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Found 77 result(s)
ODC-TBI is a community platform to Share Data, Publish Data with a DOI, and get Citations. Advancing Traumatic Brain Injury research through sharing of data from basic and clinical research.
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The team have established the CardiacAI Data Repository that brings large amounts of Australian healthcare data together in a secure environment with strict conditions for use of these data with an appropriate level of oversight of research activities. The CardiacAI Data Repository collects de-identified EMR data about cardiovascular patients who are admitted to a group of urban and regional hospitals in NSW and links this with state-wide hospital and emergency deparment visit and mortality data and mobile-health remote monitoring data.
Apollo (previously DSpace@Cambridge) is the University of Cambridge’s Institutional Repository (IR), preserving and providing access to content created by members of the University. The repository stores a range of content and provides different levels of access, but its primary focus is on providing open access to the University’s research publications.
The International Union of Basic and Clinical Pharmacology (IUPHAR) / British Pharmacological Society (BPS) Guide to PHARMACOLOGY is an expert-curated resource of ligand-activity-target relationships, the majority of which come from high-quality pharmacological and medicinal chemistry literature. It is intended as a “one-stop shop” portal to pharmacological information and its main aim is to provide a searchable database with quantitative information on drug targets and the prescription medicines and experimental drugs that act on them. In future versions we plan to add resources for education and training in pharmacological principles and techniques along with research guidelines and overviews of key topics. We hope that the IUPHAR/BPS Guide to PHARMACOLOGY (abbreviated as GtoPdb) will be useful for researchers and students in pharmacology and drug discovery and provide the general public with accurate information on the basic science underlying drug action.
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BExIS is the online data repository and information system of the Biodiversity Exploratories Project (BE). The BE is a German network of biodiversity related working groups from areas such as vegetation and soil science, zoology and forestry. Up to three years after data acquisition, the data use is restricted to members of the BE. Thereafter, the data is usually public available (https://www.bexis.uni-jena.de/ddm/publicsearch/index).
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The BonaRes Repository stores, manage and publishes soil and agricultural research data from research projects, agricultural long-term field experiments and soil profiles which contribute significantly to the analysis of changes of soil and soil functions over the long term. Research data are described by the metadata following the BonaRes Metadata Schema (DOI: 10.20387/bonares-5pgg-8yrp) which combines international recognized standards for the description of geospatial data (INSPIRE Directive) and research data (DataCite 4.0). Metadata includes AGROVOC keywords. Within the BonaRes Repository research data is provided for free reuse under the CC License and can be discovered by advanced text and map search via a number of criteria.
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More than a quarter of a million people — one in 10 NSW men and women aged over 45 — have been recruited to our 45 and Up Study, the largest ongoing study of healthy ageing in the Southern Hemisphere. The baseline information collected from all of our participants is available in the Study’s Data Book. This information, which researchers use as the basis for their analyses, contains information on key variables such as height, weight, smoking status, family history of disease and levels of physical activity. By following such a large group of people over the long term, we are developing a world-class research resource that can be used to boost our understanding of how Australians are ageing. This will answer important health and quality-of-life questions and help manage and prevent illness through improved knowledge of conditions such as cancer, heart disease, depression, obesity and diabetes.
GENCODE is a scientific project in genome research and part of the ENCODE (ENCyclopedia Of DNA Elements) scale-up project. The GENCODE consortium was initially formed as part of the pilot phase of the ENCODE project to identify and map all protein-coding genes within the ENCODE regions (approx. 1% of Human genome). Given the initial success of the project, GENCODE now aims to build an “Encyclopedia of genes and genes variants” by identifying all gene features in the human and mouse genome using a combination of computational analysis, manual annotation, and experimental validation, and annotating all evidence-based gene features in the entire human genome at a high accuracy.
GeneWeaver combines cross-species data and gene entity integration, scalable hierarchical analysis of user data with a community-built and curated data archive of gene sets and gene networks, and tools for data driven comparison of user-defined biological, behavioral and disease concepts. Gene Weaver allows users to integrate gene sets across species, tissue and experimental platform. It differs from conventional gene set over-representation analysis tools in that it allows users to evaluate intersections among all combinations of a collection of gene sets, including, but not limited to annotations to controlled vocabularies. There are numerous applications of this approach. Sets can be stored, shared and compared privately, among user defined groups of investigators, and across all users.
