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| Resource Name | Proper Citation | Abbreviations | Resource Type |
Description |
Keywords | Resource Relationships | |||||||||||||
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New Castle University, The Institute of Neuroscience: Major Research Themes Resource Report Resource Website |
New Castle University, The Institute of Neuroscience: Major Research Themes (RRID:SCR_012952) | NCL ION Research | data or information resource, topical portal, portal | This resource provides detailed information about the major research themes in the Institute of Neuroscience at the New Castle University. The major research themes of this department include: * Behavior, Psychology and Cognitive Neurosciences * Developmental Neuroscience, Aging and Neurodegeneration * Neural Circuits and Neuroimaging * Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Motor Control * Neuropharmacology and Neurotechnology * Psychiatric Neurosciences * Visual, Auditory and Sensory Neuroscience | auditory, behavior, cognitive neuroscience, developmental neuroscience, motor control, neural circuit, neurodegeneration, neurology, neuropharmacology, neuroscience, neurosurgery, neurotechnology, psychiatric neuroscience, psychology, research, sensory neuroscience, visual, neuroimaging | Aging | nif-0000-10385 | SCR_012952 | 2026-02-16 09:48:14 | 0 | |||||||||
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Database of International Rehabilitation Research Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Database of International Rehabilitation Research (RRID:SCR_013008) | journal article, data or information resource, database | The CIRRIE Database of International Rehabilitation Research currently contains almost 90,000 citations of international rehabilitation research published between 1990 and the present. The CIRRIE Database collects citations from all areas of rehabilitation and compiles them into one central source. In addition to indexing from mainstream journals and internet sites, CIRRIE also includes citations to resources not readily available to U.S. researchers. Over 5000 journals are represented in the Database and abstracts are available for most citations. A list of journals is now available. There are almost 90,000 citations currently indexed with citations added monthly. The database includes citations from 1990 to the present. It was created to facilitate the sharing of information and expertise in rehabilitation and disability research between the U.S. and other countries. | area, geographic, international, rehabilitation, research, scientific literature databases and services, language | has parent organization: University at Buffalo; New York; USA | nif-0000-21089 | SCR_013008 | CIRRIE Database | 2026-02-16 09:48:15 | 1 | |||||||||
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SIU Center for Alzheimer's Disease and Related Disorders Resource Report Resource Website |
SIU Center for Alzheimer's Disease and Related Disorders (RRID:SCR_013199) | SIU CADRD | training service resource, topical portal, patient-support portal, portal, service resource, data or information resource, disease-related portal | Resource center that provides assistance for patients and families affected by Alzheimer's disease and related conditions. The Center provides patient care through the Memory and Aging Clinic as well as through research, education and service to the community. Additionally the Center provides training in dementia care, maintains centralized data collection, and sponsors programs of research that qualify for federal financial participation. | alzheimer's disease, dementia, clinical trial, clinical, late adult human, research, patient care, education, training service |
has parent organization: Southern Illinois University School of Medicine; Illinois; USA is parent organization of: SIU CADRD Dementia Brain Autopsy Program |
Alzheimer's disease, Dementia, Aging | Public | nlx_144045 | SCR_013199 | SIU School of Medicine Center for Alzheimer's Disease and Related Disorders | 2026-02-16 09:48:26 | 0 | ||||||
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eagle-i research resource ontology Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
eagle-i research resource ontology (RRID:SCR_008784) | ERO | software application, controlled vocabulary, data repository, database, storage service resource, software resource, source code, ontology, service resource, data or information resource | Ontology that models research resources such as instruments, protocols, reagents, animal models and biospecimens. It has been developed in the context of the eagle-i project (http://eagle-i.net/) and consists of over 3451 classes of which over 1200 were created within the ERO namespace, while the rest come from existent ontologies such as the Ontology for Biomedical Investigation (OBI), the uber-anatomy ontology (Uberon), VIVO, the Ontology for Clinical Research (OCRe), the Sequence Ontology (SO), the Software Ontology (SWO) and we include terms from the NCBI Taxonomy as well. The main ontology can be browsed in OntoBee. All purls resolve to OntoBee. | research, resource, biomedical, owl |
