Home News Fall 2015 classes and training at the Medical Library

Fall 2015 classes and training at the Medical Library

August 13, 2015 - 12:11pm by Andy Hickner

Managing your References with EndNote
Description:    EndNote is a citation-management software application that makes saving citations and then citing them within documents easy. EndNote's pre-formatted style templates, specific to journal instructions, make it easy to insert references into your papers as you write them. In this class, you will learn how to easily add citations into your EndNote library, attach PDfs, and insert references into your research papers.
Date & Time:      12:00pm-1:00pm, Wednesday, September 2, 2015
Location:    Medical Library, Room 103 TCC, 333 Cedar St, New Haven, CT 06520
Presenter:     Holly Nardini

Date & Time:    12:00pm-1:00pm, Thursday, October 8, 2015
Location:    Medical Library, Room 103 TCC, 333 Cedar St, New Haven, CT 06520
Presenter:    Holly Nardini

Date & Time:    12:00pm - 1:00pm, Thursday, November 5, 2015
Location:    Medical Library, Room 103 TCC, 333 Cedar St, New Haven, CT 06520
Presenter:    Holly Nardini

Date & Time: 12:00pm - 1:00pm, Friday, December 11, 2015  
Location: Medical Library, Room 103 TCC, 333 Cedar St, New Haven CT 06520
Presenter: Holly Nardini

Interpretation of variants from human next-generation sequencing studies using Ingenuity Variant Analysis
Description: Ingenuity Variant Analysis addresses the challenge of human variant identification and interpretation. It combines analytical tools and integrated content to rapidly analyze variants by drilling down to a small, targeted subset of variants based both upon published biological evidence and your own knowledge of biology. You can easily and quickly interrogate found variants from multiple biological perspectives, explore different hypotheses, and identify the most promising variants for follow-up.
This tool leverages the Ingenuity Knowledge Base, a repository of expertly curated biological interactions and functional annotations created from millions of individually modeled relationships between proteins, genes, complexes, cells, tissues, drugs, and diseases. These include rich details, links to the original article, and are reviewed for accuracy by Ph.D. scientists. The curated content is structured into an ontology that allows for contextual information, computation by the applications, and synonym resolutions.
This interactive introductory seminar will demonstrate capabilities of Variant Analysis and Ingenuity Knowledge Base, and will review preset filtering cascades and added flexibility to customize or create your own interactive cascades in minutes for various kinds of analyses.
The seminar includes demo part and questions and answers session. You are welcome to provide specific agenda suggestions and sign up for a personalized demo and/or consultation

Date & Time:    11:00 AM - 12:30PM, Tuesday, September 15, 2015
Location:    C-103, SHM 333 Cedar St, New Haven CT 06520
Presenter:    Shawn Prince, Bioinformatics Consultant, Sr. Field Application Scientist.

Advanced Searching Techniques
Description:    Take your searching skills to the next level. Covers command language to perform searches, field searching and more. Come with your questions!
Date & Time:    12:00pm-1:00pm, Monday, September 21, 2015
Location:    Medical Library, Room 103 TCC, 333 Cedar St, New Haven, CT 06520
Presenter: Holly Nardini

Novel Online Tools for Mining the Biomedical Literature
Description: The rapid growth of experimental and computational biomedical data is being accompanied by an increase in the number of biomedical publications discussing these results. This makes retrieving relevant scientific information and identifying connections between findings, a challenging task. New literature-mining tools that make use of Natural Language Processing Algorithms and data visualization (e.g. CoreMine, NextBio, Semantic MEDLINE, etc) may be of help when sorting through this abundance of literature as discovery and hypothesis generating tools. This workshop provides an introduction on how to use some of these literature-mining tools when answering research questions and generating/narrowing hypothesis.

Date & Time:    12:00pm - 1:30pm, Tuesday, September 22, 2015
Location:    Medical Library, Large Conference Room 101A, 333 Cedar St, New Haven CT 06520
Presenter:    Rolando Milian

 

BioMart: A Research Data Management Tool for the Biomedical Sciences
Description: Some complex biomedical questions cannot be answered by reading the published literature. These may require aggregation of data from several data sets. In this regard, BioMart (www.biomart.org) is a freely available open source system that allows complex queries across more than 40 different biological data sets through a single web interface. Originally developed for the Ensembl genome browser, BioMart has been integrated into widely used software such as Galaxy, BioConductor, and Cytoskape. The BioMart interface is also used by data portals such as Ensembl, Wormbase, Gramene, and Reactome.

