SciTS Table of Contents

Welcome, Overview & Objectives | p. 3 Conference At A Glance | p. 4 Featured Speakers List | p. 6 Featured Panelists List | p. 8 Monday Schedule | p.10 Monday Workshop & Event Detail | p.12 Poster Session Titles | p.18 Monday Featured Speaker - Hotez | p.21 Tuesday Schedule | p.22 Tuesday Featured Speaker - Sallis | p.24 SciTS Recognition Awards | p.25 Tuesday Featured Speaker - Woolley | p.27 Tuesday Sessions & Event Detail | p.28 Tuesday Knowinnovation Workshop & Dinner | p.32 Wednesday T1 - T4 in 3 Minutes Competition | p.33 Wednesday Schedule | p.34 Wednesday Featured Speaker - Weingart | p.36 Wednesday Featured Panel | p.37 Wednesday Sessions & Event Detail | p.38 Thursday Training Schedule | p.40 Thursday Training Detail | p.41 Thursday Field Trips | p.45 Committee Structure | p.46

Science of Team Science C O N F E R E N C E May 21-24, 2018

Moody Gardens Convention Center Galveston,

2 WELCOME

CONFERENCE OVERVIEW

Public health, social, technological, and facilitate or hinder the effectiveness of collaborative environmental problems impacting our world are research, as well as evaluating the outcomes of complex, and we are increasingly able to address collaborative research. Its principal units of analysis them through scientific pursuit. This type of are the research, training, and community-based scientific challenge necessitates cross-disciplinary translational initiatives implemented by both engagement and collaboration, and it calls for private and public sector organizations. The SciTS longer-term interaction of groups of investigators: field focuses on understanding and enhancing the team science. Such team-based research antecedent conditions, collaborative processes, and collaborations are an essential feature of a robust outcomes associated with team science initiatives. translational research enterprise. These outcomes include scientific discoveries, educational outcomes, and translations of research The emerging science of team science (SciTS) field findings into new practices, patents, products, encompasses both conceptual and methodological technical advances, and policies. strategies aimed at understanding and enhancing the processes and outcomes of collaborative, team- based research. The SciTS field is concerned with understanding and managing circumstances that CONFERENCE OBJECTIVES

The annual SciTS conference:

• serves as a point of convergence for team science practitioners and investigators studying research teams

• engages funding agency program staff to provide guidance on developing and managing team science initiatives, and

• affords data providers and analytics developers insight into team tracking and analysis needs.

SCITS CONFERENCE 2018 Moody Gardens Conference Center https://www.scienceofteamscience.org/ 3 One Hope Boulevard [email protected] PROGRAM Galveston, Texas 77554 SCITS 2018 CONFERENCE - AT A GLANCE

M O N D A Y 05/21/2018

8am 9am 9:30am 10am 10:30am 11am 11:30am 12pm 12:30pm 1pm 1:30pm 2pm 2:30pm 3pm 3:30pm 4pm 4:30pm 5 pm 5:30pm 6 pm 6:30pm 7 pm 7:30pm 8 pm 8:30pm WORKSHOPS - AM WORKSHOPS - PM Effectiveness Through # M1.1 How to Write Research Integration # M2.1 Gaetano R. Registration Engaging Individual and Implementation Roles into Christine Ogilvie Lotrecchiano, EdD, PhD Grants and Position Them Within Hendren, PhD Motivation Lead Facilitator Salon H Organizational Structures Lead Facilitator Salon H

Understanding and Evaluating # M1.2 # M2.2 Tayana Lunch Buffet Building the Capacity for Andi Healthcare Multidisciplinary Soukup, PhD Effective Team Science with Hess, MS Teams in a Natural Setting Lead Facilitator Lead Facilitator Vine Interdisciplinary Translation Vine

# M1.3 Breakfast Reflective Consensus Building Ballroom “Manage the Research, Not # M2.3

Continental Derek W. Michael the Researchers“ Sign-Flow: on Wicked Problems with the Hoffmann, PhD Wade Reflect! Platform Lead Facilitator A Framework for Proactive Lead Facilitator Ivy Ivy Collaborative Leadership

