동향
전체 8345
  • The Inner Game: A Holistic Approach to Eating and Weight Control
    • - NIH Work and Family Life Center (WFLC) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Work/Life Center
    Just in time for the holiday season! A highly personalized and interactive program designed to help you understand how foods affect your metabolism. You will learn how to maintain a tracking system that allows you to get in touch with your body's signals, record eating and drinking habits, physical activity levels, challenges and achievements. You'll complete a metabolic profile, and learn about the glycemic index of foods.

    The NIH Work and Family Life Center (WFLC), in conjunction with the Employee Assistance Program, is pleased to announce the third 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

    The Inner Game: A Holistic Approach to Eating and Weight Control

  • Deaf Awareness Program
    • - NIH Deaf Employees Advisory Forum. (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Special

    Deaf Awareness Program

  • NK Cells: What Turns Them On, What Turns Them Off
    • - National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Immunology

    NK Cells: What Turns Them On, What Turns Them Off

  • Hospital-Acquired Infection
    • - Wenzel, Richard P.
      National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Clinical Center Grand Rounds

    Hospital-Acquired Infection

  • NCI - Board of Scientific Advisors (Day 2)
    • - NCI Board of Scientific Advisors. Meeting 2001 : (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Advisory Boards

    NCI - Board of Scientific Advisors (Day 2)

  • NCI - Board of Scientific Advisors (Day 1)
    • - NCI Board of Scientific Advisors. Meeting 2001 : (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Advisory Boards

    NCI - Board of Scientific Advisors (Day 1)

  • Cisplatin Regulation of XPA Expression in Ovarian Cancer Cells
    • - States, J Christopher.
      National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : DNA Repair

    Cisplatin Regulation of XPA Expression in Ovarian Cancer Cells

  • Getting the Most From Your Brain 3
    • - NIH Work and Family Life Center (WFLC) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Work/Life Center
    Not sure that you use your brain efficiently and effectively? This brown-bag lunch series is designed to help you understand and fully utilize the power of your brain. Join us for three hour-long sessions to understand the basics of how the brain works, understand the brain's relationship with the body, see how lifestyle and health issues affect brain function, assess what effect lifestyle changes can have on brain function, learn about behavioral approaches to improving brain function including cognition, learning, and memory; learn about and assess chemical and herbal approaches to maximizing brain function, anticipate what changes aging might bring to brain function and learn how to maintain function.

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

    Getting the Most From Your Brain 3

  • Mechanisms of Tolerance Induced with Bone Marrow Transplantation and Costimulatory Blockade
    • - Sykes, Megan.
      National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Immunology

    Mechanisms of Tolerance Induced with Bone Marrow Transplantation and Costimulatory Blockade

  • Welfare, Children and Families: The Impact of Welfare Reform in the New Economy
    • - William Julius Wilson, Ph.D., Lewis P. and Linda L. Geyser University Professor, John F. Kennedy School of Government, and Department of Afro-American Studies, Harvard University. (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.

    William Julius Wilson, Ph.D.

    Hosted by the Behavioral and Social Sciences Interest Group and OD Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research

    Sponsored by NICHD

    Welfare, Children and Families: The Impact of Welfare Reform in the New Economy

  • Mitochondrial DNA Replication Fidelity and Mitochondrial Diseases
    • - Copeland, William C.
      National Institutes of Health (U.S.). DNA Repair Interest Group. (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Mitochondria

    Mitochondrial DNA Replication Fidelity and Mitochondrial Diseases

  • The Next Step: Exploring the Proteome
    • - National Institutes of Health (U.S.). Mass Spectrometry Interest Group. (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Conferences

    The Next Step: Exploring the Proteome

  • Preparing KSA Statements for a Federal Career
    • - The NIH Work and Family Life Center (WFLC) (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Work/Life Center
    Participants in this workshop will learn about the importance of Knowledge, Skills, and Abilities (KSA) statements in the Federal application process. A group exercise in formatting and preparing KSA statements will provide hands-on experience.

    Preparing KSA Statements for a Federal Career

  • Mitochondrial DNA Replication Fidelity and Mitochondrial Diseases
    • - Copeland, William C.
      National Institutes of Health (U.S.). DNA Repair Interest Group. (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : DNA Repair

    Mitochondrial DNA Replication Fidelity and Mitochondrial Diseases

  • Cortical Cell Migration: The Message from the Mutants
    • - Karl Herrup, Ph.D., Professor, Alzheimer Center, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Neuroscience
    NIH Neuroscience Seminar Series

    Cortical Cell Migration: The Message from the Mutants

  • "Whole-body Fluorescence Imaging with GFP of Tumor Growth, Metastasis, Angiogenesis and Gene Expression." (NIH ONLY)
    • - Robert Haufman, of AntiCancer, Inc. (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : NIH Only
    NCI Mouse Collective Meeting

    "Whole-body Fluorescence Imaging with GFP of Tumor Growth, Metastasis, Angiogenesis and Gene Expression." (NIH ONLY)

  • Why Publish Electronically?
    • - NIH Library, Office of Research Services (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : Special
    The NIH Library is sponsoring a mini-symposium entitled "Why Publish Electronically" featuring Pritpal S. Tamber, Managing Editor, BioMed Central and Ed Sequeira, NLM/NCBI, PubMed Central. Speakers and attendees will seek answers to the following questions:
    Does the Web change nature of scholarly communication? What alternatives to traditional biomedical publishing exist? What has been the effect of the Web on peer review? Is there a role for a pre-print server in biomedical publishing? Should the results of the peer-reviewed research be available to all? If so, when? How are the roles of author, editor, and reviewer changed by electronic publishing?

    Why Publish Electronically?

  • Buried Alive! The Concept of Race in Science
    • - Troy Duster, Ph.D., Institute for the History of the Production of Knowledge, and Professor of Sociology, New York University; Director, American Cultures Center and Chancellor's Professor of Sociology, University of California, Berkeley. (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.

    Troy Duster, Ph.D.

    Hosted by the Behavioral and Social Sciences and AIDS Interest Groups

    Sponsored by NIDA

    Buried Alive! The Concept of Race in Science

  • NIH State-of-the-Science Conference: Management of the Clinically Inapparent Adrenal Mass (Incidentaloma) - Day 2
    • - 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 2

  • Orientation to NIH Extramural Activities - CORE 1 "Funding Mechanisms" (NIH-Only)
    • - NIH Office of Extramural Research (2010/03/04)
    • - Category : NIH Only
    Extramural Scientist Administrator Training

    For more information, visit
    CORE 1 Training Session Format

    Orientation to NIH Extramural Activities - CORE 1 "Funding Mechanisms" (NIH-Only)