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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
Connectionist Models of Cognitive, Affective, Brain, and Behavioral Disorders
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
Connectionist Models of Cognitive, Affective, Brain, and Behavioral Disorders (RRID:SCR_008088) data or information resource, community building portal, portal THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented August 23, 2016. This site aims to provide a discussion and source list for connectionist and neural network models of disorders associated with mental or brain conditions. Recent connectionist and neural network models of behavior, information processing patterns, and brain activity present in people with cognitive, affective, brain, and behavioral disorders are reviewed on this web site. Ways that assumptions regarding normal and disordered behavior may be represented in connectionist models are discussed for features of various disorders. Similarities and differences between the models and criteria for their evaluation are presented, and suggestions for inclusion of information which may help to make these models more directly comparable in the future are considered. References to Connectionist Models of Cognitive, Affective, Brain, and Behavioral Disorders include: General Neural Network Information Reviews, General Introductions, and Calls for More Connectionist Models of Mental Disorders Models of Psychopathologies and Psychiatric Disorders Models of Cognitive, Affective, Brain, and Behavioral Disorders Not Associated with Psychopathology Additionally, Web Sites for Neural Network Modelers of Disorder are provided. affective, articles, behavior, behavioral disorders, bibliographies, brain, brain activity, cognitive, connectionist, disordered, disorders, human, information processing, keywords: connectionist, mental, models, neural network, normal, psychopathologies, research labs has parent organization: Carnegie Mellon University; Pennsylvania; USA THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE nif-0000-10775 SCR_008088 Brain, Connectionist Models of Cognitive, Affective, and Behavioral Disorders 2026-02-15 09:19:28 0
NIMH Interdisciplinary Behavioral Science Center
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
NIMH Interdisciplinary Behavioral Science Center (RRID:SCR_008085) IBSC topical portal, data or information resource, portal THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on February 07, 2013. A framework for understanding human cognition, grounded in principles specifying the character of human cognitive processes, and constrained by properties, of the underlying neural mechanisms. The Center will exploit this framework to guide formulation of explicit, testable models of normal and disordered cognition, including models of the development of cognitive functions and of their disintegration as a result of brain damage or disease. This site is intended as a public service and as a focal point for exchange of ideas among the participants in the Interdisciplinary Behavioral Science Center (IBSC). Public areas of the site provide information about the Center as a whole and about the various projects in the Center, as well as web-accessible documents and tools that we are making available as a public service. A fundamental tenet is that cognition is an emergent phenomenon, arising from the interactions of cooperating processing elements organized into specialized populations. One aim of the center will be to investigate the utility of explicit models that are formulated in terms of this approach, addressing many aspects of cognition including semantic knowledge, language processing, cognitive control, perception, learning and memory. A second aim will also investigate the principles that are embodied in the models, including principles of learning, processing and representation. Learning will be a central focus, since it plays a crucial role in cognitive development, acquisition of skills, formation of memories, and remediation of cognitive functions. A third aim of the Center will be to incorporate constraints from neuroscience. Findings from neuroscience will guide the specification of the principles and the formulation of domain-specific details of particular models, and will provide target experimental observations against which to assess the adequacy of the models. In addition, the Center will make use of neurophysiological methods in animals and functional brain imaging in humans to test predictions and generate additional data needed to constrain and inform model development. The Center will provide training funds for interdisciplinary research fellowships, to train junior scientists in the convergent use of behavioral, computational, and neuroscience methodologies. The outcome of the