T U E S D A Y 05/22/2018

8am 9am 9:30am 10am 10:30am 11am 11:30am 12pm 12:30pm 1pm 1:30pm 2pm 2:30pm 3pm 3:30pm 4pm 4:30pm 5 pm 5:30pm 6pm 6:30pm 7 pm 7:30pm 8 pm

# T1.1 # T1.2 # T2.1 # T2.2 Welcome & Lunch Buffet Thematic Thematic Paper Thematic Paper Featured Ballroom Paper Sessions/Panels Sessions/Panels Speaker Sessions/ # T1.3# M2.1

James Awards Featured Speaker Break Panels

Breakfast Sallis, PhD Salon G, Salon H, Vine & Ivy Salon G, Salon H, Vine & Ivy Continental

Networking Anita Williams SciTS Recognition SciTS Salon G, Salon H, Ballroom Woolley, PhD Networking Break Vine & Ivy Networking Break

W E D N E S D A Y 05/23/2018

8am 9am 9:30am 10am 10:30am 11am 11:30am 12pm 12:30pm 1pm 1:30pm 2pm 2:30pm 3pm 3:30pm 4pm 4:30pm 5 pm 5:30pm 6pm 6:30pm 7 pm 7:30pm 8 pm

# W1.1 Featured Panel # W2.1 # W2.2 # T2.2 # W2.3 Welcome & Edward T. Lunch Buffet Thematic Featured Speaker Palazzolo, PhD Thematic Thematic Paper Ballroom Paper # M2.1 Paper Sessions/Panels Kara L. Session/Panel Hall, PhD Sessions/ Michael Emerging Scholars

Breakfast Laurie R. Weingart, PhD O’Rourke, PhD Panels

Continental Luncheon Salon G, Salon H, Salon G, Salon H, Vine & Ivy Vine & Ivy Maritza Ballroom Salazar, PhD Networking Break Networking Break Salons F & G Ballroom

T H U R S D A Y 05/24/2018

8am 9am 9:30am 10am 10:30am 11am 11:30am 12pm 12:30pm 1pm 1:30pm 2pm 2:30pm 3pm 3:30pm 4pm 4:30pm 5pm 5:30pm 6 pm 6:30pm 7 pm 7:30pm 8 pm

# W1.1 Field Trip NASA (Lunch & Transportation Included) # T2.2

Field Trip Galveston National Laboratory (Lunch & Transportation Included) # M2.1 Team Science Training Team Science Training: Track 1 Ivy Team Sci Welcome & Status of (Transformational Leadership Skills for Trans. Science) Training Team Science Team Science Training: Track 2 Vine Lunch Ballroom (Brainstorming for Innovation in Team Science) Ballroom 4 CONFERENCE CENTER

8am 9am 9:30am 10am 10:30am 11am 11:30am 12pm 12:30pm 1pm 1:30pm 2pm 2:30pm 3pm 3:30pm 4pm 4:30pm 5 pm 5:30pm 6 pm 6:30pm 7 pm 7:30pm 8 pm 8:30pm

# M 2.4 Welcome & Opening Networking To parking garage MOODY GARDENS HOTEL MEETING ROOMS Featured Speaker Poster Session Dinner & REGISTRATION WOMENS

Peter & Happy Hour Reception Hotez,MD,PhD

Networking Break MENS Ballroom Salons B & C Ballroom C F

BALLROOM B

G

8am 9am 9:30am 10am 10:30am 11am 11:30am 12pm 12:30pm 1pm 1:30pm 2pm 2:30pm 3pm 3:30pm 4pm 4:30pm 5 pm 5:30pm 6pm 6:30pm 7 pm 7:30pm 8 pm

# T2.3 # T2.4 Thematic Paper H A

Sessions/ Knowinnovation To Hotel Panels Sponsored Workshop/Dinner Salon G, Salon H, Ballroom Vine & Ivy

VINE

8am 9am 9:30am 10am 10:30am 11am 11:30am 12pm 12:30pm 1pm 1:30pm 2pm 2:30pm 3pm 3:30pm 4pm 4:30pm 5 pm 5:30pm 6pm 6:30pm 7 pm 7:30pm 8 pm

CTSA Dinner To Convention IVY Center Ballroom Closing SessionClosing

8am 9am 9:30am 10am 10:30am 11am 11:30am 12pm 12:30pm 1pm 1:30pm 2pm 2:30pm 3pm 3:30pm 4pm 4:30pm 5pm 5:30pm 6 pm 6:30pm 7 pm 7:30pm 8 pm

