Mon. 23 Oct, 2023 - Sun. 29 Oct, 2023
Mon. 23 Oct, 2023
URW: UNC Open House Core Tours
All day
The Office of Research Technologies and Office of Sponsored Programs are coordinating core tours of some of UNC's fantastic core facilities during University Research Week. Meet the core directors and staff, learn about new and upcoming events, view instrumentation, and imagine how collaboration with UNC cores can expand your science! No registration necessary.
More informationOdum Institute: Utilizing Probability Panels
Mon. 23 Oct, 2023 2:00 pm - 5:00 pm
PLEASE NOTE: This class will be covered over two afternoons: 10/23/2023 from 2pm - 4pm AND 10/25/2023 from 3pm - 5pm
Due to increasing survey costs and declining response rates, probability panels have become a major research vehicle for private, foundational, non-profit, academic, and even federally sponsored surveys. Panels are a unique type of survey research platform: Unlike cross-sectional surveys, panels of course recruit respondents specifically for future participation in surveys. In return, panelists are financially compensated, typically to join the panel in the first place, and then secondarily for each survey in which they participate.
These differences to cross-sectional surveys have a range of potential implications. How does the method and effort of recruiting impact who joins, and as a consequence what is best practice? What do panels do to retain panelists over time and which strategies are more successful than others? How much of a concern is panel conditioning, that is, the impact of persons repetitively taking surveys over time, and what are the implications for how frequently panelists should take surveys? How do panels, which exclusively request that panelists take surveys on the Internet, deal with people who do not have or are not comfortable using the Internet? What is the impact of panelist attrition and what are best efforts to replenish retired panelists? How successful are panels are executing true longitudinal surveys? And, given the additional layers of complexity, how are panel surveys properly weighted and estimated?
This short course is designed to provide a guide for consumers of probability-based panels to understand what they are working with: What questions to ask and what features to understand about probability panels in evaluating their use for data collections, and how to best use probability-based panel data. Additionally, it will serve as an exploration of best practices for practitioners: Raising issues of total survey error sources, data quality, costs, and operational logistics.
CCPH: Co-creating Emergency Action Plans
Mon. 23 Oct, 2023 5:00 pm - 6:30 pm
Community Forum: Co-Creating Community-Centered Emergency Action Plans
Community-Campus Partnerships for Health is hosting community forums where community leaders, organizations and partners will gather to share and respond to resources and ideas that mitigate the spread of emerging infections and address social determinants of health. These forums will facilitate discussion to create and implement action plans in preparation for pandemic/emergent pathogens.
N3C Community Form: De-black-boxing Health AI
Mon. 23 Oct, 2023 5:00 pm - 6:00 pm
De-black-boxing health AI: demonstrating reproducible machine learning computable phenotypes using the N3C-RECOVER Long COVID model in the All of Us data repository
Join the N3Community Forum to keep up to date on the latest N3C activity. This forum is held on a weekly basis and features one to two presentations from members of the N3C community on selected topics regarding their work with N3C. Each presentation is followed by a discussion session open to participants. This week's presentation features Emily Pfaff, PhD, discussing machine learning computable phenotypes using the N3C-RECOVER Long COVID model in the All of Us data repository.
Speaker:
Emily Pfaff, PhD
NC TraCS Institute
Tue. 24 Oct, 2023
URW: UNC Open House Core Tours
All day
The Office of Research Technologies and Office of Sponsored Programs are coordinating core tours of some of UNC's fantastic core facilities during University Research Week. Meet the core directors and staff, learn about new and upcoming events, view instrumentation, and imagine how collaboration with UNC cores can expand your science! No registration necessary.
More informationWed. 25 Oct, 2023
CCCR Speaker Series: Chronic Pain and Resilience
Wed. 25 Oct, 2023 9:30 am - 10:30 am
Chronic Pain and Resilience: How Do We Harness the Power of Joy, Optimism and Love?
Join the UNC School of Medicine Thurston Arthritis Research Center for a UNC Core Center for Clinical Research (CCCR) Speaker Series seminar featuring Afton Hassett, PsyD. Hassett is the Director of Pain and Opioid Research at the Chronic Pain and Fatigue Research Center and an Associate Professor of Anesthesiology at the University of Michigan Medical School.