Centers efforts will be a fuller characterization of the nature of human cognitive processes, a clearer formulation of the underlying principles, and a more complete understanding of normal and disordered functions across many domains of cognition. This Center includes eight projects dedicated to various aspects of cognition and various general issues that arise in the effort to build explicit models that capture different aspects of cognition, and also includes an administrative core to help foster integration and provide computing resources. * Project 1: Functional and Neural Organization of Semantic Memory * Project 2: Interactive Processes in Language: Lexical Processing * Project 3: Interactive Processes in Language: Sentence Processing * Project 4: Mechanisms of Cognitive Control * Project 5: Interactive Processes in Perception: Neurophysiology of Figure-Ground Organization * Project 6: Basic Mechanisms and Cooperating Systems in Learning Memory * Project 7: Age and Experience Dependent Processes in Learning * Project 8: Theoretical Foundations * Core: Integration, Computational Resources, and Administration human, cognition, cognition, neural mechanism, learning, interdisciplinary, behavioral, semantic knowledge, language processing, cognitive control, perception, memory, learning, processing, representation, cognitive development, model development, brain damage, functional brain imaging has parent organization: Carnegie Mellon University; Pennsylvania; USA Normal cognition, Disordered cognition NIMH THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE nif-0000-10757 SCR_008085 2026-02-15 09:19:43 0
University of Pittsburgh Alzheimer Disease Research Center
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
100+ mentions
University of Pittsburgh Alzheimer Disease Research Center (RRID:SCR_008084) ADRC disease-related portal, topical portal, data or information resource, portal A research center associated with the University of Pittsburgh that specializes in the diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease and related disorders. The overall objective of the ADRC is to study the pathophysiology of Alzheimer's disease, with the aim of improving the reliability of diagnosis of Alzheimer's and developing effective treatment strategies. Current research foci emphasize neuropsychiatry and neuropsychology, molecular genetics and epidemiology, basic neuroscience, and structural and functional imaging that aid in the diagnosis and treatment of Alzheimer's disease. Specific services at the ADRC include: comprehensive diagnostic evaluation of patients with suspected Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia; evaluation of memory, language, judgment, and other cognitive abilities; and education and counseling for patients and families. african american, alzheimer's disease, assessment, clinical, cognitive, dementia, diagnosis, diagnostic evaluation, human, medical, mild cognitive impairment, neurological, pathophysiology, psychiatric has parent organization: University of Pittsburgh; Pennsylvania; USA Alzheimer's disease, Mild Cognitive Impairment, Dementia, Aging NIA Public nif-0000-10750 SCR_008084 University of Pittsburgh Alzheimer's Disease Research Center 2026-02-15 09:19:42 494
Allen Human Brain Atlas: BrainSpan (Atlas of the Developing Brain)
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
100+ mentions
Allen Human Brain Atlas: BrainSpan (Atlas of the Developing Brain) (RRID:SCR_008083) BrainSpan reference atlas, atlas, data or information resource, expression atlas Atlas of developing human brain for studying transcriptional mechanisms involved in human brain development. Consists of RNA sequencing and exon microarray data profiling up to sixteen cortical and subcortical structures across full course of human brain development, high resolution neuroanatomical transcriptional profiles of about 300 distinct structures spanning entire brain for four midgestional prenatal specimens, in situ hybridization image data covering selected genes and brain regions in developing and adult human brain, reference atlas in full color with high resolution anatomic reference atlases of prenatal (two stages) and adult human brain along with supporting histology, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) data. anatomic, gene expression, molecular neuroanatomy, in situ hybridization, human, medial prefrontal cortex, primary visual cortex, hippocampus, amygdala, ventral striatum, postnatal, development, brain development, transcription, brain, rna sequencing, exon microarray, developmental stage, male, female, mrna transcript, developing human, adult human, fetal brain, fetus, histology, transcriptome, magnetic resonance imaging, diffusion tensor imaging, annotation, neuroanatomy, prenatal, development, fiber tract, microarray, mri, dti, methylation, microrna, mrf is used by: BICCN
