IUPUI Community for Open Research and Education Fall 2022 Panel Series

The IUPUI Community for Open Research and Education is launching an invited virtual speaker series. Comprised of faculty, graduate students, researchers, and librarians, the IUPUI Community for Open Research and Education is interested in fostering a culture at IUPUI where scholarship is open by design through building partnerships, education, training, resource development, and advocacy.

To better understand how open approaches work for IUPUI faculty and students, this virtual series invites campus educators, researchers, and students to panel discussions where they share their experiences with various aspects of the open movement. By highlighting IUPUI’s open work and the challenges to that work, the IUPUI Community for Open Research and Education hopes to develop a network for interested people that can share solutions, advocate for change, and foster opportunities for open research and education at IUPUI.

Science Communication and Open Scholarship

Date: September 29, 2022
Time: 12:00pm to 1:00pm ET
Location: Zoom; register via https://iupui.libcal.com/event/9606749

This panel explores the importance, benefits, and challenges of communicating scholarly research to a wide public audience. Panelists will share their experience using open access as one tool to increase public understanding of scientific research.

Panelists

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Profile image of Krista Longtin

Krista J. Longtin, PhD
Assistant Dean for Faculty Affairs and Professional Development
Indiana University School of Medicine
Associate Professor of Communication Studies
School of Liberal Arts

Dr. Longtin’s research focuses on communication education in the sciences and health professions, faculty development, and organizational/professional identity. Dr. Longtin leads Indiana University’s institutional affiliation with the Alda Center for Communicating Science, serves as the co-editor for the Public Library of Science’s Science Communication blog, and runs a graduate minor in Communicating Science at IUPUI.

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Andrew Cale
PhD Student, Department of Anatomy, Cell Biology & Physiology
Indiana University School of Medicine

Andrew Cale is a current Ph.D. student in the Education Track of Anatomy, Cell Biology, and Physiology at Indiana University School of Medicine. Andrew's research focuses on evaluating and developing metacognitive skills in healthcare professionals and educators. Andrew is also an Ambassador of the American Association for Anatomy.

Publisher Required Data Sharing

Date: October 13, 2022
Time: 12:00pm to 1:00pm ET
Location: Zoom; register via https://iupui.libcal.com/event/9607006

This panel explores the benefits and barriers to sharing data and publisher requirements for data sharing. The panelists will discuss their experience sharing research data and provide some practical recommendations for students and new researchers.

Panelists:

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Brian E. Dixon, PhD, MPA FACMI, FHIMSS, FAMIA
Associate Professor, Epidemiology
Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health
Indiana University

Dr. Dixon serves as the director of Public Health Informatics and research scientist at the Regenstrief Institute’s Center for Biomedical Informatics. He also serves as an Investigator in Residence at the Center on Health Information and Communication, with the Health Services Research & Development Service at the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. Dr. Dixon’s research focuses on applying informatics methods and solutions to improve population health in clinical as well as public health organizations.

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Susan Walsh, PhD
Associate Professor, Department of Biology and Forensic and Investigative Sciences
School of Science
IUPUI

Dr. Walsh is an Associate Professor in the Department of Biology and Forensic and Investigative Sciences, where she directs the Walsh FDP Lab. Walsh's research focuses on enhancing understanding of the genetic basis of human physical appearance and ancestry by using genome-wide association approaches and next-generation sequencing.

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Katie Allen
Data Scientist, Regenstrief Institute
PhD Student, Health Policy and Management
Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health
Indiana University

Katie Allen is a Data Scientist at the Regenstrief Institute and a current PhD student in Health Policy and Management in the Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health. Allen's research focuses on social determinants and health disparities. She has a specific interest in food insecurity.

Community Engagement and the Ethics of Open Research

Date: November 8, 2022
Time: 12:00 pm to 1:00pm ET
Location: Zoom; register via https://iupui.libcal.com/event/9607094

This panel explores ethical considerations for doing community engaged research, and how open research practices benefit researchers and the public. Panelists will discuss their experiences, as well as challenges and considerations for students and new researchers.

Panelists:

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Profile image of Elizabeth Nelson

Elizabeth Nelson, PhD
Assistant Professor, Medical Humanities & Health Studies
School of Liberal Arts
IUPUI

Dr. Nelson is an Assistant Professor in the Medical Humanities and Health Studies program at IUPUI. Her research focuses on modern institutions of confinement, such as mental hospitals and prisons, in both the US and France. Nelson coordinates the Indiana Women's Prison History Project, a collective of formerly and currently incarcerated scholars who publish original research on carceral history, and she directs the Black Health Faculty Working Group at IUPUI's Center for Africana Studies and Culture.

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Profile image of Jennifer Guiliano

Jennifer Guiliano, PhD
Associate Professor, Department of History
School of Liberal Arts
IUPUI

Dr. Guiliano an Associate Professor in the Department of History, and Adjunct Associate Professor in both American Studies and American Indian Programs. Dr. Guiliano's 2015 book Indian Spectacle: College Mascots and the Anxiety of Modern America, traces the appropriation, production, dissemination, and legalization of Native American images as sports mascots in the late 19th and 20th centuries. Her most recent book, A Primer for Teaching Digital History, is a guide for college and high school teachers who are new to teaching digital history or for experienced teachers seeking to reinvigorate their pedagogy.

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Profile image of Destiny Casson

Destiny Casson
Graduate Student, Medical Humanities and Health Studies
School of Liberal Arts
IUPUI

Destiny Casson is a current graduate student in the Medical Humanities and Health Studies Program at Indiana University School of Liberal Arts. She is also a member of the Black Health Equity Working Group and works closely with Dr. Elizabeth Nelson. Destiny’s academic interests, research, and professional ventures traverse Africana Studies, decolonial thought/praxis, Black feminism/womanism, mental health, medical humanities, medical anthropology, and the arts.