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| Resource Name | Proper Citation | Abbreviations | Resource Type |
Description |
Keywords | Resource Relationships | |||||||||||||
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UMMC Center for Psychiatric Neuroscience Labs and Facilities Resource Report Resource Website |
UMMC Center for Psychiatric Neuroscience Labs and Facilities (RRID:SCR_002688) | UMMC CPN Labs & Facilities, UMMC CPN Labs and Facilities | biomaterial supply resource, material resource, tissue bank, brain bank | Core facility that provides access to psychiatrically characterized post-mortem brain specimens, state-of-the-art equipment, cutting-edge technologies and the technical advice of highly trained faculty members who serve as Core Directors. The sophisticated imaging systems and biotechnologically advanced molecular core resources are provided on a shared-use basis to CPN and UMMC researchers. The CPN Research Resources Cores include the Human Brain Collection Core, Animal Core, Imaging Core, Molecular Biology Core, and Information Technologies Core. | postmortem, brain, tissue, imaging, molecular biology, genomics |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing is listed by: ScienceExchange is related to: University of Mississippi Medical Center Labs and Facilities is related to: University of Mississippi Medical Center Animal Behavior Core Facility has parent organization: University of Mississippi Medical Center; Mississippi; USA |
Depression, Normal, Mental disease | NCRR | Free | SciEx_8930 | SCR_002688 | CPN Research Resource Cores, University of Mississippi Medical Center Center for Psychiatric Neuroscience, UMMC Center for Psychiatric Neuroscience Research Resource Cores, UMMC Center for Psychiatric Neuroscience Labs & Facilities, UMMC CPN Research Resource Cores | 2026-02-13 10:55:05 | 0 | |||||
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DGAP Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
DGAP (RRID:SCR_003036) | DGAP | experimental protocol, resource, data or information resource, narrative resource, database | Produce resources to unravel the interface between insulin action, insulin resistance and the genetics of type 2 diabetes including an annotated public database, standardized protocols for gene expression and proteomic analysis, and ultimately diabetes-specific and insulin action-specific DNA chips for investigators in the field. The project aims to identify the sets of the genes involved in insulin action and the predisposition to type 2 diabetes, as well as the secondary changes in gene expression that occur in response to the metabolic abnormalities present in diabetes. There are five major and one pilot project involving human and rodent tissues that are designed to: * Create a database of the genes expressed in insulin-responsive tissues, as well as accessible tissues, that are regulated by insulin, insulin resistance and diabetes. * Assess levels and patterns of gene expression in each tissue before and after insulin stimulation in normal and genetically-modified rodents; normal, insulin resistant and diabetic humans, and in cultured and freshly isolated cell models. * Correlate the level and patterns of expression at the mRNA and/or protein level with the genetic and metabolic phenotype of the animal or cell. * Generate genomic sequence from a panel of humans with type 2 diabetes focusing on the genes most highly regulated by insulin and diabetes to determine the range of sequence and expression variation in these genes and the proteins they encode, which might affect the risk of diabetes or insulin resistance. The DGAP project will define: * the normal anatomy of gene expression, i.e. basal levels of expression and response to insulin. * the morbid anatomy of gene expression, i.e., the impact of diabetes on expression patterns and the insulin response. * the extent to which genetic variability might contribute to the alterations in expression or to diabetes itself. | gene, insulin action, predisposition, gene expression, metabolic abnormality, diabetes, insulin resistance, genetics, insulin, genetic variation, proteomics, genomics, affymetrix oligonucleotide array, microarray, protein, genomic sequence, data set |
is related to: NIDDK Information Network (dkNET) has parent organization: Harvard Medical School; Massachusetts; USA has parent organization: Broad Institute has parent organization: Dana-Farber Cancer Institute has parent organization: University of Massachusetts Medical School; Massachusetts; USA has parent organization: University of Southern Denmark; Odense; Denmark |
Type 2 diabetes, Normal, Insulin resistance | NIDDK | PMID:19786482 | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-30414 | SCR_003036 | The Diabetes Genome Anatomy Project, Diabetes Genome Anatomy Project | 2026-02-13 10:55:10 | 9 | ||||
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CCHMC Pediatric Brain Templates Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