is related to: NIH Blueprint NHP Atlas
is related to: Allen Developing Mouse Brain Atlas
is related to: Developmental Human Brain Atlas Ontology (DHBA)
has parent organization: Allen Institute for Brain Science
is parent organization of: BrainSpan
is parent organization of: BrainSpan
Neurodevelopmental disorder, Neuropsychiatric disease, Schizophrenia, Epilepsy, Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's disease, Neurological disease, Autism NIMH RC2 MH089921;
NIMH RC2 MH090047;
NIMH RC2 MH089929
Free, Freely available nif-0000-10626 http://www.developinghumanbrain.org/ SCR_008083 BrainSpan - Atlas of the Developing Human Brain, BrainSpan: Atlas of the Developing Human Brain, NIMH Transcriptional Atlas of Human Brain Development 2026-02-15 09:19:28 398
Human Ageing Genomic Resources
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
50+ mentions
Human Ageing Genomic Resources (RRID:SCR_007700) HAGR software toolkit, data or information resource, database, software resource Collection of databases and tools designed to help researchers study the genetics of human ageing using modern approaches such as functional genomics, network analyses, systems biology and evolutionary analyses. A major resource in HAGR is GenAge, which includes a curated database of genes related to human aging and a database of ageing- and longevity-associated genes in model organisms. Another major database in HAGR is AnAge. Featuring over 4,000 species, AnAge provides a compilation of data on aging, longevity, and life history that is ideal for the comparative biology of aging. GenDR is a database of genes associated with dietary restriction based on genetic manipulation experiments and gene expression profiling. Other projects include evolutionary studies, genome sequencing, cancer genomics, and gene expression analyses. The latter allowed them to identify a set of genes commonly altered during mammalian aging which represents a conserved molecular signature of aging. Software, namely in the form of scripts for Perl and SPSS, is made available for users to perform a variety of bioinformatic analyses potentially relevant for studying aging. The Perl toolkit, entitled the Ageing Research Computational Tools (ARCT), provides modules for parsing files, data-mining, searching and downloading data from the Internet, etc. Also available is an SPSS script that can be used to determine the demographic rate of aging for a given population. An extensive list of links regarding computational biology, genomics, gerontology, and comparative biology is also available. gene, gerontology, human, model, senescence, genomics, longevity, genetics, perl, spss, demographic analysis, genome, evolution, gene expression, model organism, human aging, dietary restriction, genetic manipulation has parent organization: University of Liverpool; Liverpool; United Kingdom
is parent organization of: anage
is parent organization of: GenAge
Aging, Cancer Ellison Medical Foundation ;
Wellcome Trust ME050495MES;
European Union FP7 Health Research HEALTH-F4-2008-202047
PMID:23193293 GNU General Public License, Creative Commons Attribution v3 Unported License nif-0000-02938, r3d100011871 https://doi.org/10.17616/R34W81 SCR_007700 2026-02-15 09:19:46 67
Know Stroke Campaign
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
1+ mentions
Know Stroke Campaign (RRID:SCR_008073) portal, video resource, training material, data or information resource, narrative resource, topical portal Campaign to help educate the public about the symptoms of stroke and the importance of getting to the hospital quickly, with a wide range of materials about stroke prevention, treatment, and rehabilitation available through the site. The campaign includes outreach to consumers and health care professionals using mass media, grassroots outreach, partnerships, and community education. human, prevention, rehabilitation, signs, stroke, symptoms, treatment has parent organization: National Institutes of Health Aging, Stroke nif-0000-11288 SCR_008073 Know Stroke, Know Stroke. Know the Signs. Act in Time. 2026-02-15 09:19:28 4
DNA From The Beginning: AN Animated Primer on the Basics of DNA, Genes, and Heredity
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
DNA From The Beginning: AN Animated Primer on the Basics of DNA, Genes, and Heredity (RRID:SCR_008028) DNAftB portal, video resource, training material, data or information resource, image collection, narrative resource, topical portal An animated primer on the basics of DNA, genes, and heredity organized around three key concepts: Classical Genetics, Molecules of Genetics, and Genetic Organization and Control. The science behind each concept is explained by: animation, image gallery, video interviews, problem, biographies, and links. gene, genetic, chromosome, dna, heredity, human, protein, reverse transcriptase, transcription, translation, transposon, genetics, virus, rna, mutation has parent organization: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Josiah Macy Jr. Foundation nif-0000-10208 SCR_008028 DNA from the Beginning 2026-02-15 09:19:47 0