SCITS CONFERENCE 2018 Moody Gardens Conference Center https://www.scienceofteamscience.org/ 5 One Hope Boulevard [email protected] PROGRAM Galveston, Texas 77554 FEATURED SPEAKERS

BALLROOM

Our Featured Speakers will present in the Main Ballroom of the Moody Gardens Conference Center on JAMES SALLIS, PHD LAURIE R. WEINGART, PHD May 21, 22, and 23. James Sallis, Ph.D., is a Laurie R. Weingart, distinguished professor Ph.D., is the Richard M. emeritus in the UCSD and Margaret S. Cyert School of Medicine’s Professor of Organizational Department of Family Behavior and Theory Medicine and Public and Interim Provost at Health. Recently, Dr. Sallis the Tepper School of joined the Australian Business, Carnegie Mellon Catholic University University. Dr. Weingart’s in Melbourne as a research examines Professorial Fellow. In negotiation, conflict, 2016, he served as the and innovation in cross- president of the Society functional teams. Dr. of Behavioral Medicine, Weingart has published and he is a member of more than 60 articles the National Academy and book chapters in the of Medicine. His work, fields of management, including multiple social psychology, NIH-funded projects, industrial psychology, focuses on the impact of cognitive psychology, and environmental factors economics. Dr. Weingart on health behaviors served as Chair of the like physical activity. Dr. Conflict Management Sallis was instrumental Division of the Academy in launching the field of of Management (2001), Active Living Research, the President of the which stimulated International Association interdisciplinary team for Conflict Management science among health (2003-2004), and the researchers and built Founding President of the environment researchers. Interdisciplinary Network At this year’s conference, for Group Research (2007 he will discuss lessons – 2012). She served as co- learned about team editor of the Annals of the science based on his Academy of Management experiences developing (2013-2017). At this interdisciplinary year’s conference, she will teams and building an discuss the role of conflict interdisciplinary field. He in interdisciplinary teams. will share his thoughts on building and sustaining team science as well as confronting institutional and professional challenges. 6 PETER HOTEZ, MD, PHD ANITA WILLIAMS WOOLLEY, PHD

Peter Hotez, M.D., Anita Williams Woolley, Ph.D., is a global health Ph.D., is an Associate advocate who focuses Professor of Organizational on vaccine development Behavior & Theory for neglected tropical at Carnegie Mellon diseases. Dr. Hotez is the University’s Tepper founding dean of Baylor School of Business. Dr. College of Medicine’s Woolley’s research and National School of Tropical teaching interests include Medicine, and among collaborative analysis and his numerous additional problem-solving in teams, roles, he serves as the online collaboration and Director of Texas Children’s collective intelligence, Hospital Center for Vaccine and managing multiple Development and as the team memberships. Baker Institute Fellow Her research has been in Disease and Poverty published in numerous at Rice University. He is journals including Science, an elected member of Organization Science, the the National Academy Academy of Management of Medicine, and in 2014 Review, and the Journal of he was selected by the Organizational Behavior, US State Department and she has received and White House as a US funding from institutions Science Envoy to advance including the National science and vaccine Science Foundation, the diplomacy in the Middle U.S. Army Research Office, East and North Africa. He and private corporations. also co-founded the Global She is currently a Network for Neglected member of the Academy Tropical Diseases as part of Management, the of the Clinton Global Interdisciplinary Network Initiative. At this year’s for Group Research, conference, he will discuss and the Association for his experiences as US Psychological Science, Science Envoy for the and she is a Senior Obama administration, Editor at Organization and he will address how Science and serves on science, technology and the advisory board for innovation emanating Human Computation. At from team science could this year’s conference, be used as tools of vaccine she will discuss Collective diplomacy and economic Intelligence in Scientific growth. Teams.