is listed by: BioPortal is related to: Ontobee is related to: CTSA ShareCenter has parent organization: Eagle I has parent organization: Google Code |
ARRA ; NCRR U24RR029825 |
New BSD License | nlx_144312 | SCR_008784 | 2026-02-16 09:47:16 | 1 | |||||||
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Rat Genome Database: Neurological Disease Portal Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
Rat Genome Database: Neurological Disease Portal (RRID:SCR_008685) | data or information resource, topical portal, portal | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on May 12,2023. Portal that provides researchers with easy access to data on rat genes, QTLs, strain models, biological processes and pathways related to neurological diseases. This resource also includes dynamic data analysis tools. | gene, analysis, biological, data, database, disease, genome, model, neurological, neuroscience, pathway, phenotype, qtl, rat, research | has parent organization: Medical College of Wisconsin; Wisconsin; USA | Neurological disease | RGD ; NINDS |
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-33773 | http://rgd.mcw.edu | SCR_008685 | RGD Neurological Disease Portal | 2026-02-16 09:47:14 | 14 | |||||
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University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center - Alzheimer's Disease Center Resource Report Resource Website |
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center - Alzheimer's Disease Center (RRID:SCR_008836) | UT Southwestern ADC, UTSW ADC | data or information resource, topical portal, disease-related portal, portal | A center dedicated to discovering treatments and providing preventative measures for Alzheimer's Disease. Research is strongly focused on brain changes in regards to healthy aging, mild cognitive impairment and other disorders, such as dementia. It aims to improve diagnostic measures and care giving techniques, discover more effective medical interventions, and understand the etiology of the disease and find an eventual cure. The center provides diagnostic evaluations of adult memory problems, as well as the opportunity to participate in clinical research to aid in finding better Alzheimer's treatments. | alzheimer's disease, mild cognitive impairment, dementia, aging, research, treatment, diagnosis, etiology, medical interventions, clinical research |
has parent organization: University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center; Texas; USA is parent organization of: UT Southwestern ADC Brain Tissue Donation Program |
Aging, Alzheimer's disease | NIA 1-P30-AG12300-16 | Public | nlx_144638 | SCR_008836 | UT Southwestern Medical Center ADC | 2026-02-16 09:47:17 | 0 | |||||
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BrainU: The Neuroscience Teacher Institute Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
BrainU: The Neuroscience Teacher Institute (RRID:SCR_008677) | training resource, narrative resource, training material, workshop, data or information resource | A neuroscience training program for Minnesota students and teachers. It provides teachers with three years of neuroscience training, materials, and staff support to bring brain science to their students. In these professional workshops, participants receive updates on the latest in neuroscience research -- discussion is complemented with hands-on activities and lab work. Teachers also receive curriculum materials to aid them in using neuroscience topics in support of Minnesota Intermediate and Middle Level standards. The program was expanded in 2008 to include high school teachers. | brain, curriculum, laboratory, neuroscience, research, student, teacher | has parent organization: University of Minnesota Twin Cities; Minnesota; USA | SEDAPA ; National Center for Research Resources ; ARRA |
nif-0000-33707 | SCR_008677 | BrainU | 2026-02-16 09:47:14 | 1 | ||||||||
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International Observatory on Neuro-Information Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
International Observatory on Neuro-Information (RRID:SCR_008690) | data or information resource, topical portal, portal | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on July 16, 2013. The International Observatory on Neuro-Information is the central source of knowledge, research and data on all skills and issues for Neuroscience applied in Information Sciences. It is an initiative of the Documentation Sciences Foundation, from Spain, which aims to gather information, express opinions, prepare documents, make comparative research, support and promote policy-making, evaluate trends, and take other appropriate action relating to the Neuroscience and its application to the Information Sciences (Libraries, Archives, Documentation centers), and how the traditional knowledge of Information Sciences can bring expertise in data visualization and retrieval techniques, records management, quality assurance and usability in Neuroscience. The Observatory may work together, or in agreement with other national or international organizations pursuing similar or compatible aims. | observatory, neuroscience, research, knowledge, data, science | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-37631 | SCR_008690 | Neuro-information | 2026-02-16 09:47:14 | 8 | |||||||||
