Are you sure you want to leave this community? Leaving the community will revoke any permissions you have been granted in this community.
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://hms-dbmi.github.io/scde/index.html
Software package that implements a set of statistical methods for analyzing single-cell RNA-seq data, including differential expression analysis (Kharchenko et al.) and pathway and geneset overdispersion analysis (Fan et al.)
Proper citation: SCDE (RRID:SCR_015952) Copy
https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/geomorph/index.html
Software package for performing all stages of geometric morphometric shape analysis of landmark points and curves in 2-and-3-dimensions as well as 3D surfaces in the R statistical computing environment.
Proper citation: geomorph (RRID:SCR_016482) Copy
Open source software package of Python modules for neuroscience, primarily focused on functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) analysis. Used for analyzing neuroimaging data.
Proper citation: Brain Imaging Analysis Kit (RRID:SCR_014824) Copy
http://bioinformatics.uni-muenster.de/tools/nanopipe2
Web tool for analysis of MinION (ONT) long sequencing reads. Used for analysis of reads generated by the Oxford Nanopore sequencing devices. Provides alignments to any target of interest, alignment statistics and information about polymorphisms.
Proper citation: NanoPipe (RRID:SCR_016852) Copy
https://github.com/xavierdidelot/clonalorigin
Software package for comparative analysis of the sequences of a sample of bacterial genomes in order to reconstruct the recombination events that have taken place in their ancestry.
Proper citation: ClonalOrigin (RRID:SCR_016061) Copy
https://sanger-pathogens.github.io/Roary/
Software tool for rapid large scale prokaryote pan genome analysis. Builds large scale pan genomes, identifying core and accessory genes. Makes construction of pan genome of thousands of prokaryote samples on standard desktop without compromising on accuracy of results. Not intended for meta genomics or for comparing extremely diverse sets of genomes.
Proper citation: Roary (RRID:SCR_018172) Copy
http://sonorus.princeton.edu/hefalmp/
HEFalMp (Human Experimental/FunctionAL MaPper) is a tool developed by Curtis Huttenhower in Olga Troyanskaya's lab at Princeton University. It was created to allow interactive exploration of functional maps. Functional mapping analyzes portions of these networks related to user-specified groups of genes and biological processes and displays the results as probabilities (for individual genes), functional association p-values (for groups of genes), or graphically (as an interaction network). HEFalMp contains information from roughly 15,000 microarray conditions, over 15,000 publications on genetic and physical protein interactions, and several types of DNA and protein sequence analyses and allows the exploration of over 200 H. sapiens process-specific functional relationship networks, including a global, process-independent network capturing the most general functional relationships. Looking to download functional maps? Keep an eye on the bottom of each page of results: every functional map of any kind is generated with a Download link at the bottom right. Most functional maps are provided as tab-delimited text to simplify downstream processing; graphical interaction networks are provided as Support Vector Graphics files, which can be viewed using the Adobe Viewer, any recent version of Firefox, or the excellent open source Inkscape tool.
Proper citation: Human Experimental/FunctionAL MaPper: Providing Functional Maps of the Human Genome (RRID:SCR_003506) Copy
http://rulai.cshl.edu/tools/ESE
A web-based analysis service for identifying exonic splicing enhancers in eukaryotic genes. ESEfinder accept sequences in the FASTA format. A typical mammalian gene is composed of several relatively short exons that are interrupted by much longer introns. To generate correct mature mRNAs, the exons must be identified and joined together precisely and efficiently, in a process that requires the coordinated action of five small nuclear (sn)RNAs (U1, U2, U4, U5 and U6) and more than 60 polypeptides. The inaccurate recognition of exon/intron boundaries or the failure to remove an intron generates aberrant mRNAs that are either unstable or code for defective or deleterious protein isoforms. Exonic enhancers are thought to serve as binding sites for specific serine/arginine-rich (SR) proteins, a family of structurally related and highly conserved splicing factors characterized by one or two RNA-recognition motifs (RRM) and by a distinctive C-terminal domain highly enriched in RS dipeptides (the RS domain). The RRMs mediate sequence-specific binding to the RNA, and so determine substrate specificity, whereas the RS domain appears to be involved mainly in protein-protein interactions. SR proteins bound to ESEs can promote exon definition by directly recruiting the splicing machinery through their RS domain and/or by antagonizing the action of nearby silencer elements. Sponsors: ESEfinder is supported by the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory.
