Strategic Planning
for
IT Support of Grant-funded Research
Biomedical Research Institutions Information Technology Exchange
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
Seattle, Washington
10–12 September 2003
Information technology plays an essential role in almost all
biomedical research. To be competitive, biomedical research
organizations must provide access to key information technology
as part of the institutional infrastructure available to their
researchers. At the same time, individual investigators must be
allowed maximum flexibility in the pursuit of their research.
Determining how best to accomplish these sometimes conflicting
goals will be the topic of this meeting — Strategic
Planning for IT Support of Grant-Funded Research.
We will begin with a general discussion of the overall challenge, then turn our attention to a few individual topics which will be discussed in plenary session. Smaller working groups will then convene to elaborate on individual topics. |
IT Support for Grant Funded Research: Strategic Issues
Robert J. Robbins, PhD Vice President, Information Technology Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center Seattle, WA PRESENTATION AVAILABLE AS: PDF |
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Who’s Using our Systems: Identity Management, Authorization, Authentication, and Usage Logging
RL “Bob” Morgan Sr. Technology Architect, C&C University of Washington Seattle, WA PRESENTATION AVAILABLE AS: |
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Digital Publishing Support
Robert J. Robbins, PhD Vice President, Information Technology Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center Seattle, WA PRESENTATION AVAILABLE AS: PDF |
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Scientific Data Management: Why is it So Hard?
Nat Goodman, PhD Sr. Research Scientist Institute for Systems Biology Seattle, WA PRESENTATION AVAILABLE AS: PDF |
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Research Access to Clinical Data
William B. Lober, M.D Division of Biomedical and Health Informatics University of Washington Seattle, WA PRESENTATION AVAILABLE AS: PDF |
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caBIG, the Cancer Biomedical Informatics Grid
Ken Buetow, PhD Director NCICB/NCI/NIH Bethesda, MD PRESENTATION AVAILABLE AS: |