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Image classification, object detection, segmentation, face recognition, OCR, image generation, video understanding
14,098 datasets
Australian Ocean Data Network hosts a collection documenting marine fossils from the Upper Jurassic and Lower Cretaceous periods found on the Dampier Peninsula in Western Australia. The data is derived from publications and research conducted primarily in the 1950s, including work by the Bureau of Mineral Resources and West Australian Petroleum Pty Ltd. Some original specimens were lost in a 1953 fire, with documentation relying on surviving photographs.
Point data describing physical properties of marine sediments from the Geoscience Australia Marine Sediment database. Samples were collected between 1905 and 2017 from within the Australian Exclusive Economic Zone, Antarctic Territory, and surrounding waters. Attributes include survey details, location, water depth, and sediment properties like grain size percentages and texture classification.
Geoscience Australia houses one of the world's largest collections of petroleum data. The collection includes well completion reports, logs, analysis reports, seismic profiles, and core photography submitted by industry under legislative requirements or collected by research projects. This data is discoverable through the National Offshore Petroleum Information Management System (NOPIMS).
Nivel Instantáneo del Rio provides hourly water surface height measurements from automated sensor stations across Colombia. The data is published as raw, unvalidated open data by www.datos.gov.co in compliance with Colombian transparency laws. The dataset includes station location, measurement time, and observed value.
About 200 water samples from seven drowned river mouth lakes in western Michigan, USA, were analyzed to compare three microcystin detection methods. The dataset, authored by Chen Cheng and shared under a CC-BY-4.0 license, reveals that ELISA and PPIA overestimated MC-LR concentrations, with errors linked to cyanobacterial composition and lake trophic status. Results support a tiered analytical framework for toxin monitoring.
Raw experimental data supporting a study on the human papillomavirus (HPV) oncoprotein E7. The dataset includes PDF, PNG, and TXT files totaling 1.1 MB, published by Ifeoluwa Gbala under a CC-BY-4.0 license in May 2026. It contains raw blots and analysis data for figures investigating the interaction between phosphorylated HPV-16 E7 and the host protein Vangl1.
25% of the adult population attended this village meeting to establish community preferences for a project. The agenda documents the process for selecting community experts and determining the secrecy of local knowledge. Marie-Annick Moreau published this 79.9 KB PDF document on figshare under a CC-BY-NC-SA-4.0 license.
A 132.0 KB PDF document authored by David Matias provides the etymology and scientific definition of anatomy. The document, last updated on May 30, 2026, explains anatomy as the study of organism structure, distinct from physiology and biochemistry. It is licensed under CC-BY-4.0 and hosted on figshare.
A collection of biogeochemical measurements from over 350 seabed sediment samples collected along Australia's western, northern, and eastern continental margins between 2007 and 2014. The dataset includes parameters for organic matter source, concentration, and bioavailability, analyzed from federal government surveys. It was published by researchers in 2017 to establish baseline data and link sediment properties to water column characteristics.
Experimental data from a study using Cre-lox mouse models to investigate the role of programmed cell death receptor-ligand 1 (PD-L1) in shock/sepsis-induced lung injury and mortality. The dataset includes survival rates, lung vascular permeability measurements, and cytokine, chemokine, and angiopoietin levels from blood, bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, and lung tissue. It was authored by Elizabeth W. Tindal and last updated on June 2, 2026.
A 160.9 KB dataset from a 2026 study by Elizabeth W. Tindal, shared on figshare. It contains results from an experimental study on hemorrhagic shock and sepsis-induced lung injury in mice. The data compares morbidity, mortality, and biomarker levels between mice lacking PD-L1 on endothelial cells versus neutrophils.
Elizabeth W. Tindal's dataset contains experimental results from a study on programmed cell death receptor-ligand 1 (PD-L1) in murine shock/sepsis-induced lung injury. The data includes survival rates, lung vascular permeability measurements, and cytokine, chemokine, and angiopoietin levels from bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, lung tissue, and blood. The dataset was last updated on 2026-06-02 and is shared under a CC-BY-4.0 license.
Elizabeth W. Tindal's 2026 study provides experimental data on the role of programmed cell death receptor-ligand 1 (PD-L1) in shock/sepsis-induced lung injury. The dataset includes mortality rates, lung permeability measurements, and cytokine/chemokine/angiopoietin levels from bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, lung tissue, and blood of genetically modified mice. Results indicate a morbid impact from endothelial cell PD-L1 loss but a potential protective role from neutrophil PD-L1 expression.
Elizabeth W. Tindal published this dataset on figshare in 2026. It contains experimental results from a study using Cre-lox mouse models to investigate the role of programmed cell death receptor-ligand 1 (PD-L1) in shock/sepsis-induced lung injury. The data likely includes mortality rates, lung permeability measurements, and cytokine/chemokine levels from bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, lung tissue, and blood samples.
Elizabeth W. Tindal's experimental data compares the impact of PD-L1 deficiency in endothelial cells versus neutrophils on mortality and lung injury in a murine hemorrhagic shock and sepsis model. Fourteen-day survival and lung permeability data, alongside cytokine, chemokine, and angiopoietin levels from blood, BALF, and lung tissue, are included. The dataset supports investigation into cell-type-specific immune checkpoint roles in critical illness.
Experimental data from a study using Cre-lox mouse models to test the role of programmed cell death receptor-ligand 1 (PD-L1) in shock/sepsis-induced lung injury. The dataset includes survival rates, lung permeability measurements, and cytokine, chemokine, and angiopoietin levels from blood, bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, and lung tissue. Authored by Elizabeth W. Tindal and shared under a CC-BY-4.0 license, the data was last updated in June 2026.
Elizabeth W. Tindal's research data compares survival and biomarker outcomes in genetically modified mice lacking PD-L1 on endothelial cells or neutrophils. The dataset includes 14-day mortality rates, lung permeability measurements, and cytokine/chemokine levels from bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, blood, and lung tissue. Data was collected from mice subjected to hemorrhagic shock and cecal ligation and puncture procedures.
Elizabeth W. Tindal published data on 2026-06-02 investigating the role of programmed cell death receptor-ligand 1 (PD-L1) in shock/sepsis-induced lung injury. The dataset includes results from Cre-lox mouse models with PD-L1 knocked out in endothelial cells or neutrophils, measuring survival, lung permeability, and cytokine levels. The 160.9 KB PDF file contains data from flow cytometry, ELISA assays, and organ injury indices.
Elizabeth W. Tindal's 2026 study provides experimental data on the role of programmed cell death receptor-ligand 1 (PD-L1) in shock/sepsis-induced lung injury. The dataset likely contains results from Cre-lox mouse models, including survival rates, lung permeability measurements, and cytokine/chemokine levels from blood, bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, and lung tissue. Findings indicate a morbid impact from endothelial cell PD-L1 loss but a potential protective role from neutrophil PD-L1 expression.
Experimental data from a study using Cre-lox mouse models to investigate the role of programmed cell death receptor-ligand 1 (PD-L1) in shock/sepsis-induced lung injury. The dataset includes survival rates, lung vascular permeability measurements, and cytokine, chemokine, and angiopoietin levels from blood, bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, and lung tissue. Authored by Elizabeth W. Tindal and shared on figshare under a CC-BY-4.0 license, last updated in June 2026.