CCHMC Pediatric Brain Templates (RRID:SCR_003276) | Pediatric Brain Templates | data or information resource, image collection, atlas, reference atlas | Brain imaging data collected from a large population of normal, healthy children that have been used to construct pediatric brain templates, which can be used within statistical parametric mapping for spatial normalization, tissue segmentation and visualization of imaging study results. The data has been processed and compiled in various ways to accommodate a wide range of possible research approaches. The templates are made available free of charge to all interested parties for research purposes only. When processing imaging data from children, it is important to take into account the fact that the pediatric brain differs significantly from the adult brain. Therefore, optimized processing requires appropriate reference data be used because adult reference data will introduce a systematic bias into the results. We have shown that, in the in the case of spatial normalization, the amount of non-linear deformation is dramatically less when a pediatric template is used (left, see also HBM 2002; 17:48-60). We could also show that tissue composition is substantially different between adults and children, and more so the younger the children are (right, see also MRM 2003; 50:749-757). We thus believe that the use of pediatric reference data might be more appropriate. | brain, child, human, normal, pediatric, spatial normalization, template, tissue segmentation, visualization, young human, neuroimaging | is related to: SPM | Normal, Healthy | Free, Freely available | nif-0000-01274 | https://jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/wa-jisc.exe?A2=SPM;981fd215.02 | SCR_003276 | 2026-02-13 10:55:12 | 3 | ||||||
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NIH MRI Study of Normal Brain Development Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
NIH MRI Study of Normal Brain Development (RRID:SCR_003394) | Pediatric MRI Study | data or information resource, experimental protocol, narrative resource, data set | Data sets of clinical / behavioral and image data are available for download by qualified researchers from a seven year, multi-site, longitudinal study using magnetic resonance technologies to study brain maturation in healthy, typically-developing infants, children, and adolescents and to correlate brain development with cognitive and behavioral development. The information obtained in this study is expected to provide essential data for understanding the course of normal brain development as a basis for understanding atypical brain development associated with a variety of developmental, neurological, and neuropsychiatric disorders affecting children and adults. This study enrolled over 500 children, ranging from infancy to young adulthood. The goal was to study each participant at least three times over the course of the project at one of six Pediatric Centers across the United States. Brain MR and clinical/behavioral data have been compiled and analyzed at a Data Coordinating Center and Clinical Coordinating Center. Additionally, MR spectroscopy and DTI data are being analyzed. The study was organized around two objectives corresponding to two age ranges at the time of enrollment, each with its own protocols. * Objective 1 enrolled children ages 4 years, 6 months through 18 years (total N = 433). This sample was recruited across the six Pediatric Study Centers using community based sampling to reflect the demographics of the United States in terms of income, race, and ethnicity. The subjects were studied with both imaging and clinical/behavioral measures at two year intervals for three time points. * Objective 2 enrolled newborns, infants, toddlers, and preschoolers from birth through 4 years, 5 months, who were studied three or more times at two Pediatric Study Centers at intervals ranging from three months for the youngest subjects to one year as the children approach the Objective 1 age range. Both imaging and clinical/behavioral measures were collected at each time point. Participant recruitment used community based sampling that included hospital venues (e.g., maternity wards and nurseries, satellite physician offices, and well-child clinics), community organizations (e.g., day-care centers, schools, and churches), and siblings of children participating in other research at the Pediatric Study Centers. At timepoint 1, of those enrolled, 114 children had T1 scans that passed quality control checks. Staged data release plan: The first data release included structural MR images and clinical/behavioral data from the first assessments, Visit 1, for Objective 1. A second data release included structural MRI and clinical/behavioral data from the second visit for Objective 1. A third data release included structural MRI data for both Objective 1 and 2 and all time points, as well as preliminary spectroscopy data. A fourth data release added cortical thickness, gyrification and cortical surface data. Yet to be released are longitudinally registered anatomic MRI data and diffusion tensor data. A collaborative effort among the participating centers and NIH resulted in age-appropriate MR protocols and clinical/behavioral batteries of instruments. A summary of this protocol is available as a Protocol release document. Details of the project, such as study design, rationale, recruitment, instrument battery, MRI acquisition details, and quality controls can be found in the study protocol. Also available are the MRI procedure manual and Clinical/Behavioral procedure manuals for Objective 1 and Objective 2. | young human, child, pediatric, experimental protocol, brain, brain development, development, mri, minc, clinical, behavior, anatomical mri, diffusion tensor imaging, mr spectroscopy, adolescent, clinical data, behavioral data, data visualization software, clinical measure, behavioral measure, physical neurological examination, behavioral rating, neuropsychological testing, structured psychiatric interview, hormonal measure, image collection, neonate, clinical neuroinformatics, dicom, minc2, magnetic resonance, nifti |
is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC) is listed by: Biositemaps is listed by: NIH Data Sharing Repositories is related to: NIH Data Sharing Repositories has parent organization: National Institutes of Health |
Healthy, Normal | NICHD ; NIDA ; NIMH ; NINDS ; NIH Blueprint for Neuroscience Research |
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-00201 | http://www.bic.mni.mcgill.ca/nihpd/info/, https://nihpd.crbs.ucsd.edu/nihpd/info/index.html | SCR_003394 | NIH Pediatric MRI Data Repository, Pediatric MRI Data Repository | 2026-02-13 10:55:14 | 6 | ||||
