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GCC Update

Mar 5, 2018, 10:57 AM by Melodi Moore

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A Collaboration of Baylor College of Medicine, Rice University, University of Houston, University of Texas Health Science Center,  University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, and Institute of Biosciences & Technology of Texas A&M Health Science Center

www.gulfcoastconsortia.org

UPCOMING GCC EVENTS 

2018 John S. Dunn Foundation Collaborative Research Award RFA, March 1

The Gulf Coast Consortia (GCC) is pleased to announce the RFA for the 2018 John S. Dunn Foundation Collaborative Research Award Program. Launched in 2009 as a 10-year program with generous support from the John S. Dunn Foundation, this seed grant program continues to build the collaborative environment of the Bioscience Research Collaborative (BRC) and the interdisciplinary and interinstitutional culture of the Gulf Coast Consortia. To be eligible for research or event awards, new collaborative groups must include one BRC tenant (list provided on website) and must propose a new research project or event. Preproposals will be due on June 1, 2018. For more information click HERE or contact Suzanne Tomlinson.

Keck Seminar, March 2

Min P. Kim, Houston Methodist Hospital, will present Bioengineered Model to Study Interaction between Cancer and Immune Cells. Upcoming Seminar speakers include: Kathleen Matthews, Rice University, will present Preparing for the Long and Accelerating Arc of a Career: A Lifetime of Learning (3/9). Seminar at 4pm. Networking and refreshments will follow at 5pm, BioScience Research Collaborative, 6500 Main St, Room 280. Seminars are free and open to the public. Seminar Schedule Live webcast

q-bio 2018 Conference, BioScience Research Collaborative, June 26-29

The goal of the q-bio Conference is to enrich the connection between modeling and quantitative experimentation in biology.  This year’s conference features invited speakers doing innovative work in biomechanics, biological physics, systems and synthetic biology.   Faculty, grad students and postdocs are encouraged to attend. The GCC/Keck Center is a co-administrator for this international conference. Deadline for abstract submission for contributed posters and talks extended to February 28. Please see website for details.

 
Translational Pain Research 8th Annual Symposium, April 6

Call for abstracts: Confirmed speakers include Alyssa Brewer, UC Irvine; Ru Rong Ji, Duke University; Rebecca Seal, University of Pittsburgh; and Greg Neely, University of Sydney.  Abstract Instructions Please plan to join us for this outstanding symposium.  BioScience Research Collaborative, 6500 Main St, Auditorium. Registration

NeuroNex DataJoint Training Workshop, April 19-20

In this 2-day, hands-on NeuroNex workshop, participants will learn to build relational databases to support data pipelines for complex scientific projects using the open-source DataJoint framework.  The workshop will be taught in Python with brief discussions of the MATLAB equivalent. Although DataJoint is a general framework, illustrating examples and worked problems will be based on common neuroscience experiments and recording modalities.  We invite scientists (faculty, postdocs, grad students) who are involved in acquisition, processing, and analysis of data in neuroscience and related fields, particularly those that are part of collaborative projects.  Basic knowledge of Python is required for solving exercise problems. Contact: Dimitri Yatsenko, dvyatsen@bcm.edu. BioScience Research Collaborative, 6500 Main St, Room 280, Registration

NMR and Cell Tracking Symposium, May 16

Confirmed speakers include Eric Ahrens, UCSD and Craig Malloy, UTSW.  Additionally, local speakers will discuss current NMR methods and highlight existing resources and technologies available in GCC institutions.  Sponsored by the GCC Consortium for Magnetic Resonance. BioScience Research Collaborative, 6500 Main St, 8:30 am to 5 pm.  Registration

1st Annual GCC Mental Health Research Symposium, May 18

Confirmed speakers include Ronald Duman, Yale University; Mary Kay Lobo, University of Maryland School of Medicine; and Susan Koester, NIMH.  Sponsored by the GCC Cluster for Mental Health Research. BioScience Research Collaborative, 6500 Main StRegistration

Reproducible Research (RR) with R and RStudio Workshop, June 6, 10 am -2:30 pm

First in the series of the GCC Rigor and Reproducibility (RR) Program targeted modules, this workshop will: 1) discuss examples motivating the shift to RR; 2) survey the simple nature of the most common problems; 3) discuss organizing data as projects; 4) use Rstudio, knitr, and rmarkdown to illustrate the use of literate programming to interleave text describing the analyses with the code producing the results; 5) use Rstudio, devtools, and roxygen2 to construct a basic R package; 6) survey other commonly used tools and give pointers to how they might be used and where to   learn more. This course will take place from presumes some working knowledge of R. Attendees are requested to bring laptops with recent versions of R and Rstudio installed, as well as the R packages knitr, rmarkdown, devtools, roxygen2, and RTools (this last is for Windows PCs; it’s required to compile R packages). BioScience Research Collaborative, Room 1003, 6500 Main St Limited to the first 30 registrants.  Registration

Scientific Data Integrity Workshop, June 13, 10 am -2:30 pm

Second in the series of the GCC Rigor and Reproducibility (RR) Program targeted modules, this workshop is designed to cover fundamental elements necessary to help assure the quality and integrity of data derived from research studies.  The workshop will review best practices for documentation of research activities, data capture, data (and document) management, and introduce risk mitigation strategies to enhance study reproducibility. A combination of mini lectures, case studies, and group exercises will comprise the activities. Knowledge gained will allow attendees to implement lessons learned within their research environment as elements of a quality system or internal to an individual research project. BioScience Research Collaborative, Room 1003, 6500 Main St  Limited to the first 50 registrants.  Registration