동향
전체 8345
  • Ethical and Regulatory Aspects of Clinical Research Course 7
    • - Wilfond, Benjamin.
      National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Bioethics

    Ethical and Regulatory Aspects of Clinical Research Course 7

  • Encoding Social Signals in Mammalian Chemosensory Systems
    • - Katz, Lawrence.
      National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Neuroscience

    Encoding Social Signals in Mammalian Chemosensory Systems

  • TRACO: Leukemias, Bone Marrow Transplantation
    • - Wayne, Alan S.
      National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : TRACO

    TRACO: Leukemias, Bone Marrow Transplantation

  • New Tools in the Fight Against Cancer: Small Molecules, Diversity-Oriented Synthesis and ChemBank
    • - Schreiber, Stuart.
      National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Special

    New Tools in the Fight Against Cancer: Small Molecules, Diversity-Oriented Synthesis and ChemBank

  • eHR Initiative and Pin Drive FY-03 (NIH-Only)
    • - NIH Office of Human Resources (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : NIH Only
    The Office of Human Resources would like to invite all NIH employees to learn about Electronic Human Resources (e-HR) through a host of presentations that will start during the month of September at a variety of locations. Participants will get their first look at the HR Community within the NIH Portal, Employee Express, and receive information about HHS Careers (Quickhire) and the Workflow Information and Tracking System (WiTS).

    What is the e-HR initiative? The e-HR initiative consolidates a variety of automated tools under a single brand and associates the future of HR services at the NIH with these electronic tools. These tools will ultimately be available to all employees through the HR Communities section of the NIH Portal to perform a variety of HR related activities such as applying for jobs, managing benefits, and keeping up with HR polices/procedures.

    For more information, visit
    http://ehr.od.nih.gov/ehr/default.htm

    eHR Initiative and Pin Drive FY-03 (NIH-Only)

  • Preparing for SARS, or Smallpox, or Whatever Comes Next: Responding to Emerging Infectious Diseases and Bioterrorism Threats
    • - Henderson, David.
      National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Medicine for the Public

    Preparing for SARS, or Smallpox, or Whatever Comes Next: Responding to Emerging Infectious Diseases and Bioterrorism Threats

  • History Lecture - Goldberger's War: The Life and Work of a Public Health Crusader
    • - Alan Kraut, Professor of History at American University (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Special
    The Office of NIH History hosts the first annual ???NIH History Day.??? The program includes welcoming remarks by NIH Director, Dr. Elias Zerhouni, and a special illustrated lecture given by Dr. Alan Kraut, author of the newly published book, Goldberger???s War. He will lecture on the life and times of Dr. Joseph Goldberger, a notable Public Health Service physician who lead a successful fight against pellagra, known in the early twentieth century as the ???scourge of the South.??? Goldberger fought the spread of many diseases during his career, including typhoid, yellow fever, and measles, but his discovery that the cause of pellagra was a dietary deficiency was his most renowned triumph. Dr. Kraut will tell the story of the years of experiments leading to this discovery, interweaving public health history with the absorbing tale of a doctor who went to extraordinary lengths to demonstrate his ideas.

    For more information, visit
    NIH History Lecture

    History Lecture - Goldberger's War: The Life and Work of a Public Health Crusader

  • The Global Epidemic of Mental Health Problems in Developing Countries: Depression, Suicide and Violence
    • - Arthur Kleinman, M.D., Harvard (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Special
    Sixth Fogarty International Center 35th Anniversary Global Health Lecture

    Arthur Kleinman, M.D.
    Esther and Sidney Rabb Professor of Anthropology, Harvard University; and Professor of Medical Anthropology and Professor Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School

    The Global Epidemic of Mental Health Problems in Developing Countries: Depression, Suicide and Violence

  • TRACO: Metastasis, Invasion and Tumor Progression
    • - Steeg, Patricia S.
      National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : TRACO

    TRACO: Metastasis, Invasion and Tumor Progression

  • The Organizing Principle in the Formation of the T cell Receptor-CD3 Complex
    • - Wucherpfennig, Kai.
      National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Immunology

    The Organizing Principle in the Formation of the T cell Receptor-CD3 Complex

  • Studying Cancer Families to Identify Kidney Cancer Genes (NIH-Only)
    • - Berton Zbar, M.D. (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : NCI CCR Grand Rounds (NIH Only)
    Berton Zbar, M.D.
    Chief, Laboratory of Immunobiology
    Center for Cancer Research, NCI

    Center for Cancer Research - National Cancer Institute Grand Rounds

    The primary educational objective of these seminars is to provide new information, ideas, and discussion about timely areas of research with impact on the field of oncology. A secondary educational objective is to elicit participation by individuals from all divisions of the intramural NCI, and thus facilitate more interactions among investigators and groups in the NCI.