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Brain Products Resource Report Resource Website 100+ mentions |
Brain Products (RRID:SCR_009443) | Brain Products GmbH | production service resource, material service resource, instrument manufacture, service resource | Commercial organization for hardware and software for neurophysiological research. Provides EEG and ERP amplifier systems, EEG recording caps, Data recording and analysis software, TMS Stimulator for combined EEG/TMS coregistrations and more. | manufacture, instruments, hardware, software, neurophysiological, research, EEG, ERP, EEG/fMRI, BCI, amplifier, recording, cap, data, analysis, software, TMS, stimulator | is related to: BrainVision Analyzer | nlx_155587 | SCR_009443 | 2026-02-16 09:47:24 | 105 | |||||||||
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Cancer Imaging Archive (TCIA) Resource Report Resource Website 100+ mentions |
Cancer Imaging Archive (TCIA) (RRID:SCR_008927) | TCIA | image repository, data set, data repository, database, storage service resource, catalog, service resource, data or information resource | Archive of medical images of cancer accessible for public download. All images are stored in DICOM file format and organized as Collections, typically patients related by common disease (e.g. lung cancer), image modality (MRI, CT, etc) or research focus. Neuroimaging data sets include clinical outcomes, pathology, and genomics in addition to DICOM images. Submitting Data Proposals are welcomed. | dicom, imaging, ct, pet, pt, x-ray, mri, magnetic resonance, medical, clinical, research, clinical neuroinformatics, computed tomography, dicom, imaging genomics, magnetic resonance, pet, spect, test data, web service, image collection, image, FASEB list |
is recommended by: National Library of Medicine is recommended by: NIDDK Information Network (dkNET) is recommended by: NIDDK - National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC) is listed by: DataCite is listed by: re3data.org is listed by: FAIRsharing is affiliated with: BraTumIA (Brain Tumor Image Analysis) is related to: NIH Data Sharing Repositories is related to: NCI Imaging Data Commons has parent organization: Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research has parent organization: NCI-Frederick |
Cancer | NCI | Restricted | DOI:10.25504/FAIRsharing.jrfd8y, DOI:10.17616/R3NH0V, DOI:10.7937, nlx_151749, r3d100011559 | http://www.nitrc.org/projects/tcia http://www.cancerimagingarchive.net/ http://www.cancerimagingarchive.net/primary-data/ https://wiki.cancerimagingarchive.net/display/Public/Collections https://doi.org/10.17616/R3NH0V https://doi.org/10.17616/r3NH0V https://doi.org/10.7937/ https://dx.doi.org/10.7937/ https://fairsharing.org/10.25504/FAIRsharing.jrfd8y https://doi.org/10.17616/R3NH0V https://doi.org/10.17616/R3NH0V |
SCR_008927 | TCIA, Cancer Imaging Archive, The Cancer Imaging Archive (TCIA), Cancer Imaging Archive (TCIA), The Cancer Imaging Archive | 2026-02-16 09:47:18 | 287 | ||||
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Joslin Diabetes Center Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Joslin Diabetes Center (RRID:SCR_009019) | Joslin, JDC | access service resource, resource, topical portal, portal, service resource, data or information resource, disease-related portal | Diabetes research center which provides patient care and performs diabetes research. Its primary aim is to provide a facilitating framework for conducting multi-disciplinary basic and clinical research and to encourage the scientific development of young investigators. | diabetes, patient, clinical, care, research, investigate, disease |