SCITS CONFERENCE 2018 Moody Gardens Conference Center https://www.scienceofteamscience.org/ 7 One Hope Boulevard [email protected] PROGRAM Galveston, Texas 77554 FEATURED PANELISTS

BALLROOM

Our Featured Panelists will present in the Main Ballroom of the Moody Gardens Conference Center on EDWARD T. PALAZZOLO, PHD MARITZA SALAZAR, PHD May 23rd. Edward T. Palazzolo, Ph.D., Dr. Palazzolo has Maritza Salazar, Ph.D., is is the Program Manager for multidisciplinary expertise an Assistant Professor the Army Research Office’s in the social sciences, of Organization and fundamental research leadership, information Management at the program on Social and technology, education, University of California – Cognitive Networks. project and program Irvine’s Paul Merage School The goal of the Social management, business of Business. Her research and Cognitive Networks analysis, and coaching. focuses on learning and program is to understand innovation in teams and His transactive memory human behaviors and organizations. systems research focuses cognitive processes on the interrelations as part of collective- Her scientific research between communication level phenomena with yields novel insights and knowledge networks an emphasis on high that enhance the and their impact on performance teams and competitiveness of firms, team performance in computational social the effectiveness of teams, organizational settings science. and the quality of the work through social network experience for individuals. Dr. Palazzolo served on analysis, multilevel Professor Salazar is the the faculty at The Ohio modeling, and recipient of numerous State University’s School of computational modeling. research awards, including Communication, Arizona a major multi-year grant State University’s Hugh from the National Science Downs School of Human Foundation focused on Communication, and was studying and facilitating the Associate Director of the integrative capacity of the SONIC Research Lab in interdisciplinary science Industrial Engineering and teams. Management Science at Northwestern University. She is the Team Science program director for both UCI’s Institute for Clinical and Translational Science and UCLA’s Clinical and Translational Science Institute.

8 KARA L. HALL, PHD MICHAEL O’ROURKE, PHD

Kara L. Hall, Ph.D., is and contributing to Michael O’Rourke, Program Director and internationally visible Ph.D., is Interim Director health scientist in the reports on SciTS, including of the MSU Center Behavioral Research as a member of the National for Interdisciplinarity Program of the Division Academies committee, and a Professor of of Cancer Control and which produced the Philosophy and faculty Population Sciences at the report: “Enhancing the in AgBioResearch at National Cancer Institute Effectiveness of Team Michigan State University. (NCI) of the National Science.” Institutes of Health (NIH). His research interests Dr. Hall also aims to include environmental She also serves as NCI’s enhance team science philosophy, the nature Director of the Science of across the scientific of epistemic integration Team Science (SciTS) and enterprise through and communication Director of NCI’s Theories activities such as serving in collaborative, cross- Initiative. Her SciTS work on external advisory disciplinary research, and is designed to help build committees for large the nature of linguistic an evidence base for team science initiatives communication between effective team science and for efforts across intelligent agents. approaches and support funding agencies aimed the translation and at enhancing support for He is the Director of dissemination of emerging team science. the Toolbox Dialogue knowledge and best Initiative (http://tdi.msu. practices into practical edu/), an NSF-sponsored tools and resources. research initiative that investigates philosophical Beyond conducting approaches to facilitating SciTS research, Dr. Hall interdisciplinary research. contributes to advancing the SciTS field by leading the development of special journal issues, serving as a driving force for the annual SciTS conference,

SCITS CONFERENCE 2018 Moody Gardens Conference Center https://www.scienceofteamscience.org/ 9 One Hope Boulevard [email protected] PROGRAM Galveston, Texas 77554 MONDAY SCHEDULE - May 21 - Morning Sessions

On Monday, May 21, the first day of the Science of Team Science 2018 conference, we will feature six dynamic workshops. Each workshop is 3.5 hours long, and attendees may choose to attend one morning workshop and one afternoon workshop.

Salon H

Effectiveness Through Engaging Individual Motivation: The MATRICx Assessment Instrument and Knowledge Producing Team (KPT) Building Interventions Gaetano R. Lotrecchiano, EdD, PhD 9am 3.5 hours # M1.1 Lead Facilitator

Vine

Understanding and Evaluating Healthcare Multidisciplinary Teams in a Natural Setting

Tayana Soukup, PhD 9am 3.5 hours # M1.2 Lead Facilitator

Ivy

Reflective Consensus Building on Wicked Problems with the Reflect! Platform

Michael Hoffmann, PhD 9am 3.5 hours # M1.3 Lead Facilitator

Ballroom

Lunch Buffet

12:30pm 1 hour

10 MONDAY SCHEDULE - May 21 - Afternoon Sessions

Salon H

How to Write Research Integration and Implementation Roles into Grants and Position Them Within Organizational Structures Christine Ogilvie Hendren, PhD 1:30pm 3.5 hours # M2.1 Lead Facilitator

