Mon. 9 Nov, 2020 - Sun. 15 Nov, 2020
Mon. 9 Nov, 2020
UNC OSR: Virtual UNC Symposium for Research Administrators
Mon. 9 Nov, 2020 8:30 am - 12:30 pm
The annual UNC Symposium for Research Administrators is a forum to provide campus research administrators with the most current information on policies, regulations, and best practices for conducting research at the University. The virtual symposium will be held over three half-days via Zoom for live webinar presentations and panel discussions, and includes live help/support throughout the event. Registration is not required.
Sessions will cover topics on budgeting, closeout, conflict of interest, industry, sub-awards, tools for proposal and project management, and many more. Please see the full schedule. Many sessions at this year’s symposium will also apply towards RACC continuing education credit hours.
Tue. 10 Nov, 2020
UNC OSR: Virtual UNC Symposium for Research Administrators
Tue. 10 Nov, 2020 8:30 am - 12:30 pm
The annual UNC Symposium for Research Administrators is a forum to provide campus research administrators with the most current information on policies, regulations, and best practices for conducting research at the University. The virtual symposium will be held over three half-days via Zoom for live webinar presentations and panel discussions, and includes live help/support throughout the event. Registration is not required.
Sessions will cover topics on budgeting, closeout, conflict of interest, industry, sub-awards, tools for proposal and project management, and many more. Please see the full schedule. Many sessions at this year’s symposium will also apply towards RACC continuing education credit hours.
UNC Children's Research Institute: Updates on COVID-19 Research in Pediatrics
Tue. 10 Nov, 2020 12:15 pm - 1:30 pm
Children's Research Institute Seminar Series: Updates on COVID-19 Research in Pediatrics
The Children's Research Institute will be hosting a multi-disciplinary panel discussion focused on ongoing COVID-19 pediatric research at UNC. Presenters Schwartz, Thompson, Walker, Willis and Wu will each give a short presentation highlighting their current clinical research projects, followed by a Q&A.
Registration is not required. For information on how to attend or to submit specific questions to the panel, please email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
Presenters
Stephanie Schwartz, MD
UNC Health
Peyton Thompson, MD, MSCR, Assistant Professor, Division of Pediatric Infectious Diseases
UNC School of Medicine
Tracie Walker, MD
UNC Health
Zachary Willis, MD, MPH, Director, Pediatric Antimicrobial Stewardship Program
UNC Children's Research Institute
Eveline Wu, MD, MSCR, Associate Professor, Pediatric Rheumatology
UNC Children's Research Institute
Odum Institute: Equity Consideration For Scholars
Tue. 10 Nov, 2020 2:00 pm - 4:30 pm
Odum Institute Short Course - Equity Consideration For Scholars: Taking A Critical Approach To Research
In the face of increasing awareness of the need to capture the diversity of human experience, there has also been increasing concern to study and describe populations from a critical and equitable perspective. As science is itself a cultural practice, and knowledge production can perpetuate social inequalities prevalent in social systems, many times, scholars may perpetuate inequity through language use, methods, theories, and findings.
During this workshop, the following will be discussed with implications for our practice as scholars:
- How to refer to others and be critical and thoughtful of our language use (terms and generalizations)
- How to question what is being said and what is left unsaid (e.g. mitigating discursive erasures)
- How to recognize and refer to the possible limitations of our scholarship (e.g. issues of generalizability, cultural elements in our findings)
Presenters
Allegra J. Midgette, PhD, Postdoctoral Fellow
Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute
Michelle Y. Martin Romero, PhD, Assistant Professor, Public Health Education
UNC-Greensboro
Sheps Center: Teaching Journal Articles
Tue. 10 Nov, 2020 2:00 pm - 3:00 pm
Interdisciplinary Seminar in Health Equity - Teaching Journal Articles: Focus on Health Disparities Research Articles
This is the second academic year of funding for this seminar. The Sheps Center's previous year goals will carry forward this year with some additions and improvements. The Center still aims to become acquainted with researchers and students who are involved in or interested in health disparities, to understand how to build and refine the Program in Health Disparities Research at the Sheps Center based on interaction with seminar attendees and their identified needs, and to provide a space for researchers and students to present (and solicit feedback) on past and current research to a group of peers.
The general theme of this academic year’s seminar is on the impact structures have on health disparities.
Presenter
Sharita R. Thomas, MPP, Research Associate
Cecil G. Sheps Center
Wed. 11 Nov, 2020
UNC OSR: Virtual UNC Symposium for Research Administrators
Wed. 11 Nov, 2020 8:30 am - 12:30 pm
The annual UNC Symposium for Research Administrators is a forum to provide campus research administrators with the most current information on policies, regulations, and best practices for conducting research at the University. The virtual symposium will be held over three half-days via Zoom for live webinar presentations and panel discussions, and includes live help/support throughout the event. Registration is not required.