E. coli Genome project
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
1+ mentions
E. coli Genome project (RRID:SCR_008139) topical portal, data or information resource, database, portal The E. coli Genome Project has the goal of completely sequencing the E. coli and human genomes. They began isolation of an overlapping lambda clonebank of E. coli K-12 strain MG1655. Those clones served as the starting material in our initial efforts to sequence the whole genome. Improvements in sequencing technology have since reached the point where whole-genome sequencing of microbial genomes is routine, and the human genome has in fact been completed. They initiated additional sequencing efforts, concentrating on pathogenic members of the family Enterobacteriaceae -- to which E. coli belongs. They also began a systematic functional characterization of E. coli K-12 genes and their regulation, using the whole genome sequence to address how the over 4000 genes of this organism act together to enable its survival in a wide range of environments. e. coli, enterobcteriaceae, gene, genome, human, journal aricle, knowledgebase, regulation, sequence, job has parent organization: University of Wisconsin-Madison; Wisconsin; USA NIAID ;
NHGRI
nif-0000-20961 SCR_008139 E.Coli genome project 2026-02-15 09:19:28 5
Organelle DB
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
1+ mentions
Organelle DB (RRID:SCR_007837) Organelle DB database, d spatial image, service resource, storage service resource, data repository, data or information resource, image collection Database of organelle proteins, and subcellular structures / complexes from compiled protein localization data from organisms spanning the eukaryotic kingdom. All data may be downloaded as a tab-delimited text file and new localization data (and localization images, etc) for any organism relevant to the data sets currently contained in Organelle DB is welcomed. The data sets in Organelle DB encompass 138 organisms with emphasis on the major model systems: S. cerevisiae, A. thaliana, D. melanogaster, C. elegans, M. musculus, and human proteins as well. In particular, Organelle DB is a central repository of yeast protein localization data, incorporating results from both previous and current (ongoing) large-scale studies of protein localization in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In addition, we have manually curated several recent subcellular proteomic studies for incorporation in Organelle DB. In total, Organelle DB is a singular resource consolidating our knowledge of the protein composition of eukaryotic organelles and subcellular structures. When available, we have included terms from the Gene Ontologies: the cellular component, molecular function, and biological process fields are discussed more fully in GO. Additionally, when available, we have included fluorescent micrographs (principally of yeast cells) visualizing the described protein localization. Organelle View is a visualization tool for yeast protein localization. It is a visually engaging way for high school and undergraduate students to learn about genetics or for visually-inclined researchers to explore Organelle DB. By revealing the data through a colorful, dimensional model, we believe that different kinds of information will come to light. gene, fly, vertebrate, human, mouse, plant, worm, yeast, protein, k-12, organelle, protein localization, function, subcellular structure, protein complex, sequence, annotation, micrograph, visualization, data analysis service is related to: Gene Ontology
has parent organization: University of Michigan; Ann Arbor; USA
American Cancer Society Research Scholar Grant RSG-06-179-01-MBC;
March of Dimes Basil O'Connor Starter Scholar Research award 5-FY05-1224;
NSF DBI-0543017
PMID:17130152
PMID:15608270
Free, Acknowledgement requested nif-0000-03226 SCR_007837 Organelle DB: A Database of Organelles and Protein Complexes 2026-02-15 09:19:40 7
Dana Foundation: BrainWeb
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