Vine

Building the Capacity for Effective Team Science with Interdisciplinary Translation Andi Hess, MS 1:30pm 3.5 hours # M2.2 Lead Facilitator

Ivy

“Manage the Research, Not the Researchers“ Sign-Flow: A Framework for Proactive Collaborative Leadership Derek W. Wade 1:30pm 3.5 hours # M2.3 Lead Facilitator

Entry Hall

Networking Break

5pm 0.5 hour Ballroom

Welcome & Opening Featured Speaker Peter Hotez, MD, PhD 5:30pm 1 hour # M 2.4

Salons B & C

Poster Session & Happy Hour

6:30pm 1 hour

Ballroom

Networking Dinner Reception 7:30pm 1.5 hours

SCITS CONFERENCE 2018 Moody Gardens Conference Center https://www.scienceofteamscience.org/ 11 One Hope Boulevard [email protected] PROGRAM Galveston, Texas 77554 WORKSHOP DETAIL

Effectiveness Through Engaging Individual Motivation: The MATRICx Assessment Instrument and Knowledge Producing Team (KPT) Building Interventions

Time: Monday, May 21, Morning Session (9:00am – 12:30pm) Salon H #M1.1

The Motivation Assessment COMPETENCIES/ for Team Readiness, OBJECTIVES: Integration, and • Recognize the value Collaboration (MATRICx) is a of the MATRICx as a tool for identifying individual tool used to inform motivations for collaboration knowledge producing in knowledge producing teams (KPTs) about team (KPTs). internal motivations for collaboration The MATRICx produces • Identify teaming individual cooperation activities that and collaboration profiles are applicable to Lead Facilitator: comparable with team and participant’s teaming Gaetano R. composite data informing contexts in their host Lotrecchiano, EdD, PhD KPTs about internal institutions/situations School of Medicine and Health motivations for collaboration. • Engage in the Sciences George Washington University MATRICx data informs team interpretation of MATRICx intervention strategies that output to design and Co-Facilitators: emphasize how to capitalize apply learning activities Holly J. Falk-Krzesinski, PhD on motivations found within • Apply sample activities Elsevier teams. The 6 domains of the through participant- tool (resource acquisition, engaged simulations L. Michelle Bennett, PhD maintenance of beliefs, Center for Research Strategy Intended Audience: This workshop is National Cancer Institute recognition and reward, advancing science, building targeted to those who participate in knowledge producing teams (KPTs) Yianna Vovides, PhD relationships, and knowledge and/or are responsible for team Georgetown University transfer) provide a platform workforce development. Knowledge Center for New Designs in Learning by which teams can enhance gained through this workshop can be and Scholarship effectiveness through applied to any knowledge-producing sector that depends on team science. activities dedicated to these Participation does not require any domains. predisposition to a specific discipline or area of science. This workshop is designed to assist research administrators, scientists, laboratory and other science technicians, team leaders, principal investigators, and other professionals responsible for meaning and nurturing high team effectiveness in knowledge producing teams.

12 WORKSHOP DETAIL

Understanding and Evaluating Healthcare Multidisciplinary Teams in a Natural Setting

Time: Monday, May 21, Morning Session (9:00am – 12:30pm) Vine #M1.2

The first part of the workshop • Identify and recommend will focus on team macro- potential ways to cognition, team composition, formulate and implement team dynamics, and team-centered communication, and how these interventions are interconnected. GOALS: The second part will cover • Increased understanding methodology, with a focus on of hidden complexities of observational approaches to team work evaluating and understanding • Increased understanding team dynamics. of pitfalls associated with Lead Facilitator: intense periods of team Tayana Soukup, PhD OBJECTIVES: work King’s College London • Review hidden • Increased understanding Health Services and Population Research Department complexities and pitfalls of how cognitive Centre for Implementation Sciences, of intense periods of strategies can help UK team cognitive work with overcome pitfalls, and implications for quality and how these can be used in Co-Facilitator: safety by drawing on wide practice Katia Noyes, PhD, MPH range of literature from • Identification of potential Department of Epidemiology and psychology, neuroscience, observational methods Environmental Health behavioural economies, and tools for assessing School of Public Health Professions to organisational and clinical teams University of Buffalo, NY consumer behavior • Increased understanding • Exchange experiences of of how Conversation intense periods of cognitive Analysis can be used activity in a clinical setting to understand team • Identify and recommend dynamics ways to overcome cognitive • Identification of potential pitfalls in team cognition ways to formulate • Review observational and implement team- methodological centered interventions approaches for evaluating and understanding team Intended Audience: Healthcare dynamics in a natural professionals who work as part of a multidisciplinary clinical team, as well context (using healthcare as researchers/academics with interest teams as an exemplar) in team work and organizational • Exchange information behavior. related to evaluating teams in natural contexts with emphasis on advantages and disadvantages of such approaches