is listed by: NIDDK Information Network (dkNET) is affiliated with: Diabetes Research Centers is related to: Harvard Bioinformatics Core at Joslin Diabetes Center has parent organization: Harvard University; Cambridge; United States is parent organization of: TINSAL-T2D is parent organization of: Joslin Diabetes Center Advanced Genomics and Genetics Core Facility is parent organization of: Joslin Diabetes Center Advanced Microscopy Core Facility is parent organization of: Joslin Diabetes Center Animal Physiology Core Facility is parent organization of: JDC Computer Resource is parent organization of: Joslin Diabetes Center Flow Cytometry Core Facility is parent organization of: JDC Genetics Core is parent organization of: JDC Media Core is parent organization of: Joslin Diabets Center Proteomics Core Facility is parent organization of: JDC Specialized Assay Core is parent organization of: Joslin Diabetes Center Islet Isolation Core is parent organization of: Joslin Diabetes Center Genomics Core is parent organization of: Joslin Diabetes Center Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell Core is parent organization of: Joslin Diabetes Center Enrichment Core is parent organization of: Joslin Diabetes Center Bioinformatics and Biostatistics Core is parent organization of: Joslin Diabetes Center Molecular Phenotyping and Genotyping Core has organization facet: Joslin Diabetes Center Advanced Genomics and Genetics Core Facility has organization facet: Joslin Diabetes Center Advanced Microscopy Core Facility has organization facet: Joslin Diabetes Center Animal Physiology Core Facility has organization facet: Joslin Diabetes Center Bioinformatics and Biostatistics Core has organization facet: Joslin Diabetes Center Enrichment Core has organization facet: Joslin Diabetes Center Flow Cytometry Core Facility has organization facet: Joslin Diabetes Center Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell Core is organization facet of: Diabetes Research Centers |
Diabetes | NIDDK P30 DK036836 | Available to the research community | nlx_152856 | SCR_009019 | Joslin Diabetes Cntr | 2026-02-16 09:47:19 | 2 | |||||
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ChemHealthWeb Resource Report Resource Website |
ChemHealthWeb (RRID:SCR_005851) | ChemHealthWeb | video resource, narrative resource, training material, topical portal, portal, data or information resource | Visit ChemHealthWeb for research highlights, chemist profiles, games and videos and other Web extras. The NIGMS Chemistry of Health booklet describes basic chemistry and biochemistry research that spurs a better understanding of human health. | chemistry, health, chemistry, biochemistry, research, human, game, puzzle, chemist, molecule, medicine, teacher | has parent organization: National Institute of General Medical Sciences | NIGMS | nlx_149382 | SCR_005851 | 2026-02-16 09:46:33 | 0 | ||||||||
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Conditioned Taste Aversion: An Annotated Bibliography Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Conditioned Taste Aversion: An Annotated Bibliography (RRID:SCR_005953) | CTA | data or information resource, database, bibliography | A searchable, keyword-indexed bibliography on conditioned taste aversion learning, the avoidance of fluids and foods previously associated with the aversive effects of a variety of drugs. The database includes articles as early as 1951, and papers just published given that the database is ongoing and constantly updated. In the mid 1950''s, John Garcia and his colleagues at the Radiological Defense Laboratory at Hunters Point in San Francisco assessed the effects of ionizing radiation on a myriad of behaviors in the laboratory rat. One of their behavioral findings was that radiated rats avoided consumption of solutions that had been present during radiation, presumably due to the association of the taste of the solution with the aversive effects of the radiation. These results were published in Science and introduced to the literature the phenomenon of conditioned taste aversion learning (or the Garcia Effect). Subsequently, Garcia and his colleagues demonstrated that such learning appeared unique in a number of respects, including the fact that these aversions were acquired often in a single conditioning trial, selectively to gustatory stimuli and even when long delays were imposed between access to the solution and administration of the aversive agent. Together, these unique characteristics appeared to violate the basic tenets of traditional learning theory and along with a number of other behavioral phenomena (e.g., bird song learning, species-specific defense reactions, tonic immobility and schedule-induced polydipsia) introduced the concept of biological constraints on learning that forced a reconceptualization of the role evolution played in the acquisition of behavior (Garcia and Ervin, 1968; Revusky and Garcia, 1970; Rozin and Kalat, 1971). Although the initial investigations into conditioned taste aversion learning focused on these biological and evolutionary issues and their relation to learning, research in this area soon assessed the basic generality of the phenomenon, specifically, under what conditions such learning did or did not occur. With such research, a wide variety of gustatory stimuli were reported as effective conditioned stimuli and an extensive list of drugs with diverse consequences were reported as effective aversion-inducing agents. Aversions were established in a range of strains and species and under many experimental conditions. Research in this area continues to extend the conditions under which such learning occurs and to demonstrate its