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  2. UK Biobank - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UK_Biobank

    [15] [16] [17] Nature has referred to UK Biobank as an "unprecedented open access database." [18] Since 2012, [19] 30,000 researchers from over 90 countries [20] have registered to use UK Biobank. As of November 2023 there have been over 9,000 [21] peer-reviewed publications using UK Biobank data, including over 3,000 in 2023. [22]

  3. List of biobanks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_biobanks

    A biobank is a physical place which stores biological specimens.In some cases, participant data is also collected and stored. Access policies details may vary across biobanks but generally involve obtaining ethics approval from institutional review boards (IRB) and scientific review or peer review approval from the institutions under which the biobanks operate as well as Ethics approval from ...

  4. Generation Scotland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generation_Scotland

    Generation Scotland is a biobank, a resource of biological samples and information on health and lifestyle from thousands of volunteer donors in Scotland.. The aim of Generation Scotland is to create an ethically sound, family- and population-based infrastructure to identify the genetic basis of common complex diseases. [1]

  5. Rory Collins - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rory_Collins

    www.ndph.ox.ac.uk /team /rory-collins Sir Rory Edwards Collins FMedSci FRS [ 1 ] (born 3 January 1955) is a British physician who is Professor of Medicine and Epidemiology at the Clinical Trial Service Unit within the University of Oxford , the head of the Nuffield Department of Population Health and a Fellow of Green Templeton College, Oxford .

  6. Biobank - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biobank

    A biobank is a type of biorepository that stores biological samples (usually human) for use in research. Biobanks have become an important resource in medical research, supporting many types of contemporary research like genomics and personalized medicine. Biobanks can give researchers access to data representing a large number of people.

  7. Virtual biobank - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_biobank

    A virtual biobank is a virtual repository which provides data extracted from and characterizing samples stored at classical biobanks. [1] Virtual biobanks are large databases and can provide high-resolution images of samples as well as other characteristic data. These virtual biobanks can be accessed via specialized software or web portals.

  8. Government database - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Government_database

    The National Biobank Registry gives researchers on-line access to combined data from all the biobanks participating in the Danish National Biobank initiative, including the Danish National Birth Cohort, the Danish Neonatal Screening Biobank, the Danish Patobank, the Danish Cancer Society's project biobank "Kost, kræft og helbred (Diet, Cancer ...

  9. UK Data Archive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UK_Data_Archive

    Census.ac.uk built on the work of the Census Registration Service (CRS) project (2001-2006), [36] also based at the UK Data Archive, which provided a one-stop access and registration service for the same range of users and data. Census.ac.uk offered additional services, including centralized searching across all census resources, help and ...