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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.
Mind Hacks: Neuroscience and psychology tricks to find out what's going on inside your brain. Mind Hacks is also a book by Tom Stafford and Matt Webb.
Proper citation: Mind Hacks (RRID:SCR_000170) Copy
A blog by a Romanian clinical psychologist and psychotherapist Lucia Grosaru. Major categories include: General, lifestyle, news, pensees, psychologists, psychotherapy, self-help and video. Lucia Grosaru is the President and a Founding Member of the Romanian Institute Sic Cogito, Founding Member for The Romanian Center of Psychology and a Founding Editor of The Romanian Journal of Psychology, Psychotherapy and Neuroscience. Lucia is an integrative psychotherapist, clinical psychologist and a Certified Rorschach Inkblot Test Specialist (Method: Scuola Romana Rorschach, Italy). She has graduated the Psychology and Educational Science Faculty at the University of Bucharest in 2008 and the Cognitive Psychodiagnosis and Counseling Master's Programme in 2010.
Proper citation: Psychology Corner (RRID:SCR_000630) Copy
http://mouse.brain-map.org/static/atlas
Allen Mouse Brain Atlas includes full color, high resolution anatomic reference atlas accompanied by systematic, hierarchically organized taxonomy of mouse brain structures. Enables interactive online exploration of atlas and to provide deeper level of 3D annotation for informatics analysis and viewing in Brain Explorer 3D viewer.
Proper citation: Allen Mouse Brain Reference Atlas (RRID:SCR_002978) Copy
http://stemcells.nih.gov/research/registry/
A listing of human embryonic cell lines that are eligible for use in NIH funded research. Those lines that carry disease-specific mutations are noted as such under the line name. Total Eligible Lines = 200. The purpose of the Registry is to provide investigators with: # a unique NIH Code for each cell line that must be used when applying for NIH funding and # contact information to facilitate investigators' acquisition of stem cells. Before submitting a new grant application and supporting materials for consideration of a human embryonic stem cell line, scientists may wish to see what lines are already under consideration: * Human embryonic stem cell lines submitted to NIH that are being reviewed to determine if they may be used in NIH-supported research, http://grants.nih.gov/stem_cells/registry/pending.htm President George W. Bush required that the name of the registry be changed in his Executive Order #13435, issued on June 20, 2007. As a result of this Executive Order, the former National Institutes of Health Human Embryonic Stem Cell Registry will now be called the National Institutes of Health Human Pluripotent Stem Cell Registry. The registry will now include both human embryonic stem cells that were derived consistent with the President's policy of August 9, 2001 and human pluripotent stem cells derived from non-embryonic sources.
Proper citation: NIH Human Pluripotent Stem Cell Registry (RRID:SCR_003149) Copy
https://neuinfo.org/about/sources/nlx_143622-1
International registry of biomaterial supply resources both for transplantation and research. Contributions to this resource are welcome. The database is searchable through NIF and is updated regularly.
Proper citation: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing (RRID:SCR_004193) Copy
https://catalog.data.gov/dataset?groups=research9385#topic=research_navigation
A catalog of high-value public science and research data sets from across the Federal Government.
Proper citation: Data.gov Science and Research Data Catalog (RRID:SCR_003927) Copy
http://www.uniprot.org/help/uniprotkb
Central repository for collection of functional information on proteins, with accurate and consistent annotation. In addition to capturing core data mandatory for each UniProtKB entry (mainly, the amino acid sequence, protein name or description, taxonomic data and citation information), as much annotation information as possible is added. This includes widely accepted biological ontologies, classifications and cross-references, and experimental and computational data. The UniProt Knowledgebase consists of two sections, UniProtKB/Swiss-Prot and UniProtKB/TrEMBL. UniProtKB/Swiss-Prot (reviewed) is a high quality manually annotated and non-redundant protein sequence database which brings together experimental results, computed features, and scientific conclusions. UniProtKB/TrEMBL (unreviewed) contains protein sequences associated with computationally generated annotation and large-scale functional characterization that await full manual annotation. Users may browse by taxonomy, keyword, gene ontology, enzyme class or pathway.
Proper citation: UniProtKB (RRID:SCR_004426) Copy
http://www.access-sciencejobs.co.uk/
A leading online job board for scientists, Access-ScienceJobs.co.uk was initially launched in July 2005 from an existing scientific recruitment platform with the sole aim to provide employers a more cost-effective recruitment advertising solution, and for jobseekers a one-stop portal for finding their ideal scientific position. For Jobseekers We work with some of the UK''s leading recruitment agencies and direct employers to bring you an extensive selection of scientific jobs across all related industry sectors. Start your job search here or find a direct employer or agency in our companies a-z directory. Don''t miss our articles section, with useful careers, reviews and news articles written by respected recruitment and cv specialists. * Apply Online - fast, securely & professionally * Save your Job Alerts and manage them easily within your control panel * Create an effective CV Profile and let recruiters find you For Recruiters Looking to fill a job vacancy? We attract a wide range of Scientists within the UK through various forms of job distributions, networks and media coverage. * Post your Science related Jobs to our network of qualified Scientists * Edit, Repost & Expire your Job postings, anytime * Find professional Science Candidates when you CV Search online * Post your Career & News Articles to enhance your Employer brand * List your Profile for FREE in our Companies A-Z Directory
Proper citation: Access-ScienceJobs.co.uk (RRID:SCR_005157) Copy
Website for brain experimental data and other resources such as stimuli and analysis tools. Provides marketplace and discussion forum for sharing tools and data in neuroscience. Data repository and collaborative tool that supports integration of theoretical and experimental neuroscience through collaborative research projects. CRCNS offers funding for new class of proposals focused on data sharing and other resources.