Proper citation: Exonic Splicing Enhancer Finder (RRID:SCR_002835) Copy
BiSearch is a primer-design algorithm for DNA sequences. It may be used for both bisulfite converted as well as for original not modified sequences. You can search various genomes with the designed primers to avoid non-specific PCR products by our fast ePCR method. This is especially recommended when primers are designed to amplify the highly redundant bisulfite treated sequences. It has the unique property of analyzing the primer pairs for mispriming sites on the bisulfite-treated genome and determines potential non-specific amplification products with a new search algorithm. The options of primer-design and analysis for mispriming sites can be used sequentially or separately, both on bisulfite-treated and untreated sequences. In silico and in vitro tests of the software suggest that new PCR strategies may increase the efficiency of the amplification.
Proper citation: BiSearch: Primer Design and Search Tool (RRID:SCR_002980) Copy
http://babelomics.bioinfo.cipf.es
An integrative platform for the analysis of transcriptomics, proteomics and genomic data with advanced functional profiling. Version 4 of Babelomics integrates primary (normalization, calls, etc.) and secondary (signatures, predictors, associations, TDTs, clustering, etc.) analysis tools within an environment that allows relating genomic data and/or interpreting them by means of different functional enrichment or gene set methods. Such interpretation is made not only using functional definitions (GO, KEGG, Biocarta, etc.) but also regulatory information (from Transfac, Jaspar, etc.) and other levels of regulation such as miRNA-mediated interference, protein-protein interactions, text-mining module definitions and the possibility of producing de novo annotations through the Blast2GO system . Babelomics has been extensively re-engineered and now it includes the use of web services and Web 2.0 technology features, a new user interface with persistent sessions and a new extended database of gene identifiers. In this release GEPAS and Babelomics have integrated into a unique web application with many new features and improvements: * Data input: import and quality control for the most common microarray formats * Normalization and base calling: for the most common expression, tiling and SNP microarrays (Affymetrix and Agilent). * Transcriptomics: diverse analysis options that include well established as well as novel algorithms for normalization, gene selection, class prediction, clustering and time-series analysis. * Genotyping: stratification analysis, association, TDT. * Functional profiling: functional enrichment and gene set enrichment analysis with functional terms (GO, KEGG, Biocarta, etc.), regulatory (Transfac, Jaspar, miRNAs, etc.), text-mining, derived bioentities, protein-protein interaction analysis. * Integrative analysis: Different variables can be related to each other (e.g. gene expression to gnomic copy number) and the results subjected to functional analysis. Platform: Online tool
Proper citation: Babelomics (RRID:SCR_002969) Copy
A free web-based service open to all users for analysis of tissue microarray (TMA) data and related information, accommodating categorical, semi-continuous and continuous expression scores. There is no login requirement.
Proper citation: TMA Navigator (RRID:SCR_005599) Copy
http://biit.cs.ut.ee/graphweb/
GraphWeb allows the detection of modules from biological, heterogeneous and multi-species networks, and the interpretation of detected modules using Gene Ontology, cis-regulatory motifs and biological pathways. GraphWeb is a public web server for graph-based analysis of biological networks that: * analyses directed and undirected, weighted and unweighted heterogeneous networks of genes, proteins and microarray probesets for many eukaryotic genomes; * integrates multiple diverse datasets into global networks; * incorporates multispecies data using gene orthology mapping; * filters nodes and edges based on dataset support, edge weight and node annotation; * detects gene modules from networks using a collection of algorithms; * interprets discovered modules using Gene Ontology, pathways, and cis-regulatory motifs. Platform: Online tool
Proper citation: GraphWeb (RRID:SCR_005746) Copy
http://www.animalgenome.org/bioinfo/tools/catego/
CateGOrizer takes batch input of GO term IDs in a list format or unformatted plain text file, allows users to choose one of the available classifications such as GO_slim, GOA, EGAD, MGI_GO_slim, GO-ROOT, or a self-defined classification list, find its parental branch and performs an accumulative classification count, and returns the results in a sorted table of counts, percentages, and a pie chart (if it takes longer than standard time out period, it will email the user with a URL link to the results). This tool is comprised with a set of perl CGI programs coupled with a MySQL DBMS that stores the GO terms DAG data. Platform: Online tool
Proper citation: CateGOrizer (RRID:SCR_005737) Copy
Software tool to enable biologists without training in computer vision or programming to quantitatively measure phenotypes from thousands of images automatically. It counts cells and also measures the size, shape, intensity and texture of every cell (and every labeled subcellular compartment) in every image. It was designed for high throughput screening but can perform automated image analysis for images from time-lapse movies and low-throughput experiments. CellProfiler has an increasing number of algorithms to identify and measure properties of neuronal cell types.
