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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.

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  • RRID:SCR_004656

http://www.genomeweb.com/newsletter/daily-scan

A roundup of the most interesting mainstream media articles, blog posts, and peer-reviewed literature relevant to genomic and proteomic scientists. Published daily online and by e-mail bulletin.

Proper citation: Daily Scan (RRID:SCR_004656) Copy   


http://blogs.wsj.com/health/

Health Blog offers news and analysis on health and the business of health. The blog is written by Katherine Hobson and includes contributions from staffers at The Wall Street Journal, WSJ.com and Dow Jones Newswires. A searchable interface allows the user to find topics of interest. Katherine Hobson has been writing about health and business for more than 15 years, including stints covering cancer, nutrition, exercise science, the U.S. economy and the U.K. beer industry.

Proper citation: Wall Street Journal Health Blog (RRID:SCR_004914) Copy   


http://www.calacademy.org/teachers/families/

Family Science - Fun activities to do at home, on the web, in the Academy and more. The program serves San Francisco''s fourth and fifth grade teachers, students and their families. The Rock Program We are excited to welcome you, your students and their families to the Enhanced Museum Visits for Students Program. Generously funded by Arthur and Toni Rembe Rock, this program is open to all 4th and 5th grade classes within San Francisco County lines. Each of the following FREE features are built into the field trip program to support and enrich the museum experience for teachers, students and families: * Bus transportation - if needed * Teacher workshops that highlight exhibit themes and educational resources (required for first time participants, optional for repeat teachers) * Educational programs designed to enhance the museum visit fieldtrip for your students * A student pass entitling each student unlimited free admission through August * A one-time free family pass with a science activity book for each student valid through the end of August.

Proper citation: California Academy of Sciences Family Science (RRID:SCR_005241) Copy   


http://scienceblogs.com/channel/brain-and-behavior/

ScienceBlogs posts about Brain & Behavior.

Proper citation: ScienceBlogs: Brain and Behavior (RRID:SCR_005159) Copy   


http://www.labspaces.net/DNA

Hi. I''m genegeek (aka Catherine Anderson). I realized during my PostDoc that I preferred learning and explaining new results to doing science so I started a non-traditional career of teaching and outreach. I''ll be using this space to explore public perception of genetics and other cool molecular biology stuff. I hope to add to the great discussions re: new science discoveries and general understanding of genetics. I''ve been running an outreach program and enjoy talking to non-experts about their opinions and understanding. I hope my enthusiasm for the topics can come through the screen. My posts are presented as opinion and commentary and do not represent the views of LabSpaces Productions, LLC, my employer, or my educational institution.

Proper citation: Daring Nucleic Adventures - genegeek (RRID:SCR_005215) Copy   


http://scienceblogs.com/channel/medicine/

ScienceBlogs posts about Medicine & Health.

Proper citation: ScienceBlogs: Medicine and Health (RRID:SCR_005176) Copy   


http://www.guardian.co.uk/science

Latest science news, comment, analysis and features from guardian.co.uk, the world''s leading liberal voice.

Proper citation: The Guardian: Science (RRID:SCR_005166) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_005239

http://blogs.nejm.org/now/

A blog produced by the NEJM publishing communications team about new and innovative content in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM.org). Our goal is to inform you about what''s new and provide some additional context to complement the content published in NEJM. Each week we post a piece under Insights about one of the latest research papers in NEJM, discussing its clinical significance, where it may lead us in practice and research, and often giving an editor''s thoughts about why it was important to publish. We pose questions to stimulate your thinking and discussion. The idea is to make it easy for you to give us your views on a particular topic and make the conversation accessible to other doctors and physicians-in-training. Posts contain links to the full article, which will be free to all visitors for a limited time. We also feature two posts from the Resident e-Bulletin each week, with an article summary, Clinical Pearls, and Morning Report Questions teaching points that many of you find so useful in your roles as teachers or trainees. The blog gives us a new way to distribute and store this educational information on the social web, again, inviting comment and discussion. You''ll also hear about new products and applications as we bring them out, such as new Interactive Medical Cases, or iPhone applications, like NEJM This Week and the Image Challenge. We link to videos on the NEJMvideo channel on YouTube, share our Twitter feed, and links to NEJM in the News, too. We''d like this to be an open forum, complementary to the core content of NEJM, engaging you in a new experience beyond the journal page in a more interactive community.

