Join us for a showing of the documentary The Tennessee 11. Over the course of a few days in Tennessee, eleven people from across the gun debate came together to develop consensus-based proposals on gun policy. The documentary is a testament to the power of conversation—and also shows that if we are willing to listen to one another, meaningful solutions are possible.
Archaeologists use material culture—objects made and used by people—to understand relationships between individuals in the past. But how are shared objects connected to social interactions? This presentation explores this question through a combination of computer simulations and artifact analysis in the Western Pueblo region (AD 1100-1500). Focusing on areas from central Arizona to northern Arizona and western New Mexico, the study examines pottery, projectile points, and architecture to map social networks using similarities in design.
Discovering the intricate biological mechanisms associated with brain aging and resilience to neurological disorders such as cerebral small vessel disease, stroke, and Alzheimer’s disease guide precision therapies.
Speakers
Chia-Ling Phuah, MD, MMSc
Physician-scientist and Associate Rrofessor in the Departments of Neurology and Neurosurgery at Barrow Neurological Institute (BNI)
Serious games go beyond entertainment to deliver therapies for a wide range of health conditions, including behavioral health, pain management and rehabilitation.
Speakers
Triton Ong, PhD
Senior research associate at Doxy.me, a telehealth provider and research organization
Zoom: https://asu.zoom.us/j/86472966702?pwd=03vL68RUuxTH9bUkDoW6pzBfpJQKe6.1
Find out how a health services researcher epidemiologist uses longitudinal data and causal inference to understand how social and institutional health policy affect health care access and patient outcomes.
Speakers
Tiffany Lemon, PhD
Assistant Professor, Health Services Research (HSR) & Center for Health Information and Research (CHiR), College of Health Solutions, ASU
Powerful multi-decade longitudinal research using big data and AI to combat neurodegenerative diseases.
Speakers
Brad Racette, MD
Chairman of Neurology and Senior Vice President, Barrow Neurological Institute (BNI), Academic Chair of Neurology for Creighton University School of Medicine and Professor and Chair for University of Arizona College of Medicine, BNI campus
Cut through the hype and lingo and hear what health professionals and executives need to know about the impact of this legislation, a powerful data standard and the future.
Speakers
Russ Leftwich, MD, FAMIA
Senior clinical advisor for interoperability for InterSystems; Teaching professor, ASU & Vanderbilt University
Hear how cutting-edge omics research led by an innovative human geneticist data is helping shorten diagnostic odysseys for children with neurological and sensorineural diseases and their families.
Speakers
Isabelle Schrauwen, PhD,
Professor of Translational Neurosciences, University of Arizona College of Medicine
What does it take to build medical imaging systems that achieve expert radiologist-level performance? Foundation models, of course!
Speakers
Jianming Liang, PhD
Professor, College of Health Solutions, ASU
Mohammad Reza Hosseinzadeh Taher
ASU & DA Ma PhDc, ASU
Join us for our annual Legislative, Educataion, and Advocacy Day (LEAD). This will be a 2 part series as we're joining our colleagues across the country to launch the new R.I.S.E. Campaign School - Running for Impact, Social Workers for Equity – a two-day training series dedicated to empowering social workers and mental health advocates to step into political leadership.