    Studying Cancer Families to Identify Kidney Cancer Genes (NIH-Only)

  • Unclutter Your Office, Your Home, and Your Mind: A Guide to Personal Organization (Part 2)
    • - NIH Work and Family Life Center (WFLC) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Work/Life Center
    Many people talk about organizing, but certain hindrances keep them from doing it: not enough time, not enough energy, ever-increasing volumes of paper, ever-increasing work/life responsibilities, uncertainty about how to begin, fear of wastebasketry, and on and on.

    This seminar takes a holistic approach to helping participants establish order out of chaos. It focuses on the mental and physical steps necessary to create systems that work.

    The NIH Work and Family Life Center (WFLC), in conjunction with the Employee Assistance Program, is pleased to announce the fourth annual "Faces and Phases of Life" seminar series. This successful series brings expert speakers to campus to address a broad range of quality of work and quality of life issues.

    For more information, visit the
    NIH Work and Family Life Center Faces & Phase of Life Seminar Series

    Unclutter Your Office, Your Home, and Your Mind: A Guide to Personal Organization (Part 2)

  • HPV and Cervical Cancer: The Road from Etiological Understanding to Preventive Strategies
    • - Allan Hildesheim, Ph.D., Environmental Epidemiology Branch, NCI (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : NIH Director's Seminars
    NIH Director's Seminar Series

    For more information, visit the
    NIH Director's Seminar Series

    HPV and Cervical Cancer: The Road from Etiological Understanding to Preventive Strategies

  • Acupuncture Research: Examples of the State of the Science from Bench to Bedside
    • - National Cancer Institute (U.S.). Office of Cancer Complementary and Alternative Medicine. (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Special

    Acupuncture Research: Examples of the State of the Science from Bench to Bedside

  • NIH State of the Science Conference on Endoscopic Retrograde Cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) for Diagnosis and Therapy (Day 3)
    • - Sponsored by NIDDK, NCI, FDA and the NIH Office of Medical Applications of Research (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Conferences
    ERCP is a procedure used by physicians to diagnose and treat problems in the liver, gallbladder, bile ducts, and pancreas. It combines the use of x-rays and an endoscope--a long, flexible, lighted tube. The physician inserts the endoscope in a patient's mouth and guides it down through the esophagus and into the stomach and small intestine. ERCP allows the physician to look inside these organs and also to send dye to the bile and pancreatic ducts, thereby making them visible on an x-ray.

    For more information, visit the
    conference web site

    NIH State of the Science Conference on Endoscopic Retrograde Cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) for Diagnosis and Therapy (Day 3)

  • Mentoring and Being Mentored in a Dynamic Workplace
    • - The NIH Work and Family life Center (WFLC) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Work/Life Center
    This workshop provides an overview of mentoring and discusses the desirable characteristics of both mentor and mentee. Participants will learn about the rewards and risks of mentoring and review the basic components of a mentor/mentee agreement. (Wilson Hall)

    Mentoring and Being Mentored in a Dynamic Workplace

  • MECHANISMS OF ODOR DISCRIMINATION IN C. ELEGANS
    • - Cornelia Bargmann, Ph.D. Vice Chair, Department of Anatomy, UCSF (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Wednesday Afternoon Lectures
    The Wednesday Afternoon Lectures NIH Director's Lecture Hosted by NIDCD

    MECHANISMS OF ODOR DISCRIMINATION IN C. ELEGANS

  • GIS in Public Health: Using Mapping and Spatial Analysis Technologies for Health Protection
    • -

      GIS experts from CDC/ATSDR and other public health and academic institutes, including:
      Dr. Carol Hanchette, Research Triangle Institute
      Dr. Bill Henriques, GIS Coordinator, ATSDR
      Dr. Gerard Rushton, University of Iowa
      Dr. Samuel Soret, Loma Linda School of Public Health
      (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Conferences
    Geographic Information System (GIS) technology has become an important tool for public health professionals to better understand health issues they encounter every day. GIS allows the layering of health, demographic, environmental and other traditional data sources to be analyzed by their location on the earth's surface. GIS is a tool that can serve a wide range of research and surveillance purposes. This program will provide information on essential GIS concepts and terminology, finding and getting data into a GIS, an overview of spatial statistical analysis functions available using GIS software, issues regarding the use of GIS in public health applications, and examples of GIS applications in public health practice and surveillance. This program will provide a live question and answer session, during which participants nationwide can ask instructors questions via toll free telephone lines, by fax, or via TTY lines.

    GIS in Public Health: Using Mapping and Spatial Analysis Technologies for Health Protection

  • Scientific Approaches to Consciousness
    • - (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Conferences
    Symposium featuring leading scientists and philosophers
    Natcher Conference Center: Main Auditorium

    Scientific Approaches to Consciousness

  • Successful Step Families: Common Concerns, Practical Solutions
    • - The NIH Work and Family life Center (WFLC) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Work/Life Center
    This seminar will discuss common characteristics of stepfamilies and identify special features of step family interaction. Participants will learn about the attitudes and behaviors of children at various ages regarding a parent's remarriage. (31/6C6)

    Successful Step Families: Common Concerns, Practical Solutions