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IXI dataset Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
IXI dataset (RRID:SCR_005839) | IXI dataset | data set, data or information resource, portal, project portal | Data set of nearly 600 MR images from normal, healthy subjects, along with demographic characteristics, collected as part of the Information eXtraction from Images (IXI) project available for download. Tar files containing T1, T2, PD, MRA and DTI (15 directions) scans from these subjects are available. The data has been collected at three different hospitals in London: * Hammersmith Hospital using a Philips 3T system * Guy''s Hospital using a Philips 1.5T system * Institute of Psychiatry using a GE 1.5T system | neuroimaging, structural mri assay, magnetic resonance angiography, nifti, t1, t2, pd, dti, demographic, normal, healthy, adult, mri, brain, image collection |
is used by: NIF Data Federation has parent organization: Imperial College London; London; United Kingdom |
Normal, Healthy | EPSRC GR/S21533/02 | Acknowledgement requested | nlx_149360 | http://brain-development.org/ | SCR_005839 | Information eXtraction from Images dataset | 2026-02-13 10:55:42 | 28 | ||||
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Automatic Registration Toolbox Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
Automatic Registration Toolbox (RRID:SCR_005993) | ART | data processing software, image collection, data or information resource, software toolkit, software application, image processing software, software resource, image analysis software | ART ''''acpcdetect'''' program for automatic detection of the AC and PC landmarks and the mid-sagittal plane on 3D structural MRI scans. ART ''''brainwash'''' program for automatic multi-atlas skull-stripping of 3D structural MRI scans. ART ''''3dwarper'''' program of non-linear inter-subject registration of 3D structural MRI scans. Software (art2) for linear rigid-body intra-subject inter-modality (MRI-PET) image registration. Data resource: The ART projects makes available corpus callosum segmentations of 316 normal subjects from the OASIS cross-sectional database. ART ''''yuki'''' program for fast, robust, and fully automatic segmentation of the corpus callosum on 3D structural MRI scans. | artifact removal, intermodal, intersubject, intramodal, intrasubject, image-to-template, nearest neighbor, spline interpolation, tri-linear, affine warp, nonlinear warp, image display, corpus callosum, segmentation, mri, registration, structural mri, image registration, pet, nifti |
is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC) is related to: Open Access Series of Imaging Studies has parent organization: Nathan S. Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research; New York; USA |
Normal | Free, Non-commercial | nlx_151368 | SCR_005993 | 2026-02-13 10:55:44 | 23 | |||||||
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Embryo Imaging Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Embryo Imaging (RRID:SCR_006329) | Embryo Imaging | data or information resource, image collection, data set, video resource | Collection of high resolution images and movies of mouse and human embryos produced using high resolution episcopic microscopy (HREM). Each data set is a series of block-face images generated during sectioning through an entire embryo, typically cut at 2-3 micrometers. Datasets are organized by approximate developmental stage and each embryo has been assigned a specimen ID (SID) for identification. This is an ongoing project funded by the Wellcome Trust to provide comprehensive imaging of normal and mutant mouse embryos that will complement the standard anatomical texts and form the basis for systematic phenotyping. * Movies: A 3D reconstruction shows each embryo, and lower resolution movies created through each orthogonal plane enable you to quickly review the data set. * Image Stacks: In the stack viewer, you can step through the images in sequence, zoom in to see fine details and adjust the image contrast. * NEW: Embryo Comparison: Two image stacks can now be compared in the stack viewer. | embryo, embryonic mouse, movie, high resolution image stack, image stack, comparison, high resolution episcopic microscopy, 3d reconstruction, imaging | Normal, Mutant | Wellcome Trust | Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike License | nlx_152031 | SCR_006329 | 2026-02-13 10:55:48 | 4 | |||||||
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Brad Smith Magnetic Resonance Imaging of Embryos Resource Report Resource Website |
Brad Smith Magnetic Resonance Imaging of Embryos (RRID:SCR_006300) | Brad Smith MRI of Embryos | data or information resource, image collection, data set, video resource | Data set of image collections and movies including Magnetic Resonance Imaging of Embryos, Human Embryo Imaging, MRI of Cardiovascular Development, and Live Embryo Imaging. Individual MRI slice images, three-dimensional images, animations, stereo-pair animations, animations of organ systems, and photo-micrographs are included. | embryo, magnetic resonance imaging, embryonic development, magnetic resonance microscopy, cardiovascular development, cardiovascular, development, heart, blood vessel, in-utero, in-vitro, embryonic mouse, newborn mouse, embryonic human |
is related to: Magnetic Resonance Microscopy of Mouse Embryo Specimens is related to: Multi-Dimensional Human Embryo has parent organization: University of Michigan; Ann Arbor; USA |
Normal, Mutant, Gentically-manipulated | nlx_151971 | SCR_006300 | Brad Smith Research MRI of Embryos, Brad Smith Research | 2026-02-13 10:55:48 | 0 | |||||||
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MGH-USC Human Connectome Project Resource Report Resource Website 100+ mentions |