Sessions will cover topics on budgeting, closeout, conflict of interest, industry, sub-awards, tools for proposal and project management, and many more. Please see the full schedule. Many sessions at this year’s symposium will also apply towards RACC continuing education credit hours.
Odum Institute: Multiple Imputation
Wed. 11 Nov, 2020 9:00 am - 12:30 pm
Odum Institute Short Course - Multiple Imputation: Methods And Applications
Multiple imputation offers a general purpose framework for handling missing data, protecting confidential public use data, and adjusting for measurement errors. These issues are frequently encountered by organizations that disseminate data to others, as well as by individual researchers. Participants in this workshop will learn how multiple imputation can solve problems in these areas, and they will gain a conceptual and practical basis for applying multiple imputation in their statistical work.
Topics include:
- The pros and cons of various solutions for handling missing data
- The motivation for and general idea behind multiple imputation
- Methods for implementing multiple imputation including multivariate modeling, conditional modeling, and machine learning based approaches
- Methods for checking the adequacy of imputations via graphical display and posterior predictive checks
- Applications of multiple imputation for scenarios other than missing data
Presenter
Jerry Reiter, PhD, Professor, Statistical Science
Duke University
Duke Project Management Seminar: Transition to Civilian Life
Wed. 11 Nov, 2020 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm
Transition to Civilian Life: How I Overcame Military Injuries and Jumped Back into My Life with a New Career
Join Duke Clinical & Translational Science Institute for a special Veteran’s Day event where Billy Dewalt shares his inspiring story of developing a civilian career post-military. After ten years of military service, Dewalt suffered from depression, an anxiety disorder, an incomplete spinal cord injury, and traumatic brain injuries resulting in more than 10 seizures a day and memory retention problems.
To transition back to civilian life, Billy attended ECPI University and earned a degree in network administration and security management, but still struggled with his medical issues. His life truly changed when he met Quinn. Quinn is a highly trained service dog who is able to signal to Billy when a seizure is about to occur and help him cope with his anxiety and posttraumatic stress disorder.
REDCap Hands-On Form Building Training Session
Wed. 11 Nov, 2020 1:00 pm - 3:00 pm

The REDCap Hands-On Form Building Training Session will teach users to build forms using the online designer or data dictionary. This session will be a click along hands-on/lecture/demo.
Our current REDCap trainings are offered as webinar-only.
About REDCap
REDCap is a secure web application that can be used to build and manage case report forms, surveys and other data capture mechanisms for clinical research. NC TraCS provides training classes to assist you in getting started with building REDCap data collection forms for your research projects.
Current REDCap training offerings include:
- Forms (beginner)
- Forms: Hands On (beginner)
- Functions (advanced)
- Open Session (Surveys and general questions)
- Clinical Data Management (3-day)
For more information, please visit our REDCap webpage.
R3 Symposium: Cultural Industry, Techno-capitalism, and Labor
Wed. 11 Nov, 2020 1:00 pm - 2:30 pm
Race, Racism, and Racial Equity (R3) Symposium - Cultural Industry, Techno-capitalism, and Labor: The Mediated Exploitation of Black and Brown Bodies
The Race, Racism, and Racial Equity (R3) Symposium, hosted by the University Office for Diversity and Inclusion, is a series of virtual events that brings together scholars and researchers from across campus to share their work with Carolina and the broader community. This is the second in the R3 series.
Scholars from across UNC, including Business and Communications, will share their work addressing issues of language, representation, cultural appropriation, and decontextualization of Black and Brown labor as it appears through a variety of media.
Moderator
Travis J. Albritton, PhD, MSW, MDiv, Associate Dean for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion
School of Social Work
Panelists
Kiara Childs, Doctoral Student
Department of Communication
Stephanie Mahin, PhD, Clinical Assistant Professor
Kenan-Flagler School of Business
Ashley A. Mattheis, PhD Candidate
Department of Communication
Michael Waltman, PhD, Associate Professor
Department of Communication
Thu. 12 Nov, 2020
Odum Institute: Multiple Imputation
Thu. 12 Nov, 2020 9:00 am - 12:30 pm
Odum Institute Short Course - Multiple Imputation: Methods And Applications
Multiple imputation offers a general purpose framework for handling missing data, protecting confidential public use data, and adjusting for measurement errors. These issues are frequently encountered by organizations that disseminate data to others, as well as by individual researchers. Participants in this workshop will learn how multiple imputation can solve problems in these areas, and they will gain a conceptual and practical basis for applying multiple imputation in their statistical work.
