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Description

This panel will follow the stories of three informatics tools or methods developed by CTSAs to look back on the successes and failures of ten years supporting clinical and translational science. The stories will highlight successes where they were perhaps not expected, lessons learned about tool development and outreach, how sustainability is supported, or why a great product never got widely adopted. The discussion will then turn to the current environment of open science, and how the changes in the research lifecycle could have impacted the success of tools that were ahead of their time, or made formerly widely used tools obsolete, and how future development needs to take into account open science best practices to maximize data and software reusability and funding requirements for data management. A discussion will elicit ideas and opinions from other stakeholders in the CTSA program, and how we can use the lessons of the past to ensure success in the next five-year cycle.

Learning Objective: After attending and participating in this interactive session, participants will:
-learn about the history of tools and methods developed in the CTSAs
-discuss the successes, what we learned and how to build sustainable tools and methods
-obtain a better understanding of how the CTSAs could most effectively serve the clinical and translational community in the new open science research/publishing lifecycles
-come away with a clear idea of what worked well, and what did not work well in the last ten years of CTSA tool and methods development

Authors:

Juliane Schneider (Presenter)
Harvard Catalyst | Clinical and Translational Science Center

Kristi Holmes (Presenter)
Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine

Rose Revelo (Presenter)
Oregon Health Sciences Institute, OHSU

Diane Keogh (Presenter)
tranSMART

Presentation Materials:

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