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- Visualizing T Cell Recognition
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- - Mark M. Davis, Ph.D., Investigator, HHMI and Professor of Microbiology and Immunology, Stanford University School of Medicine. (2010/03/04)
- - Category : Wednesday Afternoon Lectures
- The NIH Director's Wednesday Afternoon Lectures Series includes weekly scientific talks by some of the top researchers in the biomedical sciences worldwide.
Mark M. Davis, Ph.D.
Hosted by the Immunology Interest Group
Sponsored by NIAID
Visualizing T Cell Recognition
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- Bringing Balance to Our Fragmented Lives
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- - The NIH Work and Family Life Center (WFLC) (2010/03/04)
- - Category : Work/Life Center
- We're usually going in so many directions at once that we don't take time out for ourselves. In this workshop you can pause, get in touch with yourself, and become more aware of what's happening in your mind and body.
Bringing Balance to Our Fragmented Lives
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- Neuroscience & Mental Illness
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- - R. Wyatt, D. Weinberger, S. Hyman, S. Snyder, P. Goldman-Rakic, B. Hoffer, F. Bloom, L. DeLisi, R. Desimone, W. Freed, J. Grebb, D. Luchins, J. Kleinman, K. Berman, S. Potkin, L. DeLisi (2010/03/04)
- - Category : Conferences
- Neuroscience & Mental Illness:
A Scientific Event in Honor of Richard Jed Wyatt
40 Years of Neurotransmitters
Microcircuitry of Cognition
Neural Transplantation – Deja-Vu all over Again
Neuromics: How Genome Details will Impact Neuroscience
Schizophrenia: On a trek from brain to a genetic mechanism of susceptibility
From neural transplants and adhesion molecules, to schizophrenia-related genes and cellular mechanisms
The Impact of Atypical Antipsychotics
Science, Policy and Social Change
Cellular and Molecular Neuropathology in Schizophrenia
Neuroscience & Mental Illness
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- Alliance for Cellular Signaling
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- - Arkin, Adam.
AfCS (Organization) (2010/03/04) - - Category : Conferences
- - Arkin, Adam.
Alliance for Cellular Signaling
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- The Architecture of Cell Signaling: Lessons from a Mast Cell
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- - Jan Rivera, Ph.D., NIAMS (2010/03/04)
- - Category : NIH Director's Seminars
- The Director's Seminar Series Lecture
The Architecture of Cell Signaling: Lessons from a Mast Cell
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- Youth Violence: The Surgeon General's Report and The Research Challenge (NIH Only)
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- - Elliott, Delbert S.
National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (2010/03/04) - - Category : NIH Only
- - Elliott, Delbert S.
Youth Violence: The Surgeon General's Report and The Research Challenge (NIH Only)
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- In Utero Bone Marrow Transplantations
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- - Karin Blakemore, M.D. Associate Professor of Gynecology and Obstetrics and Director, Division of Maternal-Fetal Medicine and Prenatal Diagnostic Center, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine (2010/03/04)
- - Category : Wednesday Afternoon Lectures
- The NIH Director's Wednesday Afternoon Lectures Series includes weekly scientific talks by some of the top researchers in the biomedical sciences worldwide.
Karin Blakemore, M.D.
Hosted by the NIH Fellows
Sponsored by the Clinical Center
In Utero Bone Marrow Transplantations
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- National Cancer Advisory Board
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- - United States. National Cancer Advisory Board. Meeting (2010/03/04)
- - Category : Advisory Boards
National Cancer Advisory Board
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- Special Tuesday James A. Shannon Lecture: The Ethics of Clinical Trials
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- - Marcia Angell M.D., Former Executive Editor, New England Journal of Medicine. (2010/03/04)
- - Category : Wednesday Afternoon Lectures
- The NIH Director's Lectures Series includes weekly scientific talks by some of the top researchers in the biomedical sciences worldwide.
The James A. Shannon Lecture by Marcia Angell, M.D., cancelled February 14, 2001, has been rescheduled as a special Tuesday lecture on May 22, 2001.
Marcia Angell M.D.
Hosted by the NIH Alumni Association
Sponsored by NEI
Special Tuesday James A. Shannon Lecture: The Ethics of Clinical Trials
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- Calmodulation of Voltage-Gated Calcium Channels
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- - David T. Yue, M.D., Ph.D., Professor Biomedical Engineering and Neuroscience, Program in Molecular and Cellular Systems Physiology, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine (2010/03/04)
- - Category : Neuroscience
- NIH Neuroscience Seminar Series
Calmodulation of Voltage-Gated Calcium Channels
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- Diverse Roles of Inhibition in the Hippocampus
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- - Tamas Freund, PH.D., D.SC., Hungarian Academy of Sciences (2010/03/04)
- - Category : Neuroscience
- The NIH Neuroscience Lecture Series features lectures and discussions with leading neuroscientists. Sponsored by NINDS, NIMH, NIDCD, NIDA, NEI, and NICHD, this year's series offers advances that span the areas of molecular, cellular and organismal neuroscience.
For more information, visit the
NIH Neuroscience Seminar Series
Diverse Roles of Inhibition in the Hippocampus
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- Molecular Basis of Addictive States
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- - Eric Nestler, M.D., Ph.D., UT Southwestern Medical Center (2010/03/04)
- - Category : Wednesday Afternoon Lectures
- The NIH Director's Wednesday Afternoon Lecture Series includes weekly scientific talks by some of the top researchers in the biomedical sciences worldwide.
Drugs of abuse, such as opiates, cocaine, and alcohol, produce addiction by eliciting changes in specific neurons of the central nervous system after long-term exposure. Considerable progress has been made in recent years in identifying the specific molecular and cellular adaptations involved, and in relating them to specific behavioral features of addiction.
