Mon. 7 Nov, 2022 - Sun. 13 Nov, 2022
Mon. 7 Nov, 2022
PPMH: Biomedical Imaging for Precision Diagnosis, Prognosis, and Therapy
Mon. 7 Nov, 2022 10:00 am - 12:00 pm
Biomedical Imaging for Precision Diagnosis, Prognosis, and Therapy
Join the UNC Program for Precision Medicine in Health Care (PPMH) for a free virtual mini-symposium. Precision medicine harnesses cutting edge data and technology to provide prediction of disease risk and choice of optimum treatment. Biomedical imaging is an integral part of early diagnosis and individually tailored treatment. The speakers at this mini-symposium will address data-driven approaches to developing personalized treatment strategies.
Presenters:
Mark Shen, PhD
Assistant Professor of Psychiatry & Neuroscience
Carolina Institute for Developmental Disabilities
UNC School of Medicine
Longitudinal neuroimaging to study the brain development of infants with neurodevelopmental disorders
Eran Dayan, PhD
Associate Professor
Department of Radiology
UNC School of Medicine
Artificial Intelligence-based stratification of progression along the Alzheimer disease continuum
Andrew Satterlee, PhD
Brain Slice Technology Program Manager
Eshelman Institute for Innovation
Eshelman School of Pharmacy
A living Ex Vivo platform for functional, personalized brain cancer diagnosis
Email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. for more information.
Tue. 8 Nov, 2022
Orientation for New Clinical Research Personnel: Fall 2022
Tue. 8 Nov, 2022 1:00 pm - 3:30 pm
The Orientation for New Clinical Research Personnel is a two-part series held on November 8 & 10 from 1 - 3:30 p.m. both days. The curriculum is designed to be a true orientation for new research personnel (either new to UNC or new to research altogether), but anyone is welcome to attend. The orientation will be held in person in room 219 of the TraCS suite on the 2nd floor of the Brinkhous-Bullitt building.
Topics covered in the orientation will include:
- The research landscape at UNC-Chapel Hill
- The research study life cycle and different types of research studies
- Good Clinical Practice
- Overview of research regulations and research processes
- Overview of research roles and responsibilities
- Informed consent
Register
Please contact Catherine Barnes at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. if you have questions regarding this training.
Wed. 9 Nov, 2022
UNC HSL: New NIH Data Management and Sharing Policy Requirements
Wed. 9 Nov, 2022 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm
This session will cover the scope and requirements of NIH's new Data Management and Sharing (DMS) Policy that goes into effect January 25, 2023. Supplementary NIH guidance on the DMS plans required in proposals, data repository selection, and allowable costs in proposal budgets will also be reviewed. Selected resources and tools to help researchers navigate the new requirements will be covered, including hands-on tour of selected UNC resources as time allows.
Thu. 10 Nov, 2022
Odum Institute: Quantitative and qualitative data collection techniques for health measurements
Thu. 10 Nov, 2022 9:00 am - 1:00 pm
Quantitative and qualitative data collection techniques for health measurements
This 4-hour course will be offered via Zoom. Attendance is required as the course will not be recorded.
Course Summary:
Measuring someone’s health by means of questionnaires is a challenging task. The concept of health is very broad – it encompasses a person’s physical, social and mental state – which makes conceptualization difficult. In addition, there is a high risk of socially desirable answers, since people like to indicate that they are doing well. Finally, health research is often conducted among people who are not fit or the elderly for whom surveys are a cognitively demanding task.
This course will focus on both qualitative and quantitative data collection techniques to measure health. First, participants will learn about collecting qualitative data on health through semi-structured interviews and researcher driven photo-elicitation interviews. Ensuring the scientific quality of these forms of data collection will be discussed on the basis of Guba and Lincoln’s trustworthiness criteria. Finally, we pay attention to analyzing qualitative data by means of a thematic analysis. Second, participants will learn more about implementation of surveys in hospital waiting rooms, taking the Total Survey Error Framework into account. Special attention will be paid to the design of attitude response scales.
Level: Beginner, some basic knowledge on survey research methodology is helpful
Instructors: Marieke Haan, PhD, and Yfke Ongena, PhD
Marieke Haan, PhD, is senior lecturer at the Sociology Department of the University of Groningen, the Netherlands. She teaches courses on Methodology & Data Collection and Qualitative Research Methods. Her research interests include mixed-device surveys, health surveys, and qualitative research methods in diverse fields (e.g., sociology, psychology and medical sciences). Haan’s most recent published papers focused on positive health perceptions of older adults, hospital waiting room surveys, and mobile device use in surveys.