biological, neurochemical and anatomical substrates. Although the conditions under which aversion learning are reported to occur appear to generalize from the specific conditions under which they were originally reported, a number of factors including sex, age, training and testing procedures, deprivation level and drug history, all affect the rate of its acquisition and its terminal strength (Riley, 1998). In addition to these experimental demonstrations and assessments of generality, research on conditioned taste aversions has expanded to include investigations into its research and clinical applications (Braveman and Bronstein, 1985). In so doing, taste aversion learning has been applied to the characterization and classification of drug toxicity, the demonstration of the stimulus properties of abused drugs, the management of wildlife predation, the assessment of the etiology and treatment of cancer anorexia, the study of the biochemistry and molecular biology of learning, the etiology and control of alcohol use and abuse, the receptor characterization of the motivational effects of drugs, the occurrence of drug interactions, the characterization of drug withdrawal, the determination of taste psychophysics, the treatment of autoimmune diseases and the evaluation of the role of malaise in drug-induced satiety and drug-induced behavioral deficits. The speed with which aversions are acquired and the relative robustness of this preparation have made conditioned taste aversion learning a widely used, highly replicable and sensitive tool. In 1976, we published the first of three bibliographies on conditioned taste aversion learning. In this initial publication (see Riley and Baril, 1976), we listed and annotated 403 papers in this field. Subsequent lists published in 1977 (Riley and Clarke, 1977) and 1985 (Riley and Tuck, 1985) listed 632 and 1373 papers, respectively. Since that time, we have maintained a bibliography on taste aversion learning utilizing a variety of journal and on-line searches as well as benefiting from the generous contribution of preprints, reprints and pdf files from many colleagues. To date, the number of papers on conditioned taste aversion learning is approaching 3000. The present database lists these papers and provides a mechanism for searching the articles according to a number of search functions. Specifically, it was constructed to provide the reader access to these articles via a variety of search terms, including Author(s), Key Words, Date, Article Title and Journal. One can search for single or multiple items within any specific category. Further, one can search a single or combination of categories. The database is constantly being updated, and any feedback and suggestions are welcome and can be sent to CTALearning (at) american.edu. | taste aversion, learning, drug, aversive effect, literature, research, association, article, conditioned taste aversion, food avoidance | has parent organization: American University; Washington D.C.; USA | NIDA DA-04376 | PMID:15006479 | nif-0000-00085 | SCR_005953 | Conditioned Taste Aversion, Conditioned Taste Aversion Bibliography | 2026-02-16 09:46:35 | 3 | ||||||
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Hereditary Disease Foundation Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Hereditary Disease Foundation (RRID:SCR_006088) | HDF | funding resource, training resource, portal, topical portal, workshop, data or information resource, disease-related portal | The Hereditary Disease Foundation (HDF) aims to cure genetic illness by supporting basic biomedical research. The HDF was started by Dr. Milton Wexler in 1968 when his wife was diagnosed with Huntington''s disease (HD). The Foundation uses a variety of strategies - workshops, grants, fellowships, and targeted research contracts - to solve the mysteries of genetic disease and develop new treatments and cures. Huntington''s disease is a fatal, dominantly inherited, genetic, neurological disorder causing involuntary movements, severe emotional disturbance and progressive cognitive loss over ten to twenty years. Each child of an affected parent has a 50% risk of inheriting HD, usually in the third or fourth decade of life, though children as young as two years and adults in their eighties may also develop symptoms. The Hereditary Disease Foundation uses Huntington''s disease as a model for hereditary disease research because it is triggered by a mutation of one single gene. Progress toward treatment or a cure could be instrumental in finding ways to treat other illnesses with more complex genetics, including Parkinson''s, Alzheimer''s, Lou Gehrig''s disease (ALS), depression, schizophrenia, and cancer. The Hereditary Disease Foundation has given over $50 million to support pioneering research in genetics, gene therapy, molecular and cell biology, cell survival and death, animal models, neurophysiology, neuropharmacology and other areas relevant to understanding inherited