Transcript PPT
CHS Research Facilitation Grant
April 3, 2014
Carleton ‘Buck’ Jones, PH.D.
Associate Professor of Biomedical Sciences
Coordinator, Master of Biomedical Sciences Program
College of Health Sciences
CHS & ORSP
Intramural funds for:
◦ Animals and per diem
◦ Supplies and consumable materials
◦ Non-capital equipment
Pilot studies to obtain preliminary results
Continuation and/or completion of ongoing research projects
Overview of the application process
Eligibility
Required sections
Budget
Timeline and deadlines
Eligibility
CHS faculty with at least 0.8 FTE
◦ May collaborate with other faculty
Ability for success and tangible products
◦ Publications
◦ External grant proposals
◦ Peer-reviewed activities
No remaining Start Up
Required sections
At least 4, but less
than 7 pages
◦ Including references
◦ 12-point font
Cover Page
Program Director
review
◦ All sections addressed
◦ Project is consistent
with the faculty
member’s scholarly
agenda
Required sections
Progress Reports & Final Reports
Title
◦ If continuing grant, keep title consistent
Hypothesis or Research Question
Abstract
The RFG Committee should know what you want to
do by reading the Abstract
Abstract - Shaun Mendel, CRNA, MSN
TITLE: Interdisciplinary Simulation: Perceptions of Graduate
Health Science Students.
Interprofessional collaboration has been linked to improved patient
care [1]. The unique combination of programs within the College of
Health Sciences allows for meaningful surgical simulations between
specialties mimicking real professional interactions. The World
Health Organization, Institute of Medicine and many diverse
healthcare professional organizations in the United States support
interprofessional education [2-4]. Simulation training is an ideal
method of interprofessional education [5].
One of the barriers to effective interprofessional education and
collaboration is the presence of negative preconceptions held by
the participants [6].
This study intends to use the revised Interprofessional Education
Perceptions Scale [7] to assess student perceptions of their own
profession and other professions before and after collaborative
simulation exercises between nurse anesthesia, podiatric medicine,
and cardiovascular science students.
Abstract - Kolla Kristjansdottir, Ph.D.
TITLE: Identifying the NPM1 interactome in neuroblastoma cells
Neuroblastoma, a cancer arising from the sympathetic nervous system, is
the most common extra-cranial solid tumor in children.
Our data corroborates a previous study that shows an increase in NPM1
in high-risk neuroblastoma. NPM1 is a nucleolar protein and participates in
a wide range of biological processes including ribosome biogenesis,
chromatin remodeling, cell cycle, apoptosis and DNA repair. NPM1
functions in these processes via interaction with different binding partners
in some cases by sequestering them in the nucleoli. Of the relatively small
number of known NPM1 interactors phosphorylation status often
modulates interactor binding.
Here we propose to identify novel NPM1 interactors in neuroblastoma
using a Yeast two-hybrid (Y2H) screen followed by confirmation of
interactions in neuroblastoma cells.
These pilot studies will identify a pool of NPM1-interactors to study
further and generate a neuroblastoma cell line with tagged NPM1 for
future mechanistic studies. This work will help elucidate the role of NPM1
and its interactome in neuroblastoma and may identify novel targets for
drug therapeutics.
Required sections
Research plan
◦ Background & significance
What is the context?
Why is it important?
◦ Hypothesis & specific aims
What are you going to accomplish to rigorously test
your hypothesis?
◦ Preliminary studies if relevant
Look! We can do this!
◦ Research design, methods, and statistics
Figures are great!
Sample size calculations are great!
Research Design
Hypothesis: Soy consumption will improve
endothelial function in diabetics
Timeline
Soy Improves EC Function
ID Patients (n = 12)
Collect Information
Source:
Clinical collaborator
Exclusion criteria
Age
Smoking Hx
EtOH use
CVD
Htn.
Prescriptions
Type I vs II
Sun exposure
Ethnicity, gender, etc.
Sample 1
HbA1c
Glucose
Serum insulin
Endothelial function
by flow mediated
dilation
Soy consumption
4 weeks
Dose
Formulation
Food & event log
Sample 2
HbA1c
Glucose
Serum insulin
Endothelial function
by flow mediated
dilation
Sample size calculation using data from literature
◦ n = 12
Budget (with justification of items)
Animals and animal care
Surgical supplies and consumables
Histopathology supplies and antibodies
Quantitative rt-PCR supplies
Total
$ 770.40
$ 974.96
$ 2565.00
$ 692.00
$ 4231.96
Required sections
Timeline for project – e.g.
IACUC submission and approval
January
Animal surgeries, treatments, and behavioral analysis
March – April
Tissue processing, histopathology, and qRT-PCR
May – June
Data analysis and preparation of manuscript
April – July
Identification of key personnel
Roles and responsibilities of investigators
Writing a good proposal
Importance/impact
Research plan
Pre-submission review
Progress reports and final reports
ORSP spending policies and guidelines
Timeline and deadline
Conceptualize and develop proposal
Contact resources
May 1st
◦ ORSP
◦ Statistics
◦ Collaborators
Pre-submission review
Submit to Program Director
Submit to Dean’s Office
May 22nd
May 29th
June 2nd
Resources for faculty
CHS website:
http://www.midwestern.edu/chs-deans-office/resources-faculty-andstaff/research-and-scholarship.html
ORSP
◦ Seeking external funding
◦ Presenting and publishing your work
Forming collaborations
◦ Mentored Research
◦ Journal Clubs
Various research groups
SoTL
◦ Involving students
Research Club
Research Club
A forum for those interested in research to share their
ideas, concerns, and needs...
Monthly meetings usually include an informal half-hour
presentation of ongoing research by a faculty member,
then discussion of some set of related topics.
Discussion topics have included where to go and from
whom to get statistics support, what should be expected
of master’s level research students, what kind of
equipment needs to be requested through capital budget
requests and who would share the equipment, how
research ideas can be magnified by collaborations among
MWU faculty, what equipment is broken and how long it
will take to fix or replace, and so on.
Ellen Tarr and Kathy Lawson are the organizers, and
they do a terrific job.
-Dr. Soby’s excellent description
Research Survey
CHS Dean’s Office will be sending out a
scholarship and research survey for faculty
Please complete
Questions?
Sample size calculation
n
n = s2(Z1-b + Z1-a/2)2
(m0 – m1)2
number of measurements per group
s
variation in the sample
a
probability of type I error
b
probability of a type II error
m0 – m1 treatment effect
Z values from stats tables
Z0.8 = 0.84
Z0.975 = 1.96
a = 0.05
b = 0.20
power = 0.8
Real World Example
Sample size calculation
n = s2(Z1-b + Z1-a/2)2
(m0 – m1)2
= (1.7)2(0.84 + 1.96)2
(14.3 – 15.7)2
= 11.56, so 12 per group
a = 0.05
b = 0.20
power = 0.8