Dana Foundation: BrainWeb (RRID:SCR_007996) portal, patient-support portal, data or information resource, topical portal, disease-related portal BrainWeb provides information and links to validated sites about brain diseases and disorders. These include outside resources reviewed by scientific advisers, as well as articles in Dana publications. Sites listed in BrainWeb detail common brain diseases and disorders, and include general neuroscience and health resources. They offer descriptions of conditions, frequently asked questions, organization contacts, and sources for more information. BrainWeb and its links are suitable for lay readers, including students and educators, as well as people with brain disorders, their families, and caregivers. alzheimer’s, disease related portal, patient support portal, brain, human, brain disease, brain disorder, general neuroscience, health resource, lay man has parent organization: Dana Foundation Aging Available to the research community, Available for students and educators, Available to patients and caregivers nif-0000-07310 SCR_007996 BrainWeb, Dana Foundation: BrainWeb, The Dana Foundation: BrainWeb 2026-02-15 09:19:27 0
University of Southern California Brain Project
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
1+ mentions
University of Southern California Brain Project (RRID:SCR_008044) data or information resource, database, software resource The USC Brain Project is engaged in the effort to develop new tools and methodologies for neuroinformatics in modeling neural mechanisms of visuomotor coordination and exploring the evolution of the human language-ready brain, as well as conducting work in both neural modeling and database construction in relation to rehabilitation after stroke. Sponsors: USCBP is funded by the University of Southern California. brain, human, neural, neuroinformatics, stroke, visuomotor coordination, language has parent organization: University of Southern California; Los Angeles; USA nif-0000-10531 http://neuroinformatics.usc.edu/mediawiki/index.php/Main_Page SCR_008044 USCBP 2026-02-15 09:19:27 1
Integrative Neuroscience Initiative on Alcoholism
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
Integrative Neuroscience Initiative on Alcoholism (RRID:SCR_008042) INIA portal, slide, data or information resource, experimental protocol, narrative resource, bibliography, topical portal Consortium set out to identify the molecular, cellular, and behavioral neuroadaptations that occur in the brain reward circuits associated with the extended amygdala and its connections. It is hypothesized that genetic differences and/or neuroadaptations in this circuitry are responsible for the individual differences in vulnerability to the excessive consumption of alcohol. Chronic exposure to alcohol results in neuroadaptive phenomena, including tolerance, sensitization, dependence, withdrawal, loss of control of drinking, and relapse that contribute to the development of excessive alcohol consumption. The INIA has the following goals: 1) To establish animal models to study specific neurobiological targets for vulnerability that lead to excessive consumption of alcohol at the molecular, cellular and neural circuit level of analysis, 2) To identify specific clusters of genes whose expression is regulated by alcohol and which are responsible for any given model of excessive alcohol consumption using gene expression arrays, differential display, mutagenesis directed at specific brain areas, and the development of new informatics tools to analyze and interpret gene expression, cellular circuitry and brain circuitry data with the use of transgenic and knockout approaches, and 3) To attract new and innovative investigators to the field of alcohol research by recruiting individuals for development of U01 grants and pilot projects and by developing online interactive capacity among INIA scientists and others, and by making the neuroinformatics integrated data sets accessible, searchable and interactive with other databases for all scientists interested in alcoholism research. The structure of INIA is envisioned as two domains, Dependence-induced drinking and Binge drinking, comprised of multiple U01 research grants. The flow of information within each domain moves from molecular, to cellular, to neurocircuitry levels of analysis. These U01s share information with the core facilities, which act as data depositories. The Administrative Core coordinates the flow of information among the Domains and Cores and disseminates the information back to the U01s. A Pilot Project program will identify exciting new areas for research and the continual recruitment of new investigators to the alcohol field. The INIA program is directed by an Administrative Core in close cooperation with the Animal Models, Gene Array and Neurocircuitry Cores via a Steering Committee and with the continual advice of the Scientific Advisory Committee. extended amygdala, gene array, gene expression, genes, genetic, alcoholism, alcohol research, animal models, binge drinking, brain, brain circuitry, cellular circuitry, dependence, dependence-induced drinking, drosophila, genotyping, grants, human, imaging, knockout, loss of control, mapping, methodologies, mouse, neural circuit, neuroadaptations, neurocircuitry, neuroinformatics, neuroscience, pilot, rat, relapse, reward circuits, rnai, sensitization, tolerance, transgenic, withdrawal has parent organization: Scripps Research Institute