diseases. * Milton Wexler Workshop Program: A centerpiece of the Foundation is the interdisciplinary Workshop Program which sponsors Workshops held many times during the year. Milton Wexler began the Program to bring scientists together from different academic disciplines to brainstorm - without prepared lectures or slides - and explore new directions for research. They often share unpublished data. * Funding Opportunities ** The Basic Research Grants Program supports projects that contribute to identifying and understanding the fundamental defects in Huntington''s disease and related disorders. ** The John J. Wasmuth Postdoctoral Fellowships are named in honor of the late John Jacob Wasmuth, an essential member of the Huntington''s Disease Collaborative Research Group. Our hope is that those granted fellowships bearing his name will seek John''s level of imagination, rigor, creativity and spirit. ** The Lieberman Award is presented annually to a worthy scientist, thanks to the generosity of Harry Lieberman, a trustee of the Hereditary Disease Foundation. ** The Milton Wexler Postdoctoral Fellowship Award is named after the founder of the Hereditary Disease Foundation. The Hereditary Disease Foundation restricts this annual award to research highly relevant to curing Huntington''s disease. * Giving to the Hereditary Disease Foundation - Donations are accepted by check, credit card, etc. | genetics, gene therapy, molecular biology, cell biology, cell survival, cell death, animal model, neurophysiology, neuropharmacology, postdoctoral fellowship, award, grant, genetics, genetic disease, treatment, cure, research, postdoctoral, fellowship | Inherited disease, Huntington''s disease | nlx_151560 | SCR_006088 | Hereditary Disease Foundation (HDF) | 2026-02-16 09:46:37 | 2 | ||||||||
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Brain Test Resource Report Resource Website |
Brain Test (RRID:SCR_006212) | Brain Test | data or information resource, topical portal, portal | A portal of online studies that encourage community participation to tackle the most challenging problems in neuropsychiatry, including attention-deficit / hyperactivity disorder, schizophrenia, and bipolar disorder. Our approach is to engage the community and try to recruit tens of thousands of people to spend an hour of their time on our site. You folks will provide data in both brain tests and questionnaires, as well as DNA, and in return, we will provide some information about your brain and behavior. You will also be entered to win amazon.com gift cards. While large collaborative efforts were made in genetics in order to discover the secrets of the human genome, there are still many mysteries about the behaviors that are seen in complex neuropsychiatric syndromes and the underlying biology that gives rise to these behaviors. We know that it will require studying tens of thousands of people to begin to answer these questions. Having you, the public, as a research partner is the only way to achieve that kind of investment. This site will try to reach that goal, by combining high-throughput behavioral assessment using questionnaires and game-like cognitive tests. You provide the data and then we will provide information and feedback about why you should help us achieve our goals and how it benefits everyone in the world. We believe that through this online study, we can better understand memory and attention behaviors in the general population and their genetic basis, which will in turn allow us to better characterize how these behaviors go awry in people who suffer from mental illness. In the end, we hope this will provide better, more personalized treatment options, and ultimately prevention of these widespread and extremely debilitating brain diseases. We will use the data we collect to try to identify the genetic basis for memory and impulse control, for example. If we can achieve this goal, maybe we can then do more targeted research to understand how the biology goes awry in people who have problems with cognition, including memory and impulse control, like those diagnosed with ADHD, Schizophrenia, Bipolar Disorder, and Autism Spectrum Disorders. By participating in our research, you can learn about mental illness and health and help researchers tackle these complex problems. We can''t do it without your help. | neuropsychiatry, brain, behavior, behavioral assessment, questionnaire, cognitive test, crowdsourcing, online study, memory, attention, brain disease, gene, exercise, genetics, mental disease, mental health, research project, research | has parent organization: University of California at Los Angeles; California; USA | Attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder, Schizophrenia, Bipolar Disorder, Mental disease, Normal, Autism Spectrum Disorder | NIMH ; NARSAD |
nlx_151777 | SCR_006212 | Brain Test project | 2026-02-16 09:46:39 | 0 | ||||||