SCITS CONFERENCE 2018 Moody Gardens Conference Center https://www.scienceofteamscience.org/ 13 One Hope Boulevard [email protected] PROGRAM Galveston, Texas 77554 WORKSHOP DETAIL

Reflective Consensus Building on Wicked Problems with the Reflect! Platform

Time: Monday, May 21, Morning Session (9:00am – 12:30pm) Ivy #M1.3

The first goal of this 3.5-hour perspectives. In spite of workshop is to familiarize their significance, there are participants with the Reflect! hardly any curricula that platform, which provides prepare future generations scripted user guidance for for the challenges posed by reflective consensus building wicked problems. The Reflect! on wicked problems in teams Platform is being developed of 4 or 5 people (http:// to address this need. reflect.gatech.edu). The second and third goals are Since the Reflect! platform to stimulate a discussion is designed to overcome in which, on the one hand, various team-related barriers, Facilitator: ideas about further usages attendees will have an Michael Hoffmann, PhD of this deliberation tool are opportunity to see whether School of Public Policy generated and, on the other, this approach could work Georgia Institute of Technology possible directions of future for them in the following software developments are settings: for teaching explored. people and themselves how to cope with wicked A wicked problem is a problems; for studying complex problem whose collaboration in teams; and complexity results from the as a tool to support teams of fact that it can be framed in professionals in workshop a number of different ways, settings. depending on who is looking at it. Various ways of framing Working in teams on the the problem may depend on Reflect! platform will be the varying interests, disciplinary workshop’s main activity. or professional backgrounds, Attendees will collaborate in world-views, values, or small teams for about 2 hours differences regarding the on a wicked problem such as scale or level on which people the ethical challenges of facial think the problem should be recognition technologies addressed. For this reason, in public spaces, robotic all problems that require caregivers for the elderly, interdisciplinary collaboration inequality, climate change, or or a variety of experts are a complex planning process. wicked problems. Intended Audience: All - researchers, Wicked problems are students, and practitioners. pervasive in societies that are characterized by a multitude of—often conflicting—

14 WORKSHOP DETAIL

How to Write Research Integration and Implementation Roles into Grants and Position Them Within Organizational Structures

Time: Monday, May 21, Afternoon Session (1:30 – 5:00pm) Salon H #M2.1

This workshop will build funding such roles within on previous Intereach grants, including supported community workshops to % effort and salary numbers develop and expand our wherever possible to deliver profession by discussing and the most implementable sharing effective approaches insight to all participants. to include integration roles within grant proposals. We will augment published There are several barriers to approaches with input making the work of these from the Intereach and roles more visible, one of SciTS listservs with models the most important being for supporting Intereach Lead Facilitator: funding these positions at the roles through grants from a Christine Ogilvie proposal stage. variety of different funding Hendren, PhD vehicles. We will also break Center for the Environmental Targeted questions for this into small groups for active Implications of NanoTechnology (CEINT) workshop include: brainstorming of possible Duke University future approaches, with a • What are our targeted group devoted to IES staff funding sources? roles and a group devoted Co-Facilitators: • What are our roles in to I2S faculty roles. RDP Karen Demby, PhD The North Carolina Translational and each type of grant? professionals will be invited Clinical Sciences (NC TraCS) Institute • What is our strategy to join the group that is University of North Carolina going forward to further most relevant to their establish these roles? organizations. Matt Hotze, PhD • What is our message to Nanotechnology Enabled Water funding bodies? Intended Audience: Intereach Treatment (NEWT) Engineering • What is our message to members, I2S, IES, and/or RDP Research Center professionals interested in funding institutions? boundary-spanning roles.