Yfke Ongena, PhD, is senior lecturer Communication and Information Sciences at the University of Groningen, the Netherlands. Her research interests include interviewer and respondent interaction in survey interviews, data collection in health surveys and social desirability response bias.
Qualitative Data Analysis Workshop
Thu. 10 Nov, 2022 10:00 am - 12:00 pm
In this session, participants will have the opportunity to ask questions and seek feedback on their qualitative analysis from facilitators and other attendees. This session serves as a workshop in which participants get a chance to discuss and review qualitative analysis techniques while also learning from others.
To attend, participants must be working on a qualitative data analysis project and can seek feedback on any step in the process (e.g., coding, creating matrices/diagrams/other products, developing categories or themes, summarizing data). One does not need to have attended previous qualitative analysis training sessions administered by NC TraCS. However, participants should come with some knowledge of qualitative data analysis techniques.
Facilitators:
MaryBeth Grewe, MPH, Engagement and Qualitative Research Specialist
Simone Frank, MPH, Community Engagement and Outreach Specialist
Milenka Jean-Baptiste, MPH, Qualitative Research Specialist
Odum Institute: An introduction to daily life methods
Thu. 10 Nov, 2022 10:00 am - 4:00 pm
An introduction to daily life methods: daily diary and experience-sampling methods
This one-day course will be offered via Zoom. Attendance is required as the course will not be recorded.
Course Summary:
Daily life methods are a family of methods used to study what people do in their ordinary environments in their everyday lives through collecting data at least once a day for several days. Two common forms of daily life methods, daily diaries and experience sampling methods, will be emphasized in this course.
This course will be interactive and present opportunities for attendees to start thinking about how to apply daily life methods to their own programs of research.
Instructor: Katherine Cotter, PhD
Katherine Cotter, PhD, is a researcher with the Humanities and Human Flourishing Project in the Positive Psychology Center at the University of Pennsylvania. Her research has focused on people’s interactions with music and visual art, with an emphasis on assessing interactions in people’s typical, everyday environments. In her work, Cotter often uses daily life methods, which assess people’s thoughts, feelings, and behaviors as they occur in their everyday environments.
NIH@NC State: RePORTER Tips and Tricks
Thu. 10 Nov, 2022 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm
The Proposal Development Unit in the Office of Research and Innovation at NC State University invites everyone in the NC State community and the broader NC TraCS Institute community to participate in the NIH @ NC State Fall Grantsmanship Series.
NIH provides information about funded awards on the report.nih.gov website. This session will walk through some common searches and highlight some tips for finding what you want. Demonstrated searches will include finding a program officer in your field, identifying similar grants at NC State, and viewing the success rate for a given Institute or Center.
Orientation for New Clinical Research Personnel: Fall 2022
Thu. 10 Nov, 2022 1:00 pm - 3:30 pm
The Orientation for New Clinical Research Personnel is a two-part series held on November 8 & 10 from 1 - 3:30 p.m. both days. The curriculum is designed to be a true orientation for new research personnel (either new to UNC or new to research altogether), but anyone is welcome to attend. The orientation will be held in person in room 219 of the TraCS suite on the 2nd floor of the Brinkhous-Bullitt building.
Topics covered in the orientation will include:
- The research landscape at UNC-Chapel Hill
- The research study life cycle and different types of research studies
- Good Clinical Practice
- Overview of research regulations and research processes
- Overview of research roles and responsibilities
- Informed consent
Register
Please contact Catherine Barnes at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. if you have questions regarding this training.
Fri. 11 Nov, 2022
Rethinking Clinical Trials Grand Rounds: Data Sharing and Pragmatic Clinical Trials
Fri. 11 Nov, 2022 1:00 pm - 2:00 pm
Data Sharing and Pragmatic Clinical Trials: Law & Ethics Amidst a Changing Policy Landscape
This NIH Collaboratory Rethinking Clinical Trials Grand Rounds features:
Stephanie Morain, PhD, MPH
Assistant Professor
Ottawa Hospital Research Institute
Berman Institute of Bioethics &
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Kayte Spector-Bagdady, JD, MBioethics
Associate Director, Center for Bioethics & Social Sciences in Medicine
Assistant Professor of Obstetrics & Gynecology
University of Michigan Medical School