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Dog Genome Project Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Dog Genome Project (RRID:SCR_008486) | data or information resource, topical portal, portal | The genome of the domesticated dog, a close evolutionary relation to human, is a powerful new tool for understanding the human genome. Comparison of the dog with human and other mammals reveals key information about the structure and evolution of genes and genomes. The unique breeding history of dogs, with their extraordinary behavioral and physical diversity, offers the opportunity to find important genes underlying diseases shared between dogs and humans, such as cancer, diabetes, and epilepsy. The Canine Genome Sequencing Project produced a high-quality draft sequence of a female boxer named Tasha. By comparing Tasha with many other breeds, the project also compiled a comprehensive set of SNPs (single nucleotide polymorphisms) useful in all dog breeds. These closely spaced genomic landmarks are critical for disease mapping. By comparing the dog, rodent, and human lineages, researchers at the Broad Institute uncovered exciting new information about human genes, their evolution, and the regulatory mechanisms governing their expression. Using SNPs, researchers describe the strikingly different haplotype structure in dog breeds compared with the entire dog population. In addition, they show that by understanding the patterns of variation in dog breeds, scientists can design powerful gene mapping experiments for complex diseases that are difficult to map in human populations. Contribute Although the astounding generosity of Eli and Edythe L. Broad and several other venture philanthropists empowers our scientists to tackle many of the most important problems at the cutting edge of genomic medicine, there are many other critical challenges that they cannot yet pursue because of limited resources. We need additional visionary partners to join the Broads and the Broad Institute in transforming medicine with the power of genomics. | dog, canine, human, gene, medical, research, genome, annotation | has parent organization: Broad Institute | NIH Office of the Director R24 OD018250 | nif-0000-30464 | http://dogdata.org/ https://orip.nih.gov/comparative-medicine/programs/genetic-biological-and-information-resources https://www.broadinstitute.org/mammals-models/broad-institute-canine-genomic-resources |
SCR_008486 | Dog Genome, Canine Genome Project, Dog Gene Project, A Comprehensive Canine Genetics Resource Including Gene and Variation Annotation, Dog Genetics Project | 2026-02-16 09:47:12 | 4 | |||||||
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National Institute on Aging, Division of Neuroscience Resource Report Resource Website |
National Institute on Aging, Division of Neuroscience (RRID:SCR_008257) | funding resource, narrative resource, topical portal, portal, data or information resource | A funding resource that supports the research and training for understanding the structure and function of the aging nervous system, with an emphasis on studies involving Alzheimer's disease and age-related dementia. There is an emphasis on brain-behavior relationships. This program is composed of three branches: Neurobiology, Neuropsychology, and Dementias of Aging. The overall aim of this program is to understand the aging nervous system to minimize mental decline and improve the lives of older patients. This resource also includes links to sites for Alzheimer's disease (AD) studies that include: specimen repositories, genetic materials, bio-markers, data, policies on NIA and AD genetics sharing plans, and additional aging or other AD related links. | epidemiological, alzheimer's disease, brain, clinical, dementia, nervous system, neurobiology, neuropsychology, pathological, research, | Aging | R21-Exploratory/Development Grants ; NIH Neuroscience Blueprint initiatives |
nif-0000-22438 | http://www.nia.nih.gov/ResearchInformation/ExtramuralPrograms/NeuroscienceOfAging/ | SCR_008257 | NIA Division of Neuroscience, NIA DN, National Institute on Aging Division of Neuroscience, National Institute on Aging DN | 2026-02-16 09:47:08 | 0 | |||||||
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Centre for Visual Sciences Resource Report Resource Website |
Centre for Visual Sciences (RRID:SCR_008324) | data or information resource, laboratory portal, organization 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 | 2026-02-16 09:47:09 | 0 | ||||||||