For more information, visit
Eric Nestler, M.D., Ph.D
Lou and Ellen McGinley Distinguished Professor and Chairman, Department of Psychiatry, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas
Molecular Basis of Addictive States
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- Reasonable Availability: When Should Researchers Working in Developing Countries have to Guarantee the Reasonable Availability of any Interventions that are Proven Effective?
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- - Jack Killen, MD. and Reidar Lie, MD. (2010/03/04)
- - Category : Bioethics
- NIH Clinical Center Ethics Grand Rounds
Reasonable Availability: When Should Researchers Working in Developing Countries have to Guarantee the Reasonable Availability of any Interventions that are Proven Effective?
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- NIH State-of-the-Science Conference: Management of the Clinically Inapparent Adrenal Mass (Incidentaloma) - Day 3
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- - Sponsored by OMAR, NICHD, NCI, and NIDDK (2010/03/04)
- - Category : Conferences
- Clinically inapparent adrenal masses are discovered inadvertently, in the course of diagnostic testing or
treatment for other conditions, and thus are commonly known as incidentalomas. Improvements in
abdominal imaging techniques and technologies have resulted in the detection of an increasing number
of adrenal incidentalomas.
When detected, the clinically inapparent adrenal mass raises challenging questions for physicians and
their patients. For example, should the mass be removed? Is a nonsurgical approach indicated? What
risks are associated with either approach? Because the incidence of these masses increases with age,
appropriate management of adrenal tumors will be a growing challenge in our aging society.
For more information, visit
the conference web site
NIH State-of-the-Science Conference: Management of the Clinically Inapparent Adrenal Mass (Incidentaloma) - Day 3
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- NIH Consensus Development Conference on Antenatal Corticosteroids Revisited:Repeat Courses (Day 2)
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- - 쨌 If not, what additional information should be obtained?
The primary sponsors of this meeting are the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development and the NIH Office of Medical Applications of Research. (2010/03/04) - - Category : Conferences
- - 쨌 If not, what additional information should be obtained?
- Preterm delivery is a major cause of death and illness in infants. Corticosteroid treatment of pregnant women delivering prematurely was first introduced in 1972 to enhance fetal lung maturity. A 1994 NIH consensus panel concluded, in part, that giving corticosteroids to pregnant women at risk for preterm delivery reduces the risk of death and various serious illnesses in their preterm infants. The panel noted, however, that the benefits and risks of giving more than one course of prenatal corticosteroids during a pregnancy were unknown and called for additional research. The current conference will feature presentations on the latest research in this area. An independent, non-Federal consensus development panel will weigh the scientific evidence and draft a statement, addressing the following questions:
쨌 Is the evidence on benefits and risks of repeat courses of prenatal corticosteroids sufficient to permit consensus recommendations?
쨌 If so, what are the recommendations?
NIH Consensus Development Conference on Antenatal Corticosteroids Revisited:Repeat Courses (Day 2)
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- NIH Consensus Development Conference on Antenatal Corticosteroids Revisited:Repeat Courses (Day 1)
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- - 쨌 If not, what additional information should be obtained?
The primary sponsors of this meeting are the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development and the NIH Office of Medical Applications of Research. (2010/03/04) - - Category : Conferences
- - 쨌 If not, what additional information should be obtained?
- Preterm delivery is a major cause of death and illness in infants. Corticosteroid treatment of pregnant women delivering prematurely was first introduced in 1972 to enhance fetal lung maturity. A 1994 NIH consensus panel concluded, in part, that giving corticosteroids to pregnant women at risk for preterm delivery reduces the risk of death and various serious illnesses in their preterm infants. The panel noted, however, that the benefits and risks of giving more than one course of prenatal corticosteroids during a pregnancy were unknown and called for additional research. The current conference will feature presentations on the latest research in this area. An independent, non-Federal consensus development panel will weigh the scientific evidence and draft a statement, addressing the following questions:
쨌 Is the evidence on benefits and risks of repeat courses of prenatal corticosteroids sufficient to permit consensus recommendations?
쨌 If so, what are the recommendations?
NIH Consensus Development Conference on Antenatal Corticosteroids Revisited:Repeat Courses (Day 1)
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- Metals in Medicine
(Day 2) -
- - (2010/03/04)
- - Category : Conferences
Metals in Medicine
(Day 2) - Metals in Medicine
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- Domestic Violence Training: The Provider-Patient Relationship How to build an effective domestic violence coordinated community response team.
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- - (2010/03/04)
- - Category : Special
- This two-hour broadcast will teach viewers how to build a coordinated response team for their local community. Topics will include: the range of services that battered women's organizations provide; the realities of emergency shelter for battered women and their children; the health care team and its roles; how to work together using coalitions and networks; how to foster a proactive, prevention-oriented community-based response; how to push the envelope to prevention; how to use print and electronic media to change social norms about violence; and how to become a trainer, scholar and advocate in the community.
Domestic Violence Training: The Provider-Patient Relationship How to build an effective domestic violence coordinated community response team.
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- The Ethics of Designing Clinical Research Protocols - Session 3
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- - Robert Temple, M.D. CDER/FDA, Frank Miller, Ph.D. NIH and Robert Truog, M.D. Harvard Medical School (2010/03/04)
- - Category : Bioethics
- Ethical and Regulatory Aspects of Human Subjects Research
Department of Clinical Bioethics, Warren Grant Magnuson Clinical Center
The Ethics of Designing Clinical Research Protocols - Session 3
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- Setting Up Successful Telework Programs
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- - Sponsored by the NIH Work and Family Life Center (WFLC) (2010/03/04)
- - Category : Work/Life Center
- The broadcast will present real-life solutions to the various challenges supervisors, managers and employees face in setting up successful telework programs.
Setting Up Successful Telework Programs