Find open-source science resources
A directory of tools, AI models, datasets, and research resources for biotech, bioinformatics, and other scientific fields. Aggregated from curated GitHub awesome-lists, HuggingFace, bio.tools, Bioconductor, and more.
Filters
Health
Domain
Language
License
Source(1)
Type
2,418 of 5,923 resources
Showing 2,001–2,050
The SAGE Social Science Thesaurus is a multidisciplinary vocabulary of the most important concepts in the social sciences. SAGE uses this vocabulary as its principal keyword vocabulary for automated tagging of content on SAGE Knowledge and SAGE Research Methods. You are welcome to browse, download, use and transform the vocabulary for any non-commercial purpose. The majority of concepts in the thesaurus have been mined from headwords in SAGE encyclopedias and other reference works. Relationships between concepts have been inferred from implicit structures in those works, for example subject indexes and readers' guides. As such, the thesaurus is a structured representation of what the editors of those reference works consider to be the most important concepts in the social sciences. Additional scraping work has extracted and structured concept-specific metadata, such as dates (for events and people) and definitions. In addition to broader-narrower relationships, concepts are grouped by type: concepts, people, organizations, events, methods, theories or laws.
Scientific research institute for neuroscience, genetics, immunology, plant biology and more.
SCancerRNA provides identifiers for non-coding RNA biomarkers, including long ncRNA, microRNA, PIWI-interacting RNA, small nucleolar RNA, and circular RNA, with data on their differential expression at the cellular level in cancer.
Schema.org is a collaborative, community activity with a mission to create, maintain, and promote schemas for structured data on the Internet, on web pages, in email messages, and beyond.
A frontend to Wikidata
SCOP(e) unique identifier. This is simply a number that may be used to reference any entry in the SCOP(e) hierarchy, from root to leaves (Fold, Superfamily, Family, etc.).
This is a dot notation used to concisely describe a SCOP(e) class, fold, superfamily, and family. For example, a.39.1.1 references the 'Calbindin D9K' family, where 'a' represents the class, '39' represents the fold, '1' represents the superfamily, and the last '1' represents the family.
A 7-character sid consists of "d" followed by the 4-character PDB ID of the file of origin, the PDB chain ID ('_' if none, '.' if multiple as is the case in genetic domains), and a single character (usually an integer) if needed to specify the domain uniquely ('_' if not). Sids are currently all lower case, even when the chain letter is upper case. Example sids include d4akea1, d9hvpa_, and d1cph.1.
Scopus is the largest abstract and citation database of peer-reviewed literature: scientific journals, books and conference proceedings. Delivering a comprehensive overview of the world's research output in the fields of science, technology, medicine, social sciences, and arts and humanities, Scopus features smart tools to track, analyze and visualize research.
The SciCrunch Registry holds metadata records that describe digital resources, e.g., software, databases, projects and also services. Most of these are produced as a result of government funding and are available to the scientific community. Resources are manually curated to make sure the information is accurate. We also use a web crawler to find literature mentions for the resources.
With the growing number of available genomes, the need for an environment to support effective comparative analysis increases. The original SEED Project was started in 2003 by the [Fellowship for Interpretation of Genomes (FIG)](http://thefig.info/) as a largely unfunded open source effort. Argonne National Laboratory and the University of Chicago joined the project, and now much of the activity occurs at those two institutions (as well as the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Hope college, San Diego State University, the Burnham Institute and a number of other institutions). The cooperative effort focuses on the development of the comparative genomics environment called the SEED and, more importantly, on the development of curated genomic data. This prefix provides identifiers for molecular roles that describe the function of one or more proteins in microbes and plants.
A vocabulary about species to support the environmental research community in Arizona and New Mexico