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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for The National Consortium for Data Science
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20240805
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SUMMARY:Data Matters 2024
DESCRIPTION:Data Matters™ is a week-long series of one and two-day courses aimed at students and professionals in business\, research\, and government. The short course series is sponsored by the Odum Institute for Research in Social Science at UNC-Chapel Hill\, the National Consortium for Data Science\, and RENCI. Data Matters gives students the chance to learn about a wide range of topics in data science\, analytics\, visualization\, curation\, and more from expert instructors. \nRegistration is now open for the Data Matters series which will be held August 5 – 9\, 2024. Register here.
URL:https://datascienceconsortium.org/event/data-matters-2024/
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UID:10000076-1724932800-1724936400@datascienceconsortium.org
SUMMARY:DataBytes: Data Viz\, Chemistry\, Art\, and Public Health: Making Sense of Street Drugs
DESCRIPTION:At the Street Drug Analysis Lab\, researchers analyze street drug samples from around the country and have detected about 300 unique chemical substances. But making sense of chemicals is a notorious challenge\, with long names\, esoteric molecules\, and overlapping pharmacological properties. Therefore\, the team created a flexible ontology that can adapt over time\, and developed visualizations to bring order to the chaos. Using a type of chord diagram called hierarchical edge bundling (.js package)\, they conceptualized co-occurrence of substances in the drug supply based on 6\,000 drug samples from 34 US states\, showing connections between classes of molecules. Working with a local graphic designer\, hand drawn illustrations highlight particularly dangerous combinations of substances and tell the story of where the samples came from. \nJoin team members Nabarun Dasgupta and Anuja Panthari at the intersection of chemistry\, art\, public health\, and data science\, as they describe how their project brings order to the unruly illicit drug supply. The key message: The drug supply is vast\, but it is knowable. \nRegister for the Event \nAbout the Speakers\nNabarun Dasgupta\nNabarun Dasgupta\, PhD\, MPH\, is a scientist who studies drugs and infectious diseases. His passion is telling true stories about health with numbers. Centered in pharmaco-epidemiology\, his work amplifies community and patient voices in public health. Since 2002 he has done pioneering work in pain management\, opioid overdose prevention\, and addiction treatment. He also has deep expertise in health informatics and machine learning. In 2023 he was honored by being placed on the TIME100 Next list of rising global leaders. \nAs an applied epidemiologist\, Dasgupta has served as an advisor to the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)\, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)\, and World Health Organization (WHO). Operating with an appreciation for the social determinants and of health\, he is committed to countering the impacts of racist drug policies. At UNC IPRC\, he works at the Opioid Data Lab (OpioidData.org). His street drug analysis lab tests community-donated samples from around the country to figure out what lurks in the drug supply. Dasgupta co-founded two pioneering non-profit organizations. Project Lazarus in Wilkes County (North Carolina) was hailed by the Obama White House as a model for community-based overdose prevention. Remedy Alliance For The People is a groundbreaking national non-profit bulk distributor of free and low-cost naloxone to harm reduction programs. Previously he was the Chief Science Officer of Epidemico\, a health informatics startup he co-founded using technology developed at Harvard Medical School. He is also an associate editor at the American Journal of Public Health. \nDasgupta earned degrees from Princeton University (molecular biology)\, Yale University (epidemiology of microbial diseases)\, and the University of North Carolina (pharmacoepidemiology). Follow him on Twitter (@nabarund). \nAnuja Parathi\nAnuja Panthari is an MPH Data Science candidate at UNC Gillings School of Public Health. She completed her BS in Cognitive Science and Statistics from UC Santa Cruz in 2022. Under the guidance of Dr. Dasgupta\, she has been involved in harm reduction research at the Street Drug Analysis lab\, assisting with multiple cutting-edge data analytics and visualization projects that will help communities demystify the street drug supply.
URL:https://datascienceconsortium.org/event/databytes-aug-2024/
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