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The Brain Biodiversity Bank refers to the repository of images of and information about brain specimens contained in the collections associated with the National Museum of Health and Medicine at the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology in Washington, DC. These collections include, besides the Michigan State University Collection, the Welker Collection from the University of Wisconsin, the Yakovlev-Haleem Collection from Harvard University, the Meyer Collection from the Johns Hopkins University, and the Huber-Crosby and Crosby-Lauer Collections from the University of Michigan and the C.U. Ariëns Kappers brain collection from Amsterdam Netherlands.Introducing online atlases of the brains of humans, sheep, dolphins, and other animals. A world resource for illustrations of whole brains and stained sections from a great variety of mammals
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.
<<<!!!<<< checked 20.03.2017 SumsDB was offline; for more information and archive see http://brainvis.wustl.edu/sumsdb/ >>>!!!>>> SumsDB (the Surface Management System DataBase) is a repository of brain-mapping data (surfaces & volumes; structural & functional data) from many laboratories.
Brainlife promotes engagement and education in reproducible neuroscience. We do this by providing an online platform where users can publish code (Apps), Data, and make it "alive" by integragrate various HPC and cloud computing resources to run those Apps. Brainlife also provide mechanisms to publish all research assets associated with a scientific project (data and analyses) embedded in a cloud computing environment and referenced by a single digital-object-identifier (DOI). The platform is unique because of its focus on supporting scientific reproducibility beyond open code and open data, by providing fundamental smart mechanisms for what we refer to as “Open Services.”
The PAIN Repository is a recently funded NIH initiative, which has two components: an archive for already collected imaging data (Archived Repository), and a repository for structural and functional brain images and metadata acquired prospectively using standardized acquisition parameters (Standardized Repository) in healthy control subjects and patients with different types of chronic pain. The PAIN Repository provides the infrastructure for storage of standardized resting state functional, diffusion tensor imaging and structural brain imaging data and associated biological, physiological and behavioral metadata from multiple scanning sites, and provides tools to facilitate analysis of the resulting comprehensive data sets.
The Cognitive Function and Ageing Studies (CFAS) are population based studies of individuals aged 65 years and over living in the community, including institutions, which is the only large multi-centred population-based study in the UK that has reached sufficient maturity. There are three main studies within the CFAS group. MRC CFAS, the original study began in 1989, with three of its sites providing a parent subset for the comparison two decades later with CFAS II (2008 onwards). Subsequently another CFAS study, CFAS Wales began in 2011.
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The Austrian NeuroCloud (ANC) is a FAIR-enabling platform for sustainable research data management in Cognitive Neuroscience. Most of the offered research data is restricted, the publicly available datasets can be seen under https://data.anc.plus.ac.at/explore The ANC offers tools and services to archive, manage, and share neurocognitive data flexibly and according to community standards. Scientists have full control over what they share (e.g., full original datasets or data derivatives), how they share it (by choosing from a selection of licensing models), and with whom (e.g., by using the ANC’s adjustable User Agreement templates). The ANC provides persistent DOIs for data releases and operates in accordance with European GDPR. Moreover, the ANC fully supports the mission of the EOSC and is committed to the EU’s open science policy, legal standards, and best open science practices. Accordingly, the ANC aspires to facilitate FAIR data operations along the entire data lifecycle, actively supporting the ongoing shift in research culture towards increased transparency, data reusability, and result reproducibility.