The Central Neuroimaging Data Archive (CNDA) allows for sharing of complex imaging data to investigators around the world, through a simple web portal. The CNDA is an imaging informatics platform that provides secure data management services for Washington University investigators, including source DICOM imaging data sharing to external investigators through a web portal, cnda.wustl.edu. The CNDA’s services include automated archiving of imaging studies from all of the University’s research scanners, automated quality control and image processing routines, and secure web-based access to acquired and post-processed data for data sharing, in compliance with NIH data sharing guidelines. The CNDA is currently accepting datasets only from Washington University affiliated investigators. Through this platform, the data is available for broad sharing with researchers both internal and external to Washington University.. The CNDA overlaps with data in oasis-brains.org https://www.re3data.org/repository/r3d100012182, but CNDA is a larger data set.
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The MDR harvests metadata on data objects from a variety of sources within clinical research (e.g. trial registries, data repositories) and brings that together in a single searchable portal. The metadata is concerned with discoverability, access and provenance of the data objects (which because the data may be sensitive will often be available under a controlled access regime). At the moment (01/2021) the MDR obtains study data from: Clinical Trials.gov (CTG), The European Clinical Trials Registry (EUCTR), ISRCTN, The WHO ICTRP
LONI’s Image and Data Archive (IDA) is a secure data archiving system. The IDA uses a robust infrastructure to provide researchers with a flexible and simple interface for de-identifying, searching, retrieving, converting, and disseminating their biomedical data. With thousands of investigators across the globe and more than 21 million data downloads to data, the IDA guarantees reliability with a fault-tolerant network comprising multiple switches, routers, and Internet connections to prevent system failure.
The Deep Blue Data repository is a means for University of Michigan researchers to make their research data openly accessible to anyone in the world, provided they meet collections criteria. Submitted data sets undergo a curation review by librarians to support discovery, understanding, and reuse of the data.
WFCC Global Catalogue of Microorganisms (GCM) is expected to be a robust, reliable and user-friendly system to help culture collections to manage, disseminate and share the information related to their holdings. It also provides a uniform interface for the scientific and industrial communities to access the comprehensive microbial resource information.
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The Genome Warehouse (GWH) is a public repository housing genome-scale data for a wide range of species and delivering a series of web services for genome data submission, storage, release and sharing.
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National Genomic Resources Repository is established as an institutional framework for methodical and centralized efforts to collect, generate, conserve and distribute genomic resources for agricultural research.
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KEGG is a database resource for understanding high-level functions and utilities of the biological system, such as the cell, the organism and the ecosystem, from molecular-level information, especially large-scale molecular datasets generated by genome sequencing and other high-throughput experimental technologies
The Comprehensive Epidemiologic Data Resource (CEDR) is the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) electronic database comprised of health studies of DOE contract workers and environmental studies of areas surrounding DOE facilities. DOE recognizes the benefits of data sharing and supports the public's right to know about worker and community health risks. CEDR provides independent researchers and educators with access to de-identified data collected since the Department's early production years. Current CEDR holdings include more than 76 studies of over 1 million workers at 31 DOE sites. Access to these data is at no cost to the user.
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The National Stem Cell Translational Resource Bank (NSCTRB) contains various stem cell resources of both clinical and research grade, especially a sub-bank composed with HLA high-frequency iPSC lines in which the HLA types could match more than 60% of the Chinese population. It can not only provide services to stem cell clinical researches and translation applications, but also provide effective resources for scientific research to the Universities, research institutes, companies, etc. The bank has complete standards, specifications and relevant management systems, and has more than 200 perfessonals in the field of stem cells.
The Antimicrobial Peptide Database (APD) was originally created by a graduate student, Zhe Wang, as his master's thesis in the laboratory of Dr. Guangshun Wang. The project was initiated in 2002 and the first version of the database was open to the public in August 2003. It contained 525 peptide entries, which can be searched in multiple ways, including APD ID, peptide name, amino acid sequence, original location, PDB ID, structure, methods for structural determination, peptide length, charge, hydrophobic content, antibacterial, antifungal, antiviral, anticancer, and hemolytic activity. Some results of this bioinformatics tool were reported in the 2004 database paper. The peptide data stored in the APD were gleaned from the literature (PubMed, PDB, Google, and Swiss-Prot) manually in over a decade.
A community platform to Share Data, Publish Data with a DOI, and get Citations. Advancing Spinal Cord Injury research through sharing of data from basic and clinical research.
AmoebaDB belongs to the EuPathDB family of databases and is an integrated genomic and functional genomic database for Entamoeba and Acanthamoeba parasites. In its first iteration (released in early 2010), AmoebaDB contains the genomes of three Entamoeba species (see below). AmoebaDB integrates whole genome sequence and annotation and will rapidly expand to include experimental data and environmental isolate sequences provided by community researchers . The database includes supplemental bioinformatics analyses and a web interface for data-mining.
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The future of tropical forests matter to future climate. NGEE-Tropics is advancing model predictions of tropical forest carbon cycle responses to a changing climate over the 21st Century.