This talk will review the role of thoughts and emotions in the neurobiology of chronic pain and explore how more adaptive thoughts, positive emotions and healthy relationships decrease the experience of pain and lead to a more rewarding life.
Engagement in Research Nuts & Bolts
Wed. 25 Oct, 2023 10:00 am - 12:00 pm
Engagement in Research Nuts & Bolts: Specific Approaches for Engaging Patient & Community Partners in Research
There is no "one-size-fits-all" approach to engaging patient, community, or other partners in your research. Rather, there are a variety of engagement methods to suit your study's needs, your research team's capacity, and your partners' interests.
This online training will describe three common approaches for working with patient, community, and other partners in your research: 1) consultative community feedback sessions; 2) advisory boards; and 3) sustained collaboration with partners as members of the research team.
The session will cover considerations for choosing these specific engagement methods, as well as concrete processes and steps for implementing each approach. Participation in our Engagement in Research 101 training is not required to attend this session; however, some knowledge of engagement, whether from prior training(s) or personal experience, may foster deeper understanding of the material in this session.
Engaging Patient, Community, and Other Partners in Your Research is a multi-part online training series. You may register for the entire series OR any single training session.
Part 1 will focus on the basics of research engagement, providing an overview of patient and community engagement and its benefits, debunking common myths and misconceptions, and providing considerations and next steps for incorporating engagement approaches into your research.
Part 2 will cover specific engagement methods, including consultative community feedback sessions, advisory boards, and working with patient and community partners as members of a research team.
Part 3 will focus on the nuances of building and maintaining partnerships, outlining best practices for developing and strengthening mutually beneficial partnerships and discussing common partnership challenges and solutions.
Those who are in the process of developing, implementing, or revising a patient and/or community engagement plan for an active or upcoming project may be interested in attending our Engagement in Research Interactive Workshop, during which participants will have the opportunity to ask questions and seek feedback on their engagement plans in a small group setting.
This training series was developed collaboratively with patient, community, and researcher partners and is co-sponsored by the UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center and NC TraCS Institute.
URW: UNC Open House Core Tours
All day
The Office of Research Technologies and Office of Sponsored Programs are coordinating core tours of some of UNC's fantastic core facilities during University Research Week. Meet the core directors and staff, learn about new and upcoming events, view instrumentation, and imagine how collaboration with UNC cores can expand your science! No registration necessary.
More informationOdum Institute: Intermediate Qualtrics
Wed. 25 Oct, 2023 1:00 pm - 5:00 pm
Intermediate Qualtrics
This course will cover topics beyond the scope of the Introduction to Qualtrics short course. Take a deeper dive into “Survey Flow” features, including routing with branches, embedded data, customizing the “End of Survey” experience, and randomization. Explore embedded data, and several ways to import or set data in your survey through contact list fields, anonymous URLs, and conditions within your survey. Additional topics will include piping, authentication, managing results, re-coding values, exporting and importing data, and creating reports.
This is a hands-on course. Completion of Introduction to Qualtrics or understanding basic Qualtrics principles prior to this course is required. All participants are required to create a Qualtrics account before the course.
Odum Institute: Utilizing Probability Panels
Wed. 25 Oct, 2023 2:00 pm - 5:00 pm
PLEASE NOTE: This class will be covered over two afternoons: 10/23/2023 from 2pm - 4pm AND 10/25/2023 from 3pm - 5pm
Due to increasing survey costs and declining response rates, probability panels have become a major research vehicle for private, foundational, non-profit, academic, and even federally sponsored surveys. Panels are a unique type of survey research platform: Unlike cross-sectional surveys, panels of course recruit respondents specifically for future participation in surveys. In return, panelists are financially compensated, typically to join the panel in the first place, and then secondarily for each survey in which they participate.