MGH-USC Human Connectome Project (RRID:SCR_003490) | MGH/UCLA HCP | instrument manufacture, portal, data or information resource, material service resource, production service resource, service resource | A multi-center project comprising two distinct consortia (Mass. Gen. Hosp. and USC; and Wash. U. and the U. of Minn.) seeking to map white matter fiber pathways in the human brain using leading edge neuroimaging methods, genomics, architectonics, mathematical approaches, informatics, and interactive visualization. The mapping of the complete structural and functional neural connections in vivo within and across individuals provides unparalleled compilation of neural data, an interface to graphically navigate this data and the opportunity to achieve conclusions about the living human brain. The HCP is being developed to employ advanced neuroimaging methods, and to construct an extensive informatics infrastructure to link these data and connectivity models to detailed phenomic and genomic data, building upon existing multidisciplinary and collaborative efforts currently underway. Working with other HCP partners based at Washington University in St. Louis they will provide rich data, essential imaging protocols, and sophisticated connectivity analysis tools for the neuroscience community. This project is working to achieve the following: 1) develop sophisticated tools to process high-angular diffusion (HARDI) and diffusion spectrum imaging (DSI) from normal individuals to provide the foundation for the detailed mapping of the human connectome; 2) optimize advanced high-field imaging technologies and neurocognitive tests to map the human connectome; 3) collect connectomic, behavioral, and genotype data using optimized methods in a representative sample of normal subjects; 4) design and deploy a robust, web-based informatics infrastructure, 5) develop and disseminate data acquisition and analysis, educational, and training outreach materials. | human, structural, functional, neural, white matter, fiber, brain, in vivo, genomic, neuroimaging, visualization, neuroanatomy, genotype, connectivity, connectivity model, neural pathway, phenomic, connectomics, quantification, scanner, eeg, meg, shape analysis, spatial transformation, diffusion spectrum, q-ball, tensor metric, fiber tracking, connectome, behavior, scanner, web resource, diffusion spectrum, q-ball, tensor metric, quantification, shape analysis, spatial transformation, fiber tracking, FASEB list |
is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC) is listed by: Biositemaps has parent organization: Laboratory of Neuro Imaging has parent organization: Harvard Medical School; Massachusetts; USA has parent organization: NIH Human Connectome Project is parent organization of: USC Multimodal Connectivity Database |
Normal | NIH ; NIH Blueprint for Neuroscience Research |
Open unspecified license, (BSD/MIT-Style), LONI Software License, Public Domain | nif-0000-35789 | http://www.nitrc.org/projects/hcp_mgh-ucla | SCR_003490 | Harvard/MGH-UCLA Human Connectome Project, Harvard/MGH-UCLA Consortium: Human Connectome Project, HCP Harvard/MGH-UCLA, MGH/UCLA Consortium: Human Connectome Project | 2026-02-13 10:55:15 | 165 | ||||
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3D MRI Atlas of Mouse Development Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
3D MRI Atlas of Mouse Development (RRID:SCR_008090) | MRI Atlas of Mouse Development, | data or information resource, atlas |
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented May 10, 2017. A pilot effort that has developed a centralized, web-based biospecimen locator that presents biospecimens collected and stored at participating Arizona hospitals and biospecimen banks, which are available for acquisition and use by researchers. Researchers may use this site to browse, search and request biospecimens to use in qualified studies. The development of the ABL was guided by the Arizona Biospecimen Consortium (ABC), a consortium of hospitals and medical centers in the Phoenix area, and is now being piloted by this Consortium under the direction of ABRC. You may browse by type (cells, fluid, molecular, tissue) or disease. Common data elements decided by the ABC Standards Committee, based on data elements on the National Cancer Institute''s (NCI''s) Common Biorepository Model (CBM), are displayed. These describe the minimum set of data elements that the NCI determined were most important for a researcher to see about a biospecimen. The ABL currently does not display information on whether or not clinical data is available to accompany the biospecimens. However, a requester has the ability to solicit clinical data in the request. Once a request is approved, the biospecimen provider will contact the requester to discuss the request (and the requester''s questions) before finalizing the invoice and shipment. The ABL is available to the public to browse. In order to request biospecimens from the ABL, the researcher will be required to submit the requested required information. Upon submission of the information, shipment of the requested biospecimen(s) will be dependent on the scientific and institutional review approval. Account required. Registration is open to everyone.. Documented on October, 01, 2019. 3D digital atlas of normal mouse development constructed from magnetic resonance image data. The download is a zipped file containing the six atlases Theiler Stages (ts) 13, 21,23, 24, 25 and 26 and MRI data for an unlabeled ts19 embryo. To view the atlases, download and install MBAT from: http://mbat.loni.ucla.edu Specimens were prepared in aqueous, isotonic solutions to avoid tissue shrinkage. Limited specimen handling minimized physical perturbation of the embryos to ensure accurate geometric representations of developing mouse anatomy. Currently, the atlas contains orthogonal sections through MRI volumes, three stages of embryos that have annotated anatomy, photographs of several stages of development, lineage trees for annotated embryos and a gallery of images and movies derived from the annotations. Anatomical annotations can be viewed by selecting a transverse section and selecting a pixel on the displayed slice. |
