and life history in animals, including extensive longevity records and complementary traits for > 4000 vertebrate species. AnAge was primarily developed for comparative biology studies, in particular studies of longevity and aging, but can also be useful for ecological and conservation studies and as a reference for zoos and field biologists.
Proper citation: anage (RRID:SCR_001470) Copy
https://neuinfo.org/about/nifblog
Blog put out by the Neuroscience Information Framework covering a variety of neuroscience related topics including topics encountered by the Neuroscience Information Framework as a project.
Proper citation: NIF Blog (RRID:SCR_001651) Copy
https://www.ebi.ac.uk/chebi/beta/
Collection of chemical compounds and other small molecular entities that incorporates an ontological classification of chemical compounds of biological relevance, whereby the relationships between molecular entities or classes of entities and their parents and/or children are specified. The molecular entities in question are either products of nature or synthetic products used to intervene in the processes of living organisms.
Proper citation: CHEBI (RRID:SCR_002088) Copy
http://bionumbers.hms.harvard.edu/
Database of key numbers in molecular and cell biology--the quantitative properties of biological systems of interest to computational, systems and molecular cell biologists. Contents of the database range from cell sizes to metabolite concentrations, from reaction rates to generation times, from genome sizes to the number of mitochondria in a cell. Along with the numbers, you'll find the relevant references to the original literature, useful comments, and related numbers. While always of importance to biologists, having numbers in hand is becoming increasingly critical for experimenting, modeling, and analyzing biological systems. BioNumbers was motivated by an appreciation of how long it can take to find even the simplest number in the vast biological literature. All numbers are taken directly from a literature source and that reference is provided with the number. BioNumbers is designed to be highly searchable and queries can be performed by keywords or browsed by menus. BioNumbers is a collaborative community platform where registered users can add content and make comments on existing data. All new entries and commentary are curated to maintain high quality.
Proper citation: BioNumbers (RRID:SCR_002782) Copy
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