is parent organization of: INIA19 Primate Brain Atlas
NIAAA nif-0000-10258 SCR_008042 2026-02-15 09:19:42 0
NIA Scientific Resources
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
NIA Scientific Resources (RRID:SCR_008269) NIA Scientific Resources organism supplier, material resource, biomaterial supply resource A resource that provides information on the vast number of resources available from the National Institute of Aging. NIA maintains approximately 150 primates (Macaca mulatta) at four regional primate centers where aging-related research is conducted. NIA also maintains colonies of aged rats and mice that are used for age-related disease research. This resource supports a multi-institutional study, the Interventions Testing Program (ITP), that investigates diets and dietary supplements that extend lifespan, delay disease and avoid dysfunction. NIA is also in charge of a microarray facility which provides filter arrays of 17,000 mouse cDNA clone sets that were developed at the NIA Intramural Research Program Laboratory of Genetics. NIA supports studies that provide biospecimens that can be shared for later research. This resource also helps the C. elegans Genetic Center at the University of Minnesota, which contains 1,000 strains of C. elegans that can be used for aging studies. This resource also provides a searchable database for epidemiological research on aging. There is access to social and behavioral research materials, including books on aging and health, from the research was conducted and supported by NIA. There are links to federal web sites that are further resources for aging research that were supported by NIA. macaca mulatta, rodent, epidemiological, fibroblast, genetics, alzheimer's disease, animal, array, behavioral, caenorhabditis elegans, cdna, cell, colony, culture, disease, dna, human, hutchinson-guilford, intervention, microarray, mouse, mutation, non-human primate, premature, primate, progeria, rat, repository, scientific, skin, social, supplement, syndrome, werner, diet, dietary supplement, longitudinal, health has parent organization: National Institute on Aging
is parent organization of: NIA Aged Rodent Colonies
is parent organization of: NIA Nonhuman Primate Tissue Bank
is parent organization of: NIA Mutant Mouse Aging Colony Handbook
is parent organization of: Database for Sharing Aging Research Models
is parent organization of: Aged Rodent Tissue Bank
Aging NIA nif-0000-23759 http://www.nia.nih.gov/ResearchInformation/ScientificResources/ SCR_008269 NIA Non-Human Primate Centers and Tissue Banks 2026-02-15 09:19:49 0
Mouse Pathology Training Grant
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
Mouse Pathology Training Grant (RRID:SCR_008300) organization portal, data or information resource, laboratory portal, portal Laboratory animals are used in nearly half of all research projects supported by the National Institutes of Health. Significant needs exist at the national level for skilled scientists trained to work with and interpret the data generated from the use of rodent animal models. In response to this national need a research training program has been established through funding by the National Centers for Research Resources to provide an environment for veterinarians (D.V.M. or V.M.D.) and D.V.M./Ph.D.''s to effectively utilize mouse models of human disease. Specifically, veterinarian scientists are trained in state of-the-art molecular and cellular techniques to systematically evaluate the mechanistic pathobiology and phenotype of experimental mouse models of human disease. The training program is coordinated through an established graduate program in the College of Veterinary Medicine, Department of VeterinaryBiosciences and supported by a unified group of basic and clinical scientists with ongoing collaborative programs at The Ohio State University and Children''s Hospital. The scientists have expertise in endocrinology, infectious disease, genetics, oncology, molecular biology, immunology, physiology, biochemistry, and pathology. Trainees gain knowledge and skills to fully understand and evaluate pathophysiologic alterations of murine models of human disease through both didactic coursework and applied training in pathology and molecular biology. In addition, trainees interact with our multidisciplinary faculty to identify the range of research problems that use murine models. They acquaint themselves with the ongoing basic and clinical research studies in the laboratories and clinical sites of the participating faculty, and select a research problem that utilizes a murine model for endpoint evaluation. Following the selection of a preceptor and research problem, the trainee participates in the design and