These differences to cross-sectional surveys have a range of potential implications. How does the method and effort of recruiting impact who joins, and as a consequence what is best practice? What do panels do to retain panelists over time and which strategies are more successful than others? How much of a concern is panel conditioning, that is, the impact of persons repetitively taking surveys over time, and what are the implications for how frequently panelists should take surveys? How do panels, which exclusively request that panelists take surveys on the Internet, deal with people who do not have or are not comfortable using the Internet? What is the impact of panelist attrition and what are best efforts to replenish retired panelists? How successful are panels are executing true longitudinal surveys? And, given the additional layers of complexity, how are panel surveys properly weighted and estimated?
This short course is designed to provide a guide for consumers of probability-based panels to understand what they are working with: What questions to ask and what features to understand about probability panels in evaluating their use for data collections, and how to best use probability-based panel data. Additionally, it will serve as an exploration of best practices for practitioners: Raising issues of total survey error sources, data quality, costs, and operational logistics.
CCPH: Co-creating Emergency Action Plans
Wed. 25 Oct, 2023 5:00 pm - 6:30 pm
Community Forum: Co-Creating Community-Centered Emergency Action Plans
Community-Campus Partnerships for Health is hosting community forums where community leaders, organizations and partners will gather to share and respond to resources and ideas that mitigate the spread of emerging infections and address social determinants of health. These forums will facilitate discussion to create and implement action plans in preparation for pandemic/emergent pathogens.
Thu. 26 Oct, 2023
2023 Merrimon Lecture: Integrating Artificial Intelligence Into Health Care
Thu. 26 Oct, 2023 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm
Integrating Artificial Intelligence Into Health Care: Ethical and Legal Challenges
Featuring:
I. Glenn Cohen, JD
Professor of Law
Harvard School of Law
In this year's Merrimon Lecture, Cohen will address how hospital systems, device makers, and artificial intelligence (AI) developers are spending enormous amounts of money to bring AI, and especially machine learning, into health care. These efforts raise formidable logistical and design challenges. They also raise just as formidable legal and ethical challenges.
Cohen is one of the world's leading experts on the intersection of bioethics, the law, and health law. His current projects are related to big data, medical AI, health information technologies, mobile health, reproduction/reproductive technology, research ethics, organ transplantation, rationing in law and medicine, health policy, FDA law, COVID-19, translational medicine, and medical tourism.
Location: 4008 Old Clinic Auditorium or via Webex.
Fri. 27 Oct, 2023
Odum Institute: Being Public and Engaging Policy
Fri. 27 Oct, 2023 10:00 am - 3:30 pm
Being Public and Engaging Policy
This one-day course will be offered via Zoom only. Course schedule is 10:00am – 3:30pm, with a 1 hour lunch and (2) 10 minute breaks (1 in morning and 1 in afternoon). Attendance is required as it will not be recorded.
Academics are increasingly asked to engage with public actors from policymakers to journalists. Rarely, however, are academics given any guidance or strategies for doing so. In this workshop, Dr. Ray will provide strategies for interacting with journalists, policymakers, and bureaucrats. Participants will learn best practices for amplifying their research to broader publics as well as ways to engage in self-care to continue the work. In addition to publishing over 50 books, articles, and book chapters, Ray has testified at the federal and state levels and written over 50 op-eds for outlets including New York Times, Washington Post, Newsweek, and Insider. Ray has appeared on CNN, MSNBC, BBC, NPR, and others. From 2018-2022, Ray co-edited Contexts Magazine: Sociology for the Public, which garnered over one million views and downloads per year. He was recently awarded an Andrew Carnegie Fellowship.
Rethinking Clinical Trials Grand Rounds: Lessons From The Yale PaxLC Trial
Fri. 27 Oct, 2023 1:00 pm - 2:00 pm
Digital, Decentralized and Democratized: Lessons From The Yale PaxLC Trial
This NIH Collaboratory Rethinking Clinical Trials Grand Rounds features:
Harlan M. Krumholz, MD, SM
Harold H. Hines, Jr. Professor of Medicine
Department of Internal Medicine
Section of Cardiovascular Medicine
Yale University School of Medicine
Director, Yale-New Haven Hospital Center for Outcomes Research and Evaluation