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NYU Dataset
Methods in Infant/Toddler Neuroimaging Study
- Alternate Title(s)
- MINI
- Authors
- Cassandra L. HendrixMoriah E. Thomason
- Description
The Methods in Infant/Toddler Neuroimaging (MINI) study surveyed investigators at infant and toddler research laboratories across the globe to collect information on preferred practices for MRI acquisition, scan success rates, visit preparation, scanning protocols, family accommodations, study design, and addressing incidental findings. The survey was distributed in February 2021 through the Fetal,...
- Subject
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Neuroscience
- Timeframe
- 2021
- Access Rights
- Free to All
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Generation R
- Authors
- Vincent W. V. JaddoeGeneration R Study Group
- Description
Generation R is an ongoing prospective cohort study of child development from the prenatal period through young adulthood in a multi-ethnic population recruited from the Rotterdam, Netherlands metropolitan area. The study enrolled 9,778 mothers with a delivery date between April 2002 and January 2006; they had 9,749 live births. The primary objective of the study is to identify early environmental...
- Access Rights
- Author Approval Required
- Local Expert
- Akhgar Ghassabian
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Upstate KIDS
- Alternate Title(s)
- Upstate New York Infant Development Screening, Upstate KIDS Follow-Up Study
- Authors
- Edwina Yeung
- Description
The Upstate New York Infant Development Screening (Upstate KIDS) Study is a collaboration between the New York State Department of Health, University at Albany, and the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD). The study includes information from over 5,034 mothers and their 6,171 children in New York State, excluding New York City, who were recruited...
- Access Rights
- Author Approval Required
- Local Expert
- Akhgar Ghassabian
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NYU Dataset
Genomic Analysis of Group B Streptococcus Carriage Isolates From Botswana
- Authors
- Karen L. Hanze VillavicencioMegan J. JobAnne Claire BurghardAllison Taffet9 more author(s)...
- Description
Group B Streptococcus (GBS) is a major cause of neonatal sepsis and meningitis and a leading cause of death in infants globally. Rectovaginal colonization in late pregnancy can lead to transmission to newborns and is the major risk factor for early-onset GBS disease. This study includes genomic analysis of GBS isolated from pregnant people in Botswana. GBS isolates were examined by whole genome sequencing...
- Subject
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GenomicsPregnancy
- Access Rights
- Free to All