Topics include:
- The pros and cons of various solutions for handling missing data
- The motivation for and general idea behind multiple imputation
- Methods for implementing multiple imputation including multivariate modeling, conditional modeling, and machine learning based approaches
- Methods for checking the adequacy of imputations via graphical display and posterior predictive checks
- Applications of multiple imputation for scenarios other than missing data
Presenter
Jerry Reiter, PhD, Professor, Statistical Science
Duke University
Odum Institute: Logistic Regression
Thu. 12 Nov, 2020 3:00 pm - 5:00 pm
This online short course provides an introduction to logistic regression. Model specification, identification, estimation, hypothesis-testing, and interpretation of results are covered. Software to estimate these models is discussed, but not demonstrated. This is not a course on software, but rather a course on the concepts and uses of logistic regression.
For more information, please contact This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
Presenter
Cathy Zimmer, PhD, Social Science Researcher
Odum Institute
Stone Center: “The Meaning of Soul,” with Author Emily J. Lordi
Thu. 12 Nov, 2020 3:30 pm - 4:30 pm
Book Talk with Author Emily Lordi -- The Meaning of Soul: Black Music and Resilience since the 1960s
Join Emily J. Lordi and Michael Simanga for a discussion of Lordi’s latest book, The Meaning of Soul, via Zoom.
In The Meaning of Soul (Duke University Press, 2020), Lordi proposes a new understanding of this famously elusive concept. In the 1960s, Lordi argues, soul came to signify a cultural belief in black resilience, which was enacted through musical practices-inventive cover versions, falsetto vocals, ad-libs, and false endings. Through these soul techniques, artists such as Aretha Franklin, Donny Hathaway, Nina Simone, Marvin Gaye, Isaac Hayes, and Minnie Riperton performed virtuosic survivorship and thus helped to galvanize black communities in an era of peril and promise. Their soul legacies were later reanimated by such stars as Prince, Solange Knowles, and Flying Lotus.
Breaking with prior understandings of soul as a vague, masculinist political formation tethered to the Black Power movement, Lordi offers a vision of soul that foregrounds the intricacies of musical craft, the complex personal and social meanings of the music, the dynamic movement of soul across time, and the leading role played by black women in this musical-intellectual tradition.
Presenters
Emily J. Lordi, Associate Professor, English
Vanderbilt University
Michael Simanga, PhD, Lecturer, Department of African American Studies
Georgia State University
Fri. 13 Nov, 2020
TraCS Professional Development: Finding Funding Module - Session 1
Fri. 13 Nov, 2020 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm
This Professional Development seminar is for research professionals, graduate students, postdocs and early stage faculty researchers. It covers foundational skills useful for career development in clinical/translational research.
The first module of this seminar is titled Finding Funding and will equip attendees with knowledge of how to best find and apply for funding opportunities to support research. Each session of the seminar will meet Fridays at 12:00 pm. This session is titled: Getting started: types of funding to support research and planning your proposal submission.
Presenter
Susan Pusek, DrSc, Director, Education Programs
NC TraCS Institute
iTHRIV: ENIGMA and COINSTAC
Fri. 13 Nov, 2020 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm
Foundations of Biomedical Data Science Virtual Seminar Series - ENIGMA and COINSTAC: Turning small datasets into big ones
The use of the Collaborative Informatics and Neuroimaging Suite Toolkit for Anonymized Computation (COINSTAC) platform in the Enhancing Neuroimaging Genetics through Meta-Analysis (ENIGMA) consortium combines the technological approach of decentralized, privacy-preserving analyses with the sociological approach of sharing data.
Jessica Turner, PhD will first present how ENIGMA and COINSTAC support neuroimaging data re-use and analysis, and then showcase their integration with a decentralized meta-analysis of sex differences in schizophrenia. This work highlights the improvements needed for true data access and re-use while protecting data restrictions, as well as future connections to other resources for improved access.
Click here to add this event to your calendar.
Presenter
Jessica Turner, PhD, Professor; Gerontology, Neuroscience, & Psychology
Georgia State University
DCRI Grand Rounds: Pragmatic and Explanatory Attitudes to RCTs
Fri. 13 Nov, 2020 1:00 pm - 2:00 pm
Pragmatic and Explanatory Attitudes to RCTs: Using the PRECIS-2 Tool to Describe the Design of the MyTEMP Trial
This Duke Clinical Research Institute (DCRI) NIH "Rethinking Clinical Trials" Grand Rounds features Ahmed Al-Jaishi, Amit Garg, MD, PhD, and Merrick Zwarenstein, MBBCh, MSc, PhD. They will discuss "Pragmatic and Explanatory Attitudes to RCTs: Using the PRECIS-2 Tool to Describe the Design of the MyTEMP Trial"
Presenters
Ahmed Al-Jaishi, Doctoral Candidate, Health Research Methodology
McMaster University
Amit Garg, MD, PhD, Professor, Department of Medicine
Western University, London, Canada
Merrick Zwarenstein, MBBCh, MSc, PhD, Professor, Department of Family Medicine
Western University, London, Canada
At the time of the event, use the following information to join:
Meeting ID: 120 486 8317
Passcode: 1234
Join Meeting
Dial in: 1-650-479-3207