Proper citation: CRCNS (RRID:SCR_005608) Copy
http://www.thesciencejobs.com/
An international career website for vacancies in academic, research and related professions in Science, Technology and Engineering. Announcements on upcoming conferences, workshops, training courses, etc are also available in the site. Job seekers can subscribe for email alerts on latest jobs/event postings. Employers can post jobs free of cost. The site can be viewed in about 35 world languages. About 500 jobs, fellowships and conference announcements are made available to the site every month. Users belong to more than 120 countries.
Proper citation: TheScienceJobs.com (RRID:SCR_005160) Copy
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/clinvar/
Archive of aggregated information about sequence variation and its relationship to human health. Provides reports of relationships among human variations and phenotypes along with supporting evidence. Submissions from clinical testing labs, research labs, locus-specific databases, expert panels and professional societies are welcome. Collects reports of variants found in patient samples, assertions made regarding their clinical significance, information about submitter, and other supporting data. Alleles described in submissions are mapped to reference sequences, and reported according to HGVS standard.
Proper citation: ClinVar (RRID:SCR_006169) Copy
http://scienceblogs.com/channel/life-science/
ScienceBlogs posts about Life Science.
Proper citation: ScienceBlogs: Life Science (RRID:SCR_005158) Copy
http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/guest-blog/
The editors of Scientific American regularly encounter perspectives on science and technology that we believe our readers would find thought-provoking, fascinating, debatable and challenging. The guest blog is a forum for such opinions. The views expressed belong to the author and are not necessarily shared by Scientific American.
Proper citation: Scientific American Guest Blog (RRID:SCR_005152) Copy
http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/neuroskeptic/
A blog by a neuroscientist (United Kingdom) that takes a skeptical look at his own field, and beyond.
Proper citation: Neuroskeptic (RRID:SCR_005427) Copy
https://scicrunch.org/scicrunch/data/source/nlx_154697-13/search?q=*
A virtual database created by the Neuroscience Information Framework currently indexing Scientific Blog and News resources such as: Nature Network Blogs, Wired Science Blogs, The Guardian: Science, It Takes 30, Scientific American Cross-Check, Scientific American Bering in Mind, Research Blogging, CENtral Science, ScienceBlogs: Medicine and Health, American Guest Blog, Scientific American Observations, LabSpaces, RetractionWatch.com, Wired Science, Genomes Unzipped, PLoS Blogs, Daring Nucleic Adventures - genegeek, H2SO4Hurts - Brian Krueger PhD, and Sciblogs.
Proper citation: Integrated Blogs (RRID:SCR_005386) Copy
http://www.scientificamerican.com/section.cfm?id=bering-in-mind
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVCE, documented September 2, 2016. Science news and technology updates from Scientific American.
Proper citation: Scientific American Bering in Mind (RRID:SCR_005208) Copy
http://network.nature.com/blogs
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE.Documented on February 25,2022.NOTE:Blogs hosted on Nature Network have now moved to new homes in the Nature Publishing Group network of blogs. We''''ve made these changes so that our bloggers can take advantage of improvements in blogging technology, and so that we can offer a better service to our colleagues and those who choose to blog with us. We are no longer hosting blogs on Nature Network itself. Nature Network Blogs are blogs posted by members of Nature Network, the professional networking website for scientists around the world. All features on Nature Network are completely free. All you need to do is create a profile.
Proper citation: Nature Network Blogs (RRID:SCR_005165) Copy
The SciLogs combine the strengths of both science culture and the medium blog. They provide scientists and lay people with the opportunity to interact in interdisciplinary discussions about science in all its facets: research, applications, ethics, values, politics etc. Good Science is transparent and provides us with new knowledge about the world and ourselves. As an important part of our culture and society, science is never isolated. Informing about new results and recent developments as well as the dialogue with the public are characteristics of good science. Good blogs are personalized, authentic and active. Oftentimes, they provide unique perspectives. Blog posts are serious invitations for dialogue, readers are potential partners, invited to comment and ask the bloggers questions. The SciLogs are not a closed community. Every user is invited to comment, and new bloggers are welcome, too. Please submit your blog or blog idea to blog@scilogs.de - and we will check if we fit together.
Proper citation: SciLogs (RRID:SCR_005221) Copy
http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/
The New York Times Well is a blog by Tara Parker-Pope on the latest medical research and societal trends affecting your health. Healthy living doesn''t happen at the doctor''s office. The road to better health is paved with the small decisions we make every day. It''s about the choices we make when we buy groceries, drive our cars and hang out with our kids. Join columnist Tara Parker-Pope as she sifts through medical research and expert opinions for practical advice to help readers take control of their health and live well every day.
Proper citation: New York Times - Well (RRID:SCR_005220) Copy
http://www.ox.ac.uk/media/science_blog/
Read the latest science news and views from Oxford University in the Oxford Science Blog. The blog gives you the inside track on science at Oxford University: the projects, the people and what''s happening behind the scenes. Curated by Pete Wilton, science writer and OU Press Officer.
Proper citation: Oxford Science Blog (RRID:SCR_005218) Copy
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