embryo, embryogenesis, development, magnetic resonance imaging, mouse, developing, c57bl/6, development, anatomy, embryonic mouse | is related to: Mouse BIRN Atlasing Toolkit | Normal | Human Brain Project ; Biomedical Informatics Research Network ; Beckman Institute at Caltech ; NCRR ; NIBIB |
PMID:10091864 | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-10989 | SCR_008090 | Caltech micro MRI Atlas of Mouse Development, microMRI Atlas of Mouse Development, Caltech MRI Atlas of Mouse Development, micro MRI Atlas of Mouse Development | 2026-02-12 09:44:32 | 1 | ||||
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National NeuroAIDS Tissue Consortium Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
National NeuroAIDS Tissue Consortium (RRID:SCR_007323) | NNTC | biomaterial supply resource, material resource, tissue bank, brain bank | Collects, stores, and distributes samples of nervous tissue, cerebrospinal fluid, blood, and other tissue from HIV-infected individuals. The NNTC mission is to bolster research on the effects of HIV infection on human brain by providing high-quality, well-characterized tissue samples from patients who died with HIV, and for whom comprehensive neuromedical and neuropsychiatric data were gathered antemortem. Researchers can request tissues from patients who have been characterized by: * degree of neurobehavioral impairment * neurological and other clinical diagnoses * history of drug use * antiretroviral treatments * blood and CSF viral load * neuropathological diagnosis The NNTC encourages external researchers to submit tissue requests for ancillary studies. The Specimen Query Tool is a web-based utility that allows researchers to quickly sort and identify appropriate NNTC specimens to support their research projects. The results generated by the tool reflect the inventory at a previous time. Actual availability at the local repositories may vary as specimens are added or distributed to other investigators. | human immunodeficiency virus, nervous tissue, cerebral spinal fluid, blood, tissue, brain, neuromedical data, neuropsychiatric data, tissue, plasma, peripheral blood mononuclear cell, serum, urine, spinal cord, nervous tissue, pituitary gland, trigeminal ganglia, dorsal root ganglion, peripheral nerve, lymph node, liver, spleen, adipose tissue, bone marrow, muscle, hair, heart, thymus, kidney, lung, eye, brain, ante-mortem, post-mortem, normal, subsyndromic, minor cognitive motor disorder, hiv - associated dementia, cytomegalovirus encephalitis, neurological impairment, traumatic brain injury, neurocognitive disease, frozen, fixed, aids, one mind tbi, asymptomatic neurocognitive impairment, minor cognitive disorder, gene array, snp |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing is related to: Manhattan HIV Brain Bank is related to: CHARTER - CNS HIV Antiretroviral Therapy Effects Research |
Human immunodeficiency virus, Neurocognitive disease, Normal, Subsyndromic, Minor Cognitive Motor Disorder, HIV - Associated Dementia, Cytomegalovirus Encephalitis, Neurological impairment, Infectious disease | NIMH ; NINDS ; NIH Blueprint for Neuroscience Research |
Public: The NNTC encourages external researchers to submit tissue requests for ancillary studies. | nif-0000-00193 | SCR_007323 | nntc.org, nntc | 2026-02-13 10:56:01 | 11 | |||||
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Synapse Resource Report Resource Website 1000+ mentions |
Synapse (RRID:SCR_006307) | Synapse | data repository, storage service resource, data or information resource, service resource, database | A cloud-based collaborative platform which co-locates data, code, and computing resources for analyzing genome-scale data and seamlessly integrates these services allowing scientists to share and analyze data together. Synapse consists of a web portal integrated with the R/Bioconductor statistical package and will be integrated with additional tools. The web portal is organized around the concept of a Project which is an environment where you can interact, share data, and analysis methods with a specific group of users or broadly across open collaborations. Projects provide an organizational structure to interact with data, code and analyses, and to track data provenance. A project can be created by anyone with a Synapse account and can be shared among all Synapse users or restricted to a specific team. Public data projects include the Synapse Commons Repository (SCR) (syn150935) and the metaGenomics project (syn275039). The SCR provides access to raw data and phenotypic information for publicly available genomic data sets, such as GEO and TCGA. The metaGenomics project provides standardized preprocessed data and precomputed analysis of the public SCR data. | data sharing, collaboration, data management, analysis, genome, phenotype, crowd sourcing, open data, provenance, resource management, annotation, authoring, markup, r, python, java, command-line, cloud, FASEB list |
is used by: NF Data Portal is listed by: FORCE11 is listed by: DataCite is listed by: re3data.org is related to: clearScience is related to: Exemplar Microscopy Images of Tissues has parent organization: Sage Bionetworks |
Cancer, Normal, Cardiovascular disease, Floppy hat syndrome | Life Sciences Discovery Fund ; NCI ; NHLBI ; Alfred P. Sloan Foundation |
The community can contribute to this resource | nlx_151983, DOI:10.17616/R3B934, r3d100011894, DOI:10.7303 | https://doi.org/10.17616/R3B934 https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1506.00272 https://doi.org/10.7303/ https://dx.doi.org/10.7303 https://doi.org/10.17616/R3B934 |
