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I've been going through my del.icio.us account, updating and reviewing my links, and I realized I've got a ton of neuro-related links in which people may be interested. Enjoy!
Blogs:
* Action Potential (blogs.nature.com/nn/actionpotential/): Nature Neuroscience blog: Blog for one of the most highly respected neuroscience journals out there.
* Mind Hacks (www.mindhacks.com/): From the writers and friends of Mind Hacks, a pretty cool book.
* Brain Waves (brainwaves.corante.com): Meh. More "neuroindustry" related, but it may interest some of you.
* Seed Magazine (seedmagazine.com): Not a blog, but a really cool online science news source.
Neuroanatomy:
* Allen Brain Atlas (www.brain-map.org/welcome.do): "An interactive, genome-wide image database of gene expression in the mouse brain. A combination of RNA in situ hybridization data, detailed Reference Atlases and informatics analysis tools."
* MSU's Navigable Atlas of the Human Brain(www.msu.edu/~brains/humanatlas/): Solid, all-around neuroanatomy help.
* Brainmaps.org (brainmaps.org/): Nice, high-res brain atlases of many different species. Good complement to Paxinos and Watson's The Rat Brain.
Neurology:
* Neuroexam(www.neuroexam.com/index.php): From the author of Neuroanatomy through Clinical Cases. In my opinion, the neurological exam is one of the most elegant tools in medicine. There are tutorials and videos demonstrating some of the exams.
* Washington University School of Medicine's Neuroscience Tutorial(thalamus.wustl.edu/course/): A good introduction to clinical neuroanatomy.
Digital Signal Processing:
* The Scientist and Engineer's Guide to Digital Signal Processing (www.dspguide.com/pdfbook.htm): An amazing, easy to understand, and (surprisingly) very interesting *free* book on DSP. Covers the basics all the way up to much more advanced techniques. A must have!
* EEGLAB(sccn.ucsd.edu/eeglab/): Delorme & Makeig's open-source Matlab toolbox for EEG/waveform DSP.
* DSP Tutorial(www.dsptutor.freeuk.com/): Has some good Java visualizations of DSP principles.
* Johns Hopkins Signals Systems Control(www.jhu.edu/~signals/): More Java simulations of DSP, with some neat help on convolutions and FFT/dFFT.
Outreach:
* The Society for Neuroscience: Brain Awareness Week(apu.sfn.org/baw/): A cool program by the SfN to help bring neuroscience education to the community.
* Neuroscience for Kids(faculty.washington.edu/chudle....html): UW's Eric Chudler's fun site for kids.
* qoolsqool(www.qoolsqool.com/): Free educational materials of all types.
Blogs:
* Action Potential (blogs.nature.com/nn/actionpotential/): Nature Neuroscience blog: Blog for one of the most highly respected neuroscience journals out there.
* Mind Hacks (www.mindhacks.com/): From the writers and friends of Mind Hacks, a pretty cool book.
* Brain Waves (brainwaves.corante.com): Meh. More "neuroindustry" related, but it may interest some of you.
* Seed Magazine (seedmagazine.com): Not a blog, but a really cool online science news source.
Neuroanatomy:
* Allen Brain Atlas (www.brain-map.org/welcome.do): "An interactive, genome-wide image database of gene expression in the mouse brain. A combination of RNA in situ hybridization data, detailed Reference Atlases and informatics analysis tools."
* MSU's Navigable Atlas of the Human Brain(www.msu.edu/~brains/humanatlas/): Solid, all-around neuroanatomy help.
* Brainmaps.org (brainmaps.org/): Nice, high-res brain atlases of many different species. Good complement to Paxinos and Watson's The Rat Brain.
Neurology:
* Neuroexam(www.neuroexam.com/index.php): From the author of Neuroanatomy through Clinical Cases. In my opinion, the neurological exam is one of the most elegant tools in medicine. There are tutorials and videos demonstrating some of the exams.
* Washington University School of Medicine's Neuroscience Tutorial(thalamus.wustl.edu/course/): A good introduction to clinical neuroanatomy.
Digital Signal Processing:
* The Scientist and Engineer's Guide to Digital Signal Processing (www.dspguide.com/pdfbook.htm): An amazing, easy to understand, and (surprisingly) very interesting *free* book on DSP. Covers the basics all the way up to much more advanced techniques. A must have!
* EEGLAB(sccn.ucsd.edu/eeglab/): Delorme & Makeig's open-source Matlab toolbox for EEG/waveform DSP.
* DSP Tutorial(www.dsptutor.freeuk.com/): Has some good Java visualizations of DSP principles.
* Johns Hopkins Signals Systems Control(www.jhu.edu/~signals/): More Java simulations of DSP, with some neat help on convolutions and FFT/dFFT.
Outreach:
* The Society for Neuroscience: Brain Awareness Week(apu.sfn.org/baw/): A cool program by the SfN to help bring neuroscience education to the community.
* Neuroscience for Kids(faculty.washington.edu/chudle....html): UW's Eric Chudler's fun site for kids.
* qoolsqool(www.qoolsqool.com/): Free educational materials of all types.
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Unsu...
Re: *****Links a'plenty!*****
Wed, October 4, 2006 - 11:43 AMHoly CRAP Tribe's HTML capabilities are for shit, and if you just remove HTML it links everything in a string. OK... so remove the "):" at the end of every link to follow them to the correct locations.
Ugh. -
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Unsu...
Re: *****Links a'plenty!*****
Thu, October 5, 2006 - 7:37 AMThanks, Brad. There are some really useful link here.
BTW, you going to SfN this year? I'm planning on skipping it and going to Cosyne in February. -
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Unsu...
Re: *****Links a'plenty!*****
Thu, October 5, 2006 - 11:01 AMI'd like to hit CoSyNe one of these years... but yeah... I'm in Atlanta for SfN this year. When and where is CoSyNe? -
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Unsu...
Re: *****Links a'plenty!*****
Fri, October 6, 2006 - 8:26 AMCosyne is in February in beautiful Salt Lake City. I need some feedback on my modeling work so i figured that was the group to talk to. I'm a little jealous I'm not going to Atlanta, though.
Have a good time!
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