performance of experiments, as well as analysis and presentation of data regarding a murine model. Trainees develop skills in clinical, gross, and histologic pathology, molecular and immunologic techniques, and use transgenic and immunodeficient mouse models to identify and characterize alterations in embryonic and postnatal development. Therefore, trainees acquire a broad background in molecular biology, genetics, pathology, laboratory animal medicine, as well as research design methodology to fulfill national needs in the development of skilled scientists in mouse pathobiology. :Sponsors: Mouse Pathology Training Grant is funded by the National Centers for Research Resources. endocrinology, genetic, animal, biochemistry, cellular, disease, health, histologic, human, immunodeficient, immunology, infectious, laboratory, medicine, model, molecular, mouse, oncology, pathobiology, pathology, pathophysiologic, phenotype, physiology, technique, veterinary has parent organization: Ohio State University; Ohio; USA nif-0000-24381 SCR_008300 Mouse Pathology Training Grant 2026-02-15 09:19:49 0
Fisher Center For Alzheimers Research Foundation: ALZinfo.org
 
Resource Report
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100+ mentions
Fisher Center For Alzheimers Research Foundation: ALZinfo.org (RRID:SCR_008255) funding resource, data or information resource, community building portal, portal A portal to educate, engage and create an online community. The Fisher Center for Alzheimer''s Research Foundation, founded in 1995, was created in answer to the recommendations of three U.S. Senate commissioned symposia held in the 1990s by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to gather information on the cause, care and cure of Alzheimer''s disease. The Fisher Center was created following this design. The funding initiatives of the Foundation are appropriated accordingly to the three areas cited by the NIH task force cause, care and cure. The primary resources of the Foundation are directed toward scientific research into the cause and hopefully the cure of Alzheimer''s disease. To this end, the Foundation under the direction of its founder, Zachary Fisher, and in collaboration with David Rockefeller, constructed the Fisher Center for Alzheimer''s Disease Research at The Rockefeller University, headed by 2000 Nobel Prize winner, Paul Greengard, Ph.D. The 10,000 square foot laboratory is the most advanced facility of its kind in the country equipped with the latest in equipment necessary to undertake an interdisciplinary assault on this disease. The Fisher Center also has collaborative programs at the University of Genoa and supports the work of well over 60 scientists and researchers across the United States and in 17 foreign countries. The Foundation also funds projects for the care of people with Alzheimer''s disease and their caregivers. The Fisher Alzheimer''s Disease Education and Resources Program at the New York University School of Medicine was established under the direction of Barry Reisberg, M.D., internationally known expert in the care of Alzheimer''s patients. The Foundations Alzheimer''s Information Program was created in 2001 to answer the primary need of caregivers for comprehensive, easily accessible information. Our goals are to: Understand the Cause of Alzheimer''s To find a Cure for this devastating disease Improve the Care of people living with the disease to enhance their quality of life and that of their caregivers and families About Our Research Beating Back Beta Amyloid Improving the Quality of Life for Alzheimers Patients Reversing Nerve Cell Damage Using Hormones to Slow the Progress of Disease Curing Early-Onset Alzheimers The Science of Caregiving Scientific Studies drugs, fundraising, alzheimers disease, care, caregiving, cause, clinical stages, cure, dementia, diagnosis, human, memory, prevention, research, symptoms, therapeutic activities, treatment nif-0000-22435 SCR_008255 ALZinfo.org 2026-02-15 09:19:45 237
Network Analysis, Visualization and Graphing TORonto
 
Resource Report
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50+ mentions
Network Analysis, Visualization and Graphing TORonto (RRID:SCR_008373) NAViGaTOR software application, data visualization software, data processing software, software resource, d visualization software A software package for visualizing and analyzing protein-protein interaction networks. NAViGaTOR can query OPHID / I2D - online databases of interaction data - and display networks in 2D or 3D. To improve scalability and performance, NAViGaTOR combines Java with OpenGL to provide a 2D/3D visualization system on multiple hardware platforms. NAViGaTOR also provides analytical capabilities and supports standard import and export formats such as GO and the Proteomics Standards Initiative (PSI). NAViGaTOR can be installed and run on Microsoft Windows, Linux / UNIX, and Mac OS systems. NAViGaTOR is written in Java and uses JOGL (Java bindings for OpenGL) to support scalability, highlighting or suppressing of information, and other advanced graphic approaches. fly, algorithm, capacity, graphical, graphing, human, interaction, interactome, intersection, mouse, network, node, protein, proteomic, rat, worm, yeast, graphing application, 2d visualization, 3d visualization, visualization, biological network, protein-protein interaction, gene, bio.tools is listed by: Debian