SCR_006307 | 2026-02-13 10:55:48 | 1002 | |||||
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Cancer Research Network of the FRSQ Resource Report Resource Website |
Cancer Research Network of the FRSQ (RRID:SCR_004225) | RRCancer | biomaterial supply resource, tissue bank, material resource | An infrastructure to allow Quebec researchers to have at their disposal tumor banks and the services that support large scale research in genomics and proteomics. The database and the tissue bank of the research network was created to allow rapid access to biological samples and their clinical data. It is spread out over many hospital institutions (in Montreal, Quebec and Sherbrooke). The members of the RRCancer-BTD supply normal, benign and malignant samples from routine surgeries and blood tests. Blood and tissue samples are collected by the provincial biobanks on a regular basis and are coded, classified and stored. The samples can be supplied to a researcher either fresh or frozen or blocks of paraffin or on slices. The sharing of information and biological material is managed according to ethical rules and contributes to increasing the value of research in Quebec. The network has mobilized a significant number of researchers in the area of cancer that unite their efforts to pursue high caliber multidisciplinary research. They are a group of researchers from many different Qu��bec Universities all working in the branch of cancer research. They are located in four hospital centers in Quebec, namely the University of Montreal Hospital Centre (CHUM), the University of Quebec Hospital Centre (CHUQ), the University of Sherbrooke Hospital Centre (CHUS) and the McGill University Hospital Centre (CUSM), as well as in the affiliated research and university centers (Sacr��-Coeur, Maisonneuve-Rosemont and the Montreal Jewish Hospital). The collaborative efforts created and maintained in this network have allowed transfer of knowledge and the sharing of cutting edge technologies. RRCancer favors multidisciplinary cancer research in both fundamental and clinical scopes. The network is based on the desire researchers to work together to prevent cancer and improve therapeutic strategies, all the while continuing the very important task of raining new specialists and graduate students. | genomics, proteomics, benign, malignant, clinical |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing is related to: University of Montreal Hospital Centre; Quebec; Canada is related to: Canadian Tumour Repository Network is related to: University of Quebec Hospital Centre; Quebec; Canada is related to: University of Sherbrooke Hospital Centre; Quebec; Canada is related to: Sacred Heart Hospital of Montreal; Quebec; Canada is related to: Maisonneuve-Rosemont Hospital; Quebec; Canada is related to: Jewish General Hospital; Quebec; Canada is related to: McGill University Health Centre; Quebec; Canada has parent organization: FRQS |
Cancer, Normal | FRQS | PMID:16980224 | nlx_143641 | SCR_004225 | R��seau de recherche en cancer, R��seau de recherche sur le cancer du FRSQ, RRCancer-BTD, R��seau de recherche sur le cancer, FRSQ Cancer Research Network | 2026-02-13 10:55:23 | 0 | |||||
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Minnesota Liver Tissue Cell Distribution System Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Minnesota Liver Tissue Cell Distribution System (RRID:SCR_004840) | LTCDS | biomaterial supply resource, tissue bank, material resource | Tissue bank that provides human liver tissue from regional centers for distribution to scientific investigators throughout the United States. These USA regional centers have active liver transplant programs with human subjects approval to provide portions of the resected pathologic liver for which the transplant is performed. | liver, cirrhosis, fulminate, failure, chronic, rejection, inborn, error, metabolism, normal, cell, culture, isolated, hepatocyte, culture |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing is listed by: NIDDK Information Network (dkNET) is listed by: NIDDK Research Resources is related to: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing has parent organization: University of Minnesota Medical School; Minnesota; USA |
Childhood cirrhosis, Adult cirrhosis, Fulminate liver failure, Chronic rejection, Inborn error of metabolism, Normal, Cirrhosis | NIH | Public, USA | nlx_82318 | http://www.med.umn.edu/peds/gi/ltcds/, http://www.med.umn.edu/peds/ltcds/home.html, http://www.med.umn.edu/peds/ltpads/ | SCR_004840 | University of Minnesota Liver Tissue Cell Distribution System, Liver Tissue Procurement and Distribution System, Liver Tissue Cell Distribution System, Liver Tissue Cell Distribution System (LTCDS), LTPADS | 2026-02-13 10:55:31 | 2 | ||||
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UCL/UCLH Biobank for Studying Health and Disease Resource Report Resource Website |
UCL/UCLH Biobank for Studying Health and Disease (RRID:SCR_004610) | UCL Biobank for studying Health and Disease | biomaterial supply resource, tissue bank, material resource | The UCL/UCLH Biobank for Studying Health and Disease has been primarily established to support the Research Programme and scientific needs, of the Pathology Department UCLH & the UCL Cancer Institute. The establishment of the core programme enables a centralised approach to the management and integration of all research groups working within these institutions, providing appropriate structure and support. The biobank has policies and guidelines to guarantee compliance with HTA legislation and to ensure quality standards will be maintained. The biobank stores normal and pathological specimens, surplus to diagnostic requirements, from relevant tissues and bodily fluids, as well as human tissue used in xenograft