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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.
http://fcon_1000.projects.nitrc.org/indi/abide/
Resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging (R-fMRI) datasets from 539 individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and 573 typical controls. This initiative involved 16 international sites, sharing 20 samples yielding 1112 datasets composed of both MRI data and an extensive array of phenotypic information common across nearly all sites. This effort is expected to facilitate discovery science and comparisons across samples. All datasets are anonymous, with no protected health information included.
Proper citation: ABIDE (RRID:SCR_003612) Copy
http://www.nitrc.org/projects/ibsr
Data set of manually-guided expert segmentation results along with magnetic resonance brain image data. Its purpose is to encourage the development and evaluation of segmentation methods by providing raw test and image data, human expert segmentation results, and methods for comparing segmentation results. Please see the MediaWiki for more information. This repository is meant to contain standard test image data sets which will permit a standardized mechanism for evaluation of the sensitivity of a given analysis method to signal to noise ratio, contrast to noise ratio, shape complexity, degree of partial volume effect, etc. This capability is felt to be essential to further development in the field since many published algorithms tend to only operate successfully under a narrow range of conditions which may not extend to those experienced under the typical clinical imaging setting. This repository is also meant to describe and discuss methods for the comparison of results.
Proper citation: Internet Brain Segmentation Repository (RRID:SCR_001994) Copy
http://www.nitrc.org/projects/rosetta/
Public datasets that have been transcoded into multiple formats. This library of valid file format conversions (DICOM->NIFTI, DICOM->PAR/REC, etc.) will provide a reference for tool developers seeking to support multiple sources of data.
Proper citation: Rosetta Bit (RRID:SCR_001906) Copy
http://www.nitrc.org/projects/mcic/
Expertly collected, well-curated data sets consisting of comprehensive clinical characterization and raw structural, functional and diffusion-weighted DICOM images in schizophrenia patients and gender and age-matched controls are now accessible to the scientific community through an on-line data repository (coins.mrn.org). This data repository will be useful to 1) educators in the fields of neuroimaging, medical image analysis and medical imaging informatics who need exemplar data sets for courses and workshops; 2) computer scientists and software algorithm developers for testing and validating novel registration, segmentation, and other analysis software; and 3) scientists who can study schizophrenia by further analysis of this cohort and/or by pooling with other data.
Proper citation: MCIC (RRID:SCR_002310) Copy
Biomedical technology resource center specializing in novel approaches and tools for neuroimaging. It develops novel strategies to investigate brain structure and function in their full multidimensional complexity. There is a rapidly growing need for brain models comprehensive enough to represent brain structure and function as they change across time in large populations, in different disease states, across imaging modalities, across age and sex, and even across species. International networks of collaborators are provided with a diverse array of tools to create, analyze, visualize, and interact with models of the brain. A major focus of these collaborations is to develop four-dimensional brain models that track and analyze complex patterns of dynamically changing brain structure in development and disease, expanding investigations of brain structure-function relations to four dimensions.
Proper citation: Laboratory of Neuro Imaging (RRID:SCR_001922) Copy
https://www.nitrc.org/projects/nitrc_es
An on-demand, cloud based computational virtual machine pre-installed with popular NITRC neuroimaging tools built using NeuroDebian. For a listing of current NITRC-CE packages visit: http://www.nitrc.org/ce-packages. You can also use the "public Amazon Machine Interface (AMI)" to conduct your analyses on the Amazon EC2 platform.
Proper citation: NITRC Computational Environment (RRID:SCR_002171) Copy
http://www.remedyinformatics.com/
Software to harmonize the data that you have in different Excel files, databases, repositories, biospecimen applications, etc. and maps it to one common registry. Remedy Informatics' platform aggregates data from multiple sources, harmonizes the data via Ontology, and provides data visualization and pattern recognition and querying tools.
Proper citation: Registry Builder Data Harmonization and Aggregation Tool (RRID:SCR_006559) Copy
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER AVAILABLE,documented on February 1st, 2022. Instrument supplier providing eye tracking capabilities for behavioral labs as well as for MRI, MEG, and EEG research environments.
Proper citation: SR Research EyeLink Eye Trackers (RRID:SCR_009602) Copy
http://www.nitrc.org/projects/bstp/
A free collection of MRI brain images for testing segmentation algorithms. It is available for download to assess the accuracy, reproducibility and sensitivity of MRI segmentation software. It includes data from infants and adults as well as patients with Alzheimer's disease.
Proper citation: Brain Segmentation Testing Protocol (RRID:SCR_009445) Copy
https://github.com/BRAINSia/BRAINSTools/tree/master/TestData
About 1.2GB of anonymized imaging data of many different file formats used by the BRAINS suite of tools (BRAINSFit, GTRACT, BRAINS, BRAINSTracer... and others) as a common set of anonymized data for nightly regression testing.