Proper citation: Now at NEJM (RRID:SCR_005239) Copy   


http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/observations/

From the editors and reporters of Scientific American, this blog delivers commentary, opinion and analysis on the latest developments in science and technology and their influence on society and policy. From reasoned arguments and cultural critiques to personal and skeptical takes on interesting science news, you''ll find a wide range of scientifically relevant insights here.

Proper citation: Scientific American Observations (RRID:SCR_005195) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_005197

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://scienceblogs.com/

From climate change to intelligent design, HIV/AIDS to stem cells, science education to space exploration, science is figuring prominently in our discussions of politics, religion, philosophy, business and the arts. New insights and discoveries in neuroscience, theoretical physics and genetics are revolutionizing our understanding of who are are, where we come from and where we''re heading. Launched in January 2006, ScienceBlogs is a portal to this global dialogue, a digital science salon featuring the leading bloggers from a wide array of scientific disciplines. Today, ScienceBlogs is the largest online community dedicated to science. We believe in providing our bloggers with the freedom to exercise their own editorial and creative instincts. We do not edit their work and we do not tell them what to write about. We have selected our 80+ bloggers based on their originality, insight, talent, and dedication and how we think they would contribute to the discussion at ScienceBlogs. Our role, as we see it, is to create and continue to improve this forum for discussion, and to ensure that the rich dialogue that takes place at ScienceBlogs resonates outside the blogosphere. ScienceBlogs is always interested in bringing new contributors into our community. If you''re interested in blogging with us, please fill out our application, and we''ll be in touch.

Proper citation: ScienceBlogs (RRID:SCR_005197) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_005230

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://www.bioportfolio.com/

BioPortfolio is a leading news, information and knowledge resource covering the global life science industries impacted on by biotechnology. The site aims to provide the lay person, the researcher and the management executive with a single location to source core information on specific bio-related topics, to collate relevant data associated with each topic and to point the user to relevant knowledge resources. We publish up to the minute news (see biotechnology news categories) and regularly update content across our information databases. BioPortfolio promotes and sells market research and management reports from 30+ publishers. In addition our unique corporate database lists 40,000+ companies and organizations. BioPortfolio aims to bring together high quality information about marketed drugs - medication and relevant clinical trials, research papers and recent news from PubMed, ClinicalTrials.gov, and DailyMed. Additionally, resources include biotech, pharma and medical job listings. When the BioPortfolio site was launched in February 1997 the company aimed to provide a global free-to-use resource with defined aims and mission statement: to meet the increasing demand of consumers, scientists, investors, commerce and government for timely, accurate and commercially useful information and intelligence on biotechnology companies, technologies and products world-wide. Driven by the success of the site we have made major investments and improvements to enhance our content and to apply the latest web technologies to improve functionality and site utility. We believe this unique depth and breadth of content is supporting individuals, organizations and policy-makers to become more aware of the role of biotechnology on the global economy. With 97,000 users visiting the site more than once per month we are confident that we are providing information our users need. We hope you the users find the site of value for both personal and professional reasons. Please enjoy this free resource and email your comments!

Proper citation: BioPortfolio (RRID:SCR_005230) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_005231

    This resource has 10+ mentions.

http://www.gene-talk.de

A web-based tool, knowledgebase and community for analysis and interpretation of human variant files. VCFs (Variant Call Formats) are preprocessed and annotated, you can filter them, access all databases and provide your expertise to the community by creating annotations.

Proper citation: GeneTalk (RRID:SCR_005231) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_005229

http://ogremk5.wordpress.com/

Science, Technology, Education, Government, and anti-woo. Cassandra had the gift of seeing the future, but the curse of having no one believe her.

Proper citation: Cassandras Tears (RRID:SCR_005229) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_005219

http://sciblogs.co.nz/

Sciblogs brings together the best science bloggers in the country (New Zealand) on one website, creating a hub for scientific analysis and discussion and facilitating reader interaction. The website is for scientists who want to reach out to a general audience to explain their science and how it relates to society. Some Sciblog contributors spend most of their time in the lab or buried in research. Others are authors or entrepreneurs. All of them know what they are talking about and have an interest in engaging in discussion on the big science-related issues facing society. Over time more bloggers will be added to the Sciblogs roster. If you would like to inquire about hosting a blog on Sciblogs contact us. You can easily keep an eye on new Sciblogs posts by subscribing via RSS or email or by following our Twitter feed. Alternatively, there is a Facebook page as well as a Facebook group feel free to join in! Categories: * Science * Agriculture * Technology * Health and Medicine * Environment and Ecology * Science and Society

Proper citation: Sciblogs (RRID:SCR_005219) Copy   


http://bioinformatics.knowledgeblog.org/

Series of tutorial material covering a broad selection of topics in bioinformatics. Categories include: Bioinformatics APIs, Data integration, Events, Grid and Cloud Computing, Metabolic modelling, Reviews, Software Comparisons, Statistics, Systems Biology, Transcriptomics, Tutorials.

