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October 2019

 

Stop by Auditoria A-C on October 21st from 2-4:00pm to learn about:

  • Mixed methods research and evaluation
  • Study design
  • Qualitative methods
  • Survey design and administration
  • Data visualization
  • Data management
  • Brain imaging lab and research network
  • Shared Resources
  • Geographic information systems
  • Research compliance and reviews
  • National Library of Medicine online resources
  • IRB
  • REDcap

 

  • i2b2
  • TriNetX
  • Statistical Consulting
  • Publishing
  • Copyright
  • ORCID
  • Digital Commons
  • Bioinformatics
  • Data storage
  • Microscopy and other imaging applications
  • Research Administration and Mentoring
  • Scientific Exchange and education

 

 


Presenters:

Analytics Institute: DHMC DataWarehouse
Thirumal R Aluka, DataWarehouse Director; Thirumal.R.Aluka@hitchcock.org
Gouri Chakraborti, Sr. Research Programmer Analyst; Gouri.Chakraborti@hitchcock.org

The Analytics Institute is available to provide the resources, tools, skills, and knowledge needed to help the organization make informed decisions. The AI offers the following:

  • Data capture and tools that ensure the quality and consistency of information being collected.
  • Reports that provide information about costs, quality, operations, and patient populations.
  • Analysis and support of data queries, mining, tools, and education.
  • Insights through consulting, advanced analytics, research, and interpretation.
  • Education to provide staff and leaders the ability to create their own custom reports.

bioMT: Institute for Biomolecular targeting

Andreia Verissimo, PhD ; Research Scientist; andreia.verissimo@dartmouth.edu

The COBRE Institute for Biomolecular Targeting (bioMT) supports researchers at Dartmouth at the key interface between discovery and translation. bioMT accelerates the research productivity and scientific impact of faculty leading interdisciplinary research projects, with emphasis on discovery, validation, and inhibition of therapeutic targets for brain cancer, colon cancer, pancreatic cancer, airway infection, and inflammation. We integrate insights from protein biochemistry and engineering, biophysics, high-resolution microscopy, and structural and computational biology with mentoring of junior faculty, scientific exchange, and administrative support.

The bioMT has three cores that support the bioMT research community: Molecular Tools Core (MTC), Molecular Interactions and Imaging Core (MIIC), and Research Administration & Mentoring Core (RAMC).

Brain Imaging Lab/Brain Research Network

James Ford, James.C.Hitchcock.org

The Brain Imaging Lab and Brain Research Network provide scientific collaboration, resources, and training related to research on brain function and dysfunction.

The Dartmouth Institute: Center for Program Design and Evaluation 

Rebecca Butcher, Assistant Director, CPDE, Rebecca.Butcher@Dartmouth.Edu
Geoffrey West, Research Associate, CPDE Geoffrey.D.West@Dartmouth.Edu
Nithya Ramesh, Research Associate, CPDE, Nithya.Puttige.Ramesh@dartmouth.edu

The Center for Program Design and Evaluation (CPDE) is a non-profit, fee-for-service research center providing expertise in program design and evaluation for a range of programs and research grants locally, nationally, and internationally. Our experienced team helps you design research methods and monitor progress, provides you with rapid and relevant feedback for continuous improvement, and produces robust data for dissemination of your work.

Dartmouth Library: Data Management and Visualization

Lora Leligdon, Physical Sciences Librarian, lora.c.leligdon@dartmouth.edu
Catrina Cuadra, Library Data Fellow, Catrina.A.Cuadra@dartmouth.edu

The Library offers workshops and provides support for your data management needs. We offer on-demand instruction and consultations to individual researchers, classes, and departments including assistance with data management planning, and helping with organizing, analyzing, visualizing, and sharing your research data. We can recommend best practices for keeping your data usable, now and into the future.

Dartmouth SYNERGY: Clinical and Translational Science Institute

Laurie S. Lester, SYNERGY Director of Operations, Laurie.S.Lester@Dartmouth.edu
Lydia J. Lewis, SYNERGY Executive Administrative Assistant, Lydia.J.Lewis@Dartmouth.edu

Dartmouth SYNERGY Clinical and Translational Science Institute, speeds the impact of discovery and translates new knowledge into practice and improved population health. By connecting researchers to critical resources, funding opportunities, technologies, research training, and expertise, SYNERGY helps investigators advance research and efficiently translate discoveries into improved population health.

Dartmouth SYNERGY Clinical and Translational Science Institute is funded through the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Clinical and Translational Science Awards (CTSA) program, under award number UL1TR001086. The CTSA program is led by the NIH's National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS).

Dartmouth SYNERGY: Informatics Tools and Research (REDCap, i2b2, TriNetX)

Sukie, Researcher and Designer, informatics@synergy.dartmouth.edu
John Higgins, Research Data Broker, informatics@synergy.dartmouth.edu
Sergio Duncan, Research Scientist, informatics@synergy.dartmouth.edu
Will Haslett, Research Scientist, informatics@synergy.dartmouth.edu

Innovative informatics solutions for your research. Our mission is to provide living tools that can be translated to the larger healthcare community. If you have a project that involves healthcare data or software, let’s talk!