is listed by: bio.tools
is related to: Gene Ontology
has parent organization: University of Toronto; Ontario; Canada
Genome Canada ;
Ontario Genomics Institute ;
Canada Research Chair Program ;
Ontario Research Fund Research Excellence ;
Canada Foundation for Innovation 12301;
Canada Foundation for Innovation 203383
PMID:19837718 Freely-downloadable for academic and not-for-profit institutions nif-0000-25610, biotools:navigator https://bio.tools/navigator SCR_008373 NAViGaTOR - Network Analysis Visualization and Graphing TORonto, NAViGaTOR - Network Analysis Visualization & Graphing TORonto 2026-02-15 09:19:48 52
Centre for Visual Sciences
 
Resource Report
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Centre for Visual Sciences (RRID:SCR_008324) organization portal, data or information resource, laboratory portal, portal THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented August 23, 2016. Vision Science is a large discipline at the ANU that is found in several teaching and research faculties and several large research institutes. About 85 research staff participate in all forms of vision science from machine vision, to neurophysiology, behaviour and cognition. The scale of analysis ranges from molecular to systems approaches and covers insect, vertebrate and human visual systems. Topics such as disease and development of the human visual system are also covered. CVS works to connect and sustain the component parts of the ANU vision science community. behavior, cognition, development, disease, human, insect, molecular, neurophysiology, research, science, system, vertebrate, vision, visual has parent organization: Australian National University; Acton; Australia THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE nif-0000-24688 SCR_008324 CVS 2026-02-15 09:19:30 0
BIT Life Sciences
 
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BIT Life Sciences (RRID:SCR_008313) topical portal, data or information resource, portal Information and human resource exchange services for academia and industries, professional and commercial societies from major industrial sectors and academic organizations. Events: Annual Drug Discovery Science & Technology (IDDST), World DNA and Genome Day celebrating the discovery of DNA double helix structure, Life science Forum, World AIDS Day, Pepcon Conference, iBio and World Cancer Congress. employment, environment, exchange, academic, bioscientific, cancer, commercial, communication, conference, dna, healthcare, human, industry, intelligence, life, organization, pharmaceutical, professional, science, society, structure nif-0000-24452 SCR_008313 BIT Life Sciences 2026-02-15 09:19:47 0
linkRbrain
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
linkRbrain (RRID:SCR_014562) data management software, software application, web application, software resource An online tool for managing and viewing datasets. Data can be viewed in 2D or 3D with activation points as points clouds or projections on the cortex surface. Data can be imported as a NIfTI file or a list of activation peaks and results can be exported as a PDF file. web application, data management software, brain, human, 2d, 3d, activation point, cortex surface Public, Free SCR_014562 LinkRBrain, linkRbrain: online tool for neuroscience 2026-02-15 09:20:56 0
NetNGlyc
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
1000+ mentions
NetNGlyc (RRID:SCR_001570) NetNGlyc software application, data analysis service, software resource, service resource, production service resource, analysis service resource Server that predicts N-Glycosylation sites in human proteins using artificial neural networks that examine the sequence context of Asn-Xaa-Ser/Thr sequons. NetNGlyc 1.0 is also available as a stand-alone software package, with the same functionality as the service above. Ready-to-ship packages exist for the most common UNIX platforms. predict, n-glycosylation site, human, protein, neural network, sequence, asn-xaa-ser/thr sequon, glycoprotein, bio.tools is listed by: bio.tools
is listed by: Debian
has parent organization: CBS Prediction Servers
Free, Freely available nlx_153863, biotools:netnglyc https://bio.tools/netnglyc SCR_001570 NetNGlyc Server 2026-02-15 09:18:07 1753

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