experiments. Stored tissues include; snap-frozen or cryopreserved tissue, formalin-fixed tissue, paraffin-embedded tissues, and slides prepared for histological examination. Tissues include resection specimens obtained surgically or by needle core biopsy. Bodily fluids include; whole blood, serum, plasma, urine, cerebrospinal fluid, milk, saliva and buccal smears and cytological specimens such as sputum and cervical smears. Fine needle aspirates obtained from tissues and bodily cavities (eg. pleura and peritoneum) are also collected. Where appropriate the biobank also stores separated cells, protein, DNA and RNA isolated from collected tissues and bodily fluids described above. Some of the tissue and aspirated samples are stored in the diagnostic archive. | specimen, pathology, tissue, bodily fluid, human tissue, xenograft, tissue, blood, serum, plasma, urine, cerebral spinal fluid, milk, saliva, buccal smear, sputum, cervical smear, pleura, peritoneum, cell, protein, dna, rna, snap-frozen, cryopreserved, formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded, slide, normal, disease, cancer, frozen |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing has parent organization: University College London; London; United Kingdom |
Normal, Disease, Cancer | Private / Partners: The aim is to support primarily, Research in the Pathology Department, UCLH and the UCL-Cancer Institute but it will also support other UCLH partners. | nlx_143838 | SCR_004610 | UCL/UCLH Biobank for Studying Health Disease, UCL Biobank for studying Health Disease, UCL / UCLH Biobank for Studying Health Disease | 2026-02-13 10:55:28 | 0 | ||||||
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NDRI Dorsal Root Ganglia Program Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
NDRI Dorsal Root Ganglia Program (RRID:SCR_005043) | NDRI DRG Program | biomaterial supply resource, tissue bank, material resource | NDRI actively recovers a diverse range of normal and diseased human tissues for biomedical researchers. We have recently implemented a new program to make human dorsal root ganglia (DRG) available for your research studies. The dorsal root ganglia contain cell bodies of afferent (inbound) neurons, and transmit pain and temperature sensations from the body. DRGs from C5 through L5 regions will be available. DRGs will be recovered under operating room conditions with a low post mortem interval to preservation and can be shipped at 4 degrees C, snap-frozen or fixed. Detailed medical-social history information is provided for each donor. If you are interested in obtaining these specimens, please contact me at your earliest convenience. Current NDRI researchers can immediately request these samples. Non-NDRI researchers need to submit a researcher application. * The program provides a reliable source of human DRG neurons that can be utilized for: Electrophysiology analysis, Live cell imaging studies * Low PMI yields high quality samples that are suitable for rigorous molecular applications: Deep sequencing analysis, In situ hybridization, Micro-array analysis * DRGs from C5 through L5 regions will be available. * The tissue fee for this program is 500 dollars per DRG * Customizable-- the researcher determines the DRG location and quantity that is needed for their research. | dorsal root ganglion, clinical data, neuron, post-mortem, dorsal root ganglion, nerve tissue, fresh, snap-frozen, fixed |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing has parent organization: University of Oklahoma College of Medicine; Oklahoma; USA has parent organization: National Disease Research Interchange |
Normal, Diseased | Public (Research): Current NDRI researchers can immediately request these samples. Non-NDRI researchers need to submit a researcher application. | nlx_144060 | http://www.oumedicine.com/body.cfm?id=6189 | SCR_005043 | Dorsal Root Ganglia Program | 2026-02-13 10:55:34 | 1 | |||||
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Chernobyl Tissue Bank Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Chernobyl Tissue Bank (RRID:SCR_010662) | CTB | biomaterial supply resource, material resource | The CTB (Chernobyl Tissue Bank) is an international cooperation that collects, stores and disseminates biological samples from tumors and normal tissues from patients for whom the aetiology of their disease is known - exposure to radioiodine in childhood following the accident at the Chernobyl power plant. The main objective of this project is to provide a research resource for both ongoing and future studies of the health consequences of the Chernobyl accident. It seeks to maximize the amount of information obtained from small pieces of tumor by providing multiple aliquots of RNA and DNA extracted from well documented pathological specimens to a number of researchers world-wide and to conserve this valuable material for future generations of scientists. It exists to promote collaborative, rather than competitive, research on a limited biological resource. Tissue is collected to an approved standard operating procedure (SOP) and is snap frozen; the presence or absence of tumor is verified by frozen section. A representative paraffin block is also obtained for each case. Where appropriate, we also collect fresh and paraffin-embedded tissue from loco-regional metastases. Currently we do not issue tissue but provide extracted nucleic acid, paraffin sections and sections from tissue microarrays from this material. The project is coordinated from Imperial College, London and works with Institutes in the Russian Federation (the Medical Radiological Research Centre in Obninsk) and Ukraine (the Institute of Endocrinology and Metabolism in Kiev) to support local scientists and clinicians to manage and run a tissue bank for those patients who have developed thyroid tumors following exposure to radiation from the Chernobyl accident. Belarus was also initially included in the project, but is currently suspended for political reasons. |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing has parent organization: Imperial College London; London; United Kingdom |