GrantGPS: Grant Proposal Support

GrantGPS is available to provide faculty of all rank, postdoctoral fellows, and graduate students with a wide range of services and information to support research projects in all disciplines, including:

  • Brainstorm and draft proposal ideas
  • Connect you to internal resources
  • Identify opportunities for funding
  • Create timelines for submission of applications
  • Coordinate the various components of multiple application processes
  • Facilitate access to and cover costs for external editing and review services

Information Technology & Consulting: Statistical Consulting

Jianjun Hua, Statistical Consultant, jianjun.hua@dartmouth.edu

Provide statistical consultation to faculty, researchers, and students in their short and/or long term research projects. Teach and/or organize trainings and events about statistics or statistical applications (R/SAS/Stata/SPSS).

National Library of Medicine: Online Resources

Martha Meacham, martha.meacham2@umassmed.edu

The National Library of Medicine, the world’s largest biomedical library, NLM maintains and makes available vast electronic information resources on a wide range of topics that are searched billions of times each year by millions of people around the globe. It also supports and conducts research, development, and training in biomedical informatics and health information technology.

Norris Cotton Cancer Center: Shared Resources

Christian Lytle, Admin Coordinator of Shared Resources, chlytle@dartmouth.edu
Ron Hirte, Laboratory & Facilities Coordinator, Ronald.A.Hirte@dartmouth.edu

NCCC Shared Resources Provide biomedical and Biological investigators access to instruments, technologies, services and expert consultation that can advance their research. Shared Resources provide increased availability and use of technology, dedicated, highly-trained staff, Improved research efficiency, and productivity, along with coordination of multiple services.

Nursing Evidence Based Practice & Research
Note: Must be connected to DHMC's intranet.

Office of Sponsored Projects: Research Compliance & Reviews

Mike Chamness, Grant Officer, michael.t.chamness@dartmouth.edu
William Sjogren, Grant Officer, william.a.sjogren@dartmouth.edu

The Office of Sponsored Projects serves as a central resource to support the research enterprise at Dartmouth by providing guidance and stewardship for the research community and the College. OSP is comprehensive in its scope and mission, handling both pre-award and post-award services. The Office has primary responsibility for assuring Dartmouth's compliance with the regulations of a range of funding agencies, for negotiating Dartmouth's indirect cost rate, and monitoring college-wide implications of these negotiations on a regular basis. Sponsored projects fall within several general functional categories. Examples of those categories are: research, training, curriculum development, public services, fellowships, art exhibitions, and equipment awards. This support extends from a proposal's conception through to the completion of a sponsored project award.

Research ITC

Research ITC, part of Information Technology Consulting (ITC), facilitates and enables the advancement of research by providing leading-edge computing services and offering research support to faculty, PIs, post-docs, research associates, graduate and undergraduate students in all academic research domains including life sciences, statistics, humanities, engineering, GIS, physics, and chemistry.

Our services and technologies ensure that researchers have access to a world-class high-performance computational environment (HPC) on our systems such as the Discovery Cluster, Polaris and Andes for scientific computing, data analysis, visualization, and data storage.

Our services and consulting include HPC and dedicated hardware solutions, data support (large scale, shared, lab storage for academic and research purposes), systems support (virtual machines, etc.), research software licensing and support (Matlab, R, ArcGIS, CLC Genomics Workbench, etc.), training (workshops, lab, small group, one-on-one), software development, programming and high performance or parallel programming support, visualization of data, grant support (writing and software/hardware configuration and pricing)

We are committed to developing a responsive and highly capable computing infrastructure that helps researchers with big data challenges of the future across all academic disciplines at Dartmouth

Scholarly Communication: Publishing, Copyright, ORCID, DigitalCommons

Shawn Martin, Head of Scholarly Communication, Copyright and Publishing, Shawn.J.Martin@Dartmouth.edu

Dartmouth’s scholarly communication, copyright, and publishing program engages diverse voices, encourages student contribution, and empowers the Dartmouth community to build a more equitable and sustainable research ecosystem. The program manages Dartmouth’s Digital Commons, coordinates the implementation of library publishing initiatives and open access policy programs. The program also will communicate the importance of publishing issues, research management, author rights, and copyright to the Dartmouth community, and implements methods for the broader dissemination of the results of Dartmouth’s research.


Planning Committee:
Pamela Bagley, MSLIS, PhD, Biomedical Libraries
Heather Blunt, MLS, Biomedical Libraries
Christian Darabos, PhD, Research ITC
Paige Scudder, MLIS, Biomedical Libraries

Sponsored by:
Dartmouth SYNERGY: Clinical and Translation Science Institute
​Dartmouth Research ITC
Dartmouth Biomedical Libraries