In this workshop we will use simple examples to demonstrate how to navigate, build queries, and save and export the results on BioMart such as:

  • how to retrieve the Ensembl mouse genes and genomic locations in the first 10 Mbp of chromosome 1 region;
  •  retrieving 1 kb of upstream sequences from a cluster of human genes identified by an expression profile experiment;
  • obtain a list of the SNPs that have been associated with RB1. For the SNPs, obtain several attributes such as source, rs ID, chromosome location, and pathogenicity

Date & Time:    12:00pm - 1:00pm, Thursday, October 1, 2015
Location:    Medical Library, Large Conference Room 101A, 333 Cedar St, New Haven CT 06520
Presenter: Rolando Milian

     

Tools for Enrichment Analysis
Description: Bioinformatics enrichment tools play an important role in identifying, annotating, and functionally analyzing large list of genes generated by high-throughput technologies (e.g. microarrary, RNA-seq, ChIP-chip). This workshop will provide an overview of the principle, type of enrichments, and the infrastructure of enrichment tools. By using concrete examples, it will also introduce some of the most popular tools for gene enrichment analysis such as DAVID, GSEA, MetaCore, and WebGestalt.

Date & Time:    12:00pm - 1:30pm, Thursday, October 15, 2015
Location:    SHM L Room 101A Yale Medical Library, 333 Cedar St. New Haven CT 06520
Presenter:    Rolando Milian

Give Your PubMed Skills a Tune Up
Description:     PubMed is one of the most comprehensive resources for searching the biomedical literature.  Most researchers have used it one time or another but it may be time to brush up on your search skills to ensure that you a relevant set of results.  In this class we will go over PubMed search techniques, including how to quickly limit a search and the role of Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) in creating more effective searches. Participants will also learn timesaving features such as saving searches and how to link out to full-text.
Date & Time:     12:00pm - 1:00pm, Monday, October 26, 2015
Location:    Medical Library, Room 103 TCC, 333 Cedar St, New Haven, CT 06520
Presenter:    Holly Nardini

Introduction to Genome Browsers
Description: In this workshop we will learn how to navigate the genome browsers from NCBI's Genome Workbench, UCSC Genome Browser, and Ensembl. These browsers are valuable tools when identifying, localizing genes, and looking at their information in the genomic context. By using concrete examples, it will be shown how to locate a human gene, download a gene sequence and its upstream sequence, locate Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs) and conserved regions, and use the browsers to download results in a batch
Date & Time:    12:00pm - 1:30pm, Thursday, November 5, 2015
Location:    Medical Library, Large Conference Room 101A, 333 Cedar St, New Haven CT 06520
Presenter:    Rolando Milian

 
Systematic Review: Conducting Comprehensive Searches
Description:    One critical step in the SR process is to comprehensively search the literature. This workshop will introduce procedures to ensure that your search is comprehensive, methodical, transparent and reproducible.
Date & Time:    12:00pm - 1:00pm, Friday, November 13, 2015
Location:    Medical Library, Room 103 TCC, 333 Cedar St, New Haven CT 06520
Presenter:    Holly Nardini

My Bibliography and SciENcv: grant reporting, compliance and biosketch through MyNCBI
Description: Although not required at this point, the NIH suggest the use of the Science Experts Network Curriculum Vitae (SciENcv), -a MyNCBI online tool- that serves as an interagency system designed to create biosketches for multiple federal agencies. This, along with the use of My Bibliography for grant activity reporting and NIH Public Access Policy compliance, increases the importance using MyNCBI as a tool for managing NIH-sponsored research. This workshop introduce researchers, research assistants and administrators on the effective use of these online tools and will cover the following among other topics:

  • How to create MyNCBI account and how to link it to the eRA Commons account
  • How to delegate your account
  • How to populate and manage My Bibliography
  • How to use My Bibliography for grant reporting/compliance
  • How to use SciENcv to create different biosketches (from scratch, from external source, etc)
  • How to create and ORCID ID* and how to link SciENcv to that ORCID ID

Date & Time:    12:00pm - 1:00pm, Wednesday, November 18, 2015
Location:    Medical Library, Large Conference Room 101A, 333 Cedar St, New Haven CT 06520
Presenter:    Rolando Milian

 
Citation Analysis: Tools of the Trade
Description:     This one-hour class examines the features of Scopus, Web of Knowledge, Essential Science Indicators and Google Scholar. Tips and techniques for utilizing these products will be discussed.
Date & Time:    12:00pm - 1:00pm, Wednesday, December 2, 2015
Location:    Medical Library, Room 103 TCC, 333 Cedar St, New Haven CT 06520
Presenter:    Holly Nardini

Making Sense of Genomic Variation
Description: In this session we will review the most popular databases and tools used to annotate, analyze and visualize genomic variations. [More details on this session soon]
Date & Time:    12:00pm - 1:30pm, Thursday, December 3, 2015
Location:    Medical Library, Large Conference Room 101A, 333 Cedar St, New Haven CT 06520
Presenter:    Rolando Milian