Proper citation: CellProfiler Image Analysis Software (RRID:SCR_007358) Copy
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on May 12,2023. An integrated packages of tools for microarray data analysis. GEPAS provides a web-based interface that offers diverse analysis options from the early step of preprocessing (normalization of Affymetrix and two-color microarray experiments and other preprocessing options), to the final step of the functional profiling of the experiment (using Gene Ontology, pathways, PubMed abstracts etc.), which include different possibilities for clustering, gene selection, class prediction and array-comparative genomic hybridization management.
Proper citation: Gene Expression Profile Analysis Suite (RRID:SCR_008341) Copy
https://compumedicsneuroscan.com/products/by-name/curry/
Processing software for multimodal neuroimaging centered on combining functional data such as EEG and MEG with imaging data from MRI and CT to optimize source reconstruction. They are now combining Curry's strength with the acquisition and signal processing features of the SCAN software for a comprehensive EEG acquisition, data analysis, source localization and source imaging package.
Proper citation: CURRY (RRID:SCR_009546) Copy
http://marsbar.sourceforge.net/
A toolbox for SPM which provides routines for region of interest analysis. Features include region of interest definition, combination of regions of interest with simple algebra, extraction of data for regions with and without SPM preprocessing (scaling, filtering), and statistical analyses of ROI data using the SPM statistics machinery.
Proper citation: MarsBaR region of interest toolbox for SPM (RRID:SCR_009605) Copy
http://mrtools.mgh.harvard.edu/index.php/TBR
A tool for functional connectivity analysis of fcMRI data that maps functional data from individual sessions onto a priori spatial components from group level parcellations.
Proper citation: Template Based Rotation (RRID:SCR_012157) Copy
http://openbabel.org/wiki/Main_Page
Software toolbox that is used to convert, analyze, or store data from molecular modeling, chemistry, biochemistry and other related areas. This software is used to read, write, and convert into over 110 chemical file formats.
Proper citation: Open Babel (RRID:SCR_014920) Copy
Center for Computational Biology as a joint research center in the McKusick-Nathans Institute of Genetic Medicine, spanning the School of Medicine, the Whiting School of Engineering, the Bloomberg School of Public Health, and the Krieger School of Arts & Sciences. Multidisciplinary center dedicated to research on genomics, genetics, DNA sequencing technology, and computational methods for DNA and RNA sequence analysis.
Proper citation: Center for Computational Biology at JHU (RRID:SCR_016680) Copy
Can't find your Tool?
We recommend that you click next to the search bar to check some helpful tips on searches and refine your search firstly. Alternatively, please register your tool with the SciCrunch Registry by adding a little information to a web form, logging in will enable users to create a provisional RRID, but it not required to submit.
Welcome to the NIF Resources search. From here you can search through a compilation of resources used by NIF and see how data is organized within our community.
You are currently on the Community Resources tab looking through categories and sources that NIF has compiled. You can navigate through those categories from here or change to a different tab to execute your search through. Each tab gives a different perspective on data.
If you have an account on NIF then you can log in from here to get additional features in NIF such as Collections, Saved Searches, and managing Resources.
Here is the search term that is being executed, you can type in anything you want to search for. Some tips to help searching:
You can save any searches you perform for quick access to later from here.
We recognized your search term and included synonyms and inferred terms along side your term to help get the data you are looking for.
If you are logged into NIF you can add data records to your collections to create custom spreadsheets across multiple sources of data.
Here are the sources that were queried against in your search that you can investigate further.
Here are the categories present within NIF that you can filter your data on
Here are the subcategories present within this category that you can filter your data on
If you have any further questions please check out our FAQs Page to ask questions and see our tutorials. Click this button to view this tutorial again.