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Alcohol and Drug Abuse Institute, University of Washington Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Alcohol and Drug Abuse Institute, University of Washington (RRID:SCR_008283) | organization portal, narrative resource, portal, data or information resource, report | The Alcohol and Drug Abuse Institute is a multidisciplinary research center at the University of Washington. Its mission is to support and facilitate research and research dissemination in the field of alcohol and drug abuse. Recognizing the need to address the enormous problems caused by alcohol and drug abuse, the University of Washington established the Alcohol and Drug Abuse Institute in October of 1973 as an interdisciplinary research center in the Warren G. Magnuson Health Sciences Center. From its beginning, the mission of the Institute has been to conduct and support substance abuse research at the University of Washington, and disseminate research findings in substance abuse. The activities of the Institute may be described under three general headings: Intramural research by ADAI Research Scientists supported through federal, state, and other grants and contracts; Stimulation and support of research by ADAI Research Affiliates and faculty in departments throughout the University through a Small Grants Program. Since 1973, ADAI has awarded almost three million dollars to researchers in 40 University departments, for approximately 300 projects. Many of those funded projects led to outside funding for expanded research. Dissemination of research findings through its Library and Information Service, publications and presentations by ADAI scientists, web page, listservs, newsletters, and symposia. The Institute receives financial support from the State of Washington under state Initiative 171, which mandates that a portion of fees collected for state liquor licenses be allocated to the two state research universities for research on alcohol and drug abuse, and dissemination of research information. The University of Washington provides additional funding. Research studies are funded primarily through grants and contracts awarded by federal and state agencies and private foundations. The Alcohol and Drug Abuse Institute serves as a focal point for alcohol and drug abuse research at the University of Washington and in the region, benefiting the citizens of Washington State by expanding our knowledge and making information available to health and social service professionals and policy makers. The Institute''s multidisciplinary staff of clinical and social psychologists, sociologists, epidemiologists, public health experts, educators, and librarians plays a key role in working to understand and reduce the harm caused by alcohol and drug abuse. Dennis M. Donovan, Ph.D. has been the Director of the Alcohol and Drug Abuse Institute since 1993. Dr. Donovan is a Professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences and an Adjunct Professor in the Department of Psychology. | alcoholism, research, research dissemination, substance-related disorder | has parent organization: University of Washington; Seattle; USA | nif-0000-23841 | SCR_008283 | ADAI | 2026-02-16 09:47:09 | 5 | |||||||||
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ConnectomeViewer: Multi-Modal Multi-Level Network Visualization and Analysis Resource Report Resource Website |
ConnectomeViewer: Multi-Modal Multi-Level Network Visualization and Analysis (RRID:SCR_008312) | ConnectomeViewer | software application, data processing software, network analysis software, data visualization software, data analysis software, software resource, rendering software, network graph visualization software, d visualization software | Extensible, scriptable, pythonic software tool for visualization and analysis in structural neuroimaging research on many spatial scales. Employing the Connectome File Format, diverse data such as networks, surfaces, volumes, tracks and metadata are handled and integrated. The field of Connectomics research benefits from recent advances in structural neuroimaging technologies on all spatial scales. The need for software tools to visualize and analyze the emerging data is urgent. The ConnectomeViewer application was developed to meet the needs of basic and clinical neuroscientists, as well as complex network scientists, providing an integrative, extensible platform to visualize and analyze Connectomics data. With the Connectome File Format, interlinking different datatypes such as hierarchical networks, surface data, volumetric data is easy and might provide new ways of analyzing and interacting with data. Furthermore, ConnectomeViewer readily integrates with: * ConnectomeWiki: a semantic knowledge base representing connectomics data at a mesoscale level across various species, allowing easy access to relevant literature and databases. * ConnectomeDatabase: a repository to store and disseminate Connectome files. | extensible, analysis, clinical, data, diverse, metadata, network, neuroscience, neuroscientist, pythonics, research, scriptable, software, structural, surface, technology, tool, track, visualization, volume, neuroimaging |
has parent organization: Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne; Lausanne; Switzerland has parent organization: University of Lausanne; Lausanne; Switzerland |
nif-0000-24442 | SCR_008312 | 2026-02-16 09:47:09 | 0 |
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