Proper citation: BRAINSTestData (RRID:SCR_009517) Copy
fNIR Imager 1100 is a new generation portable functional near-infrared (fNIR) imaging research tool capable of monitoring brain?s hemodynamics and thereby the cognitive state of the subject in natural environments. Neuroimaging Solution for Natural Environments: * fNIR is the only stand-alone and field-deployable technology able to determine localized brain activity. * fNIR can be readily integrated with other physiological and neurobehavioral measures that assess human brain activity, including eye tracking, pupil reflex, respiration and electrodermal activity. fNIR can also complement other techniques. * Studies have shown a positive correlation between a participant's performance and fNIR responses as a function of task load. * It has also been shown that fNIR can effectively monitor attention and working memory in real-life situations.
Proper citation: fNIR Devices (RRID:SCR_009623) Copy
http://www.nitrc.org/projects/eegdataanimal
A collection of 32-channel data from 14 subjects (7 males, 7 females) acquired using the Neuroscan software. Subjects are performing a go-nogo categorization task and a go-no recognition task on natural photographs presented very briefly (20 ms). Each subject responded to a total of 2500 trials. Data is CZ referenced and is sampled at 1000 Hz (total data size is 4Gb; more details are given later).
Proper citation: EEG human categorization data (RRID:SCR_009468) Copy
http://www.nitrc.org/projects/diffusion-data
An open-data initiative for the distributation of common datasets for the evaluation and validation of diffusion MRI processing methods. http://www.dkfz.de/en/medphysrad/projectgroups/dwi/DTI_projects.html#inhalt3
Proper citation: Diffusion MRI - In-vivo and Phantom Data (RRID:SCR_009464) Copy
http://www.nitrc.org/projects/stark_aging/
Behavioral and imaging data from about 120 participants aged 18-89. Data were collected as part of a grant to use high-resolution imaging and advanced behavioral tasks to understand how aging affects the hippocampus and how this is related to age-related cognitive decline. The full dataset includes traditional neuropsycholgical measures, hippocampal-specific behavioral measures, whole-brain DTI, high-resolution DTI of the medial temporal lobes, and structural MRI including segmentation of grey/white/CSF, of cortical regions and of hippocampal subfields.
Proper citation: Stark Cross-Sectional Aging (RRID:SCR_014171) Copy
http://www.nitrc.org/projects/ymdti/
A dataset which contains diffusion tensor images of 93 healthy, young male subjects.
Proper citation: YMDTI: Diffusion Tensor Images of Healthy Young Males (RRID:SCR_014183) Copy
http://www.nitrc.org/projects/hfh_t1_hp_seg1/
Shared dataset which consists of skull-stripped T1 MRI images and segmented hippocampi of 163 Temporal Lobe Epilepsy (TLE) patients. The T1 and hippocampal segmentation data of TLE patients are uploaded in three separate datasets which can be accessed from the main site.
Proper citation: Epilepsy T1 and Hippocampal Segmentation Datasets (RRID:SCR_014926) Copy
http://mousetracker.jbfreeman.net
A free, user-friendly software package that allows researchers to record and analyze hand movements traveling toward potential responses on the screen (via the x, y coordinates of the computer mouse). By looking at the dynamics of how participants' hand movements settle into a response alternative--and how they may be partially pulled toward other alternatives--researchers glean valuable information about real-time cognitive processing. It's like opening up a single reaction time into a continuous stream of rich cognitive output. MouseTracker has impressive temporal resolution, comparable to eye-tracking and event-related brain potential (ERP) measures. Experiments can incorporate images, letter strings, sounds, and videos. Once recorded, mouse trajectories can be visualized, averaged, and explored, and measures of attraction/curvature, complexity, velocity, and acceleration can be computed. Precise characterizations of mouse trajectories' temporal and spatial dynamics are available, and these can shed light on a variety of important empirical questions across psychology, cognitive science, and beyond.
Proper citation: MouseTracker (RRID:SCR_005979) Copy
http://www.nitrc.org/projects/asl_spm8/
Quick ASL Wrapper for preprocessing arterial spin labeled (ASL) Data and computing blood flow measurements using UPenn ASL toolbox.
Proper citation: ASL spm8 (RRID:SCR_008873) Copy
http://www.nitrc.org/projects/antsr
An R extension to ANTs that performs multivariate statistical parametric mapping of DTI, T1 and other datatypes for the purpose of both performing clinical studies and for tracking the performance of ANTs (and other) image processing methodologies. ANTsR depends upon the R statistical language, bash scripts and the ANTs toolkit. Some branches of ANTsR will also depend upon pipedream and specific datasets. Some of these datasets will be open access and, in that case, ANTsR will provide a 100% reproducible neuroimaging study on that data.
Proper citation: ANTsR (RRID:SCR_008891) Copy
http://www.nitrc.org/projects/cbfdap/
A web enabled data and workflow management system extended from the HID codebase on NITRC specialized for Arterial Spin Labeling data management and analysis (including group analysis) in a centralized manner.
Proper citation: Cerebral Blood Flow Database and Analysis Pipeline (RRID:SCR_009454) Copy
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