Proper citation: Bioinformatics Knowledgeblog (RRID:SCR_005379) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_005380

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://ontogenesis.knowledgeblog.org/

Knowledge Blog for descriptive, tutorial and explanatory material about building, using and maintaining ontologies, as well as the social processes and technology that support this. Ontogenesis features over 20 articles written by leading academics, and has attracted over 17,000 page reads. Articles are peer-reviewed. Following publication as reviewed, articles are stable and can be cited by stable URL or DOI. Ontogenesis is now archived by the British Library as part of the UK Web Archive and is indexed by Google Scholar. The initial idea for Ontogenesis came from Phillip Lord. You can read the original manifesto that they wrote, describing the purpose of this blog. Ontogenesis is the first and main example of a Knowledgeblog, a flexible and light-weight process for scientific publication. It has received funding from JISC. They are currently open to submissions. Please contact them if you want further information, or would like to offer articles for publication.

Proper citation: Ontogenesis (RRID:SCR_005380) Copy   


http://taverna.knowledgeblog.org/

Taverna Knowledge Blog: Designing, Executing and Sharing Scientific workflows

Proper citation: Taverna Knowledge Blog (RRID:SCR_005381) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_005530

http://brainethics.org/

There are a lot of fine blogs out there covering the avalance of current neuroscience research. With this blog Thomas Rams��y & Martin Skov want to highlight the many consequences of this growing understanding of the human brain. We are especially interested in two types of consequences: Tinkering with the brain and What is it like to be a human being? * Tinkering with the brain: First and foremost, with an understanding of how the brain works comes the possibility of tinkering with it. We already use billions of dollars every year on psychopharmocologia trying to treat depression, schizophrenia, obsessive-compulsive disorder and other mental diseases. But should we also use our knowledge of the brain to treat undesirable mental traits such as pedophilia or sociopathy? And what about enhancing normal brains? Clearly, evolution hasn''t endowed us with the most efficient brain imaginable. Shouldn''t we do something about its many shortcomings? * What is it like to be a human being?: Secondly, our view of human behavior is sure to change with our improved understanding of the human brain. Our knowledge of core human faculties such as language, social reasoning, aesthetics, and economics is already being challenged by modern neuroscience, yielding multiple hard questions. Do we have a free will? Is the mind innate or plastic? If people are not responsible for their actions (since all actions are caused by blind molecular processes) does our legal system still make sense? In short, will modern neuroscience come to completely redefine human nature? We try to discuss contemporary research literature, not just news reports. Although we will occasionally also target popular science reports, since we believe they play an important role in dissemining lessons from the lab. And in the future we plan to also post interviews with interesting researchers, as well as link to our own publications in journals and books. Additionally, the latest and most important books in the multidisciplinary field of neuroscience, cognition, psychology, ethics and economics are presented.

Proper citation: BrainEthics (RRID:SCR_005530) Copy   


http://blog.ketyov.com/

Bradley Voytek''''s blog is where he tries out new ideas. He will often be wrong, but that''''s the point. He is a Neuroscientist studying human cognition, neuroplasticity, and brain computer interfacing. Into really geeky stuff. World zombie neuroscience expert. Also runs brainSCANr.com with his wife, Jessica.

Proper citation: Oscillatory Thoughts (RRID:SCR_005481) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_005478

    This resource has 10+ mentions.

http://neurosphere.wordpress.com/

This blog belongs to me, Dave J Hayes PhD, a Neuroscientist at the University of Ottawa''s Institute of Mental Health Research. My research focuses on the neuroscience of motivation and emotion particularly regarding how brains and people respond to aversive and rewarding things in their environment. A neurosphere is a free-floating group of neural stem cells which can multiply, outside of their natural environment, and retain the ability to differentiate into functional brain cells. I don''t work on neurospheres. However, i like the metaphor of a group of people coming together, outside of their natural environment, through their interest in all things neuro which, incidentally, is everything. The sphere of human thought.

Proper citation: neurosphere (RRID:SCR_005478) Copy   



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