Tumor, Normal, Exposure to radioiodine in childhood following the accident at the Chernobyl power plant | European Union ; Sasakawa Memorial Health Foundation ; NCI |
nlx_70828 | SCR_010662 | 2026-02-13 10:56:40 | 9 | ||||||||
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da Vinci European Biobank Resource Report Resource Website |
da Vinci European Biobank (RRID:SCR_004908) | daVEB | biomaterial supply resource, material resource | BioBank that collects, stores, processes and distributes biospecimens and the associated data. The biospecimens are human and non-human genetic materials, proteins, cells, tissues and biofluids. The data are the biological information associated to the samples and, in the case of human samples, the clinical information pertaining to the donor. The da Vinci European BioBank (daVEB) is a multicenter biobank with a centralized IT infrastructure and a main repository located at the Polo Scientifico (Scientific Campus of the University of Florence) in Sesto Fiorentino (Florence, Italy). Hosted by the Magnetic Resonance Center (CERM), an expert center on protein structure and metabolomics, daVEB's aim is to host as rich as possible biological human sample collections, stored accordingly to EU guidelines, in order to offer a powerful tool in the study of complex diseases. At the end of July 2011, the da Vinci European BioBank of the Pharmacogenomics FiorGen Onlus Foundation has been audited and got the quality certification according to UNI EN ISO 9001:2008 for Collection, storage and distribution of biological samples and the associated data for scientific research. Besides the samples stored at da Vinci European BioBank in Sesto Fiorentino (Florence), the daVEB is also the administrative biobank for research sample collections that are stored in the delocalized repositories. All the sample collections must be registered in the biobank: * sample collections taken within the regular health care * samples taken from healthy individuals or other persons out of the regular health care * samples that have been taken in hospitals within research protocols on specific pathologies all transferred to daVEB endowed with a transfer agreement signed by the donor. The Research Units actually afferent to daVEB are delocalized in the Florence, Prato, Pisa and Siena provinces. Delocalized repositories are under construction in Tuscany. | clinical data, metabolomics via 1h-nmr, complex disease |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing has parent organization: University of Florence; Florence; Italy |
Normal, Disease, Healthy | nlx_87590 | SCR_004908 | 2026-02-13 10:55:32 | 0 | ||||||||
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Human Developmental Biology Resource Resource Report Resource Website 100+ mentions |
Human Developmental Biology Resource (RRID:SCR_006326) | HDBR | biomaterial supply resource, material resource | Collection of human embryonic and fetal material (Tissue and RNA) ranging from 3 to 20 weeks of development available to the international scientific community. Material can either be sent to registered users or our In House Gene Expression Service (IHGES) can carry out projects on user''''s behalf, providing high quality images and interpretation of gene expression patterns. Gene expression data emerging from HDBR material is added to our gene expression database which is accessible via our HUDSEN (Human Developmental Studies Network) website. A significant proportion of the material has been cytogenetically karyotyped, and normal karyotyped material is provided for research. | development, fetal material, fetus, embryonic human, fetus human, karyotype, gene expression, image, imaging, FASEB list |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing is related to: HUDSEN Human Gene Expression Spatial Database has parent organization: Newcastle University; Newcastle upon Tyne; United Kingdom has parent organization: University College London; London; United Kingdom |
Normal | MRC ; Wellcome Trust |
Public: Intended for use primarily by academic researchers. Every effort is made to ensure that optimal use is made of donated tissue, Both in terms of the aims and quality of the research for which it is used and avoidance of duplication/wastage. Applications by pharmaceutical or biotechnology companies for access to the Resource are considered, Provided that the tissue itself is not used directly for financial gain. | nlx_152030 | SCR_006326 | MRC-Wellcome Trust Human Developmental Biology Resource | 2026-02-13 10:55:49 | 284 | |||||
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SHEEP - Stockholm Heart Epidemiology Program Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
SHEEP - Stockholm Heart Epidemiology Program (RRID:SCR_008905) | KI Biobank - SHEEP | biomaterial supply resource, material resource | DNA from a population-based case-control study designed to investigate causes of myocardial infarction. The study population comprised all Swedish citizens living in the county of Stockholm who were 45 to 70 years of age and free of previously clinically diagnosed MI. Sample types: * DNA Number of sample donors: 2831 (sample collection completed) | heart, epidemiology, cardiac disease, middle adult human, late adult human, aging |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing has parent organization: Karolisnka Biobank |
Myocardial infarction, Normal, Aging | nlx_151444 | http://ki.se/ki/jsp/polopoly.jsp?d=29346&a=31574&l=en | SCR_008905 | Stockholm Heart Epidemiology Program | 2026-02-13 10:56:16 | 2 |
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