Pips Veazey Workshop participants will Alaska Experimental Program to learn how to best pitch the Stimulate Competitive Research added value of Intereach roles to traditional and non- traditional funding bodies within the world of academic research.

This seminar will serve as an opportunity to study past successes and brainstorm creative future approaches for

SCITS CONFERENCE 2018 Moody Gardens Conference Center https://www.scienceofteamscience.org/ 15 One Hope Boulevard [email protected] PROGRAM Galveston, Texas 77554 WORKSHOP DETAIL

Building the Capacity for Effective Team Science with Interdisciplinary Translation

Time: Monday, May 21, Afternoon Session (1:30 – 5:00pm) Vine #M2.2

During this workshop, OBJECTIVES: participants will gain an Participants will understand introduction to a newly basic Interdisciplinary proposed method for Translation concepts and conducting effective team skills. science. Interdisciplinary Translation embeds a Participants will engage in trained interdisciplinarian discussions across disciplinary in research teams to build boundaries around example team capacity and translate scenarios. team communication across Participants will jointly create disciplinary languages and a conceptual diagram to Facilitator: cultures. serve as a boundary object Andi Hess, MS Participants will be placed into that assists the team in Interdisciplinary Translation and interdisciplinary teams and organizing a conceptual Integration Sciences framework of a scenario. Arizona State University given an example scenario with a complex system and a Participants will reflect on complex problem. One person the team discussion process will be briefly “trained” as an and articulate practices interdisciplinary translator that enhance or hinder the and given a set of guidelines collaboration experience. to follow while facilitating the team collaboration activity. Participants will EXPECTED OUTCOMES: practice communicating Participants will gain hands- across disciplinary boundaries on experience practicing and collaboratively produce effective collaboration. a conceptual diagram of Participants will co-create an the complex system, along inventory of best practices for with integrated potential interdisciplinary translation research questions. Teams will and building team capacity present these outcomes and for team science research. then engage in a discussion regarding the experience. Participants will be able to They will then reflect on the use boundary objects in process and co-create an future team scenarios as a inventory of best practices for tool for discussions that cross Interdisciplinary Translation. disciplinary boundaries.

Intended Audience: Researchers who are already participating or plan to participate in Team Science research project teams and seek the skills and tools to make projects and team communication more efficient.

16 WORKSHOP DETAIL

“Manage the Research, Not the Researchers” Sign-Flow: A Framework for Proactive Collaborative Leadership

Time: Monday, May 21, Afternoon Session (1:30 – 5:00pm) Ivy #M2.3

Sign-Flow is a selected Visualization -- Using a visual set of Interdisciplinary representation of the project Product Development best elements onto the State practices, generalized for Transition Map as a focal point any collaborative knowledge for critical project decisions. work, that provides a common Synchronization -- Team framework for project decision- members form and use making. Traditional project Transition Agreements when management tools based deciding to move a project in role- and process-centric element across States, while coordination/control methods having individual authority can restrict cross-discipline within their expertise on the Lead Facilitator: innovation, reinforce existing items within States. Derek W. Wade social silos, and create Kumido Adaptive Strategies cumbersome decision-making This separation of the State hierarchies. Sign-Flow differs Transition Map from the from these in that is centered individual project elements also serves to clarify agreements at Co-Facilitator: on a simple feed-forward flow that provides structure for project initiation. Susan Eller, MSN, RN, CHSE decisions at various states of the By the end of this session, Stanford School of Medicine project while accommodating attendees will be able to relate team member diversity. the Sign-Flow framework to In this workshop, Derek and their trans-disciplinary project Susan will present Sign-Flow team coordination needs, and as a practical distillation negotiate role and process of the most immediately discussions in the context of beneficial Lean/Kanban (a set Sign-Flow. of best practices with roots in Attendees will take away their manufacturing and software created workflow analysis, development) practices for a State Transition Map, Transition trans-disciplinary science team: Agreements, and Visualization State Transition Mapping Design as a beginning-to- -- Simplifying the complex end example of applying web of decisions, handoffs, the framework to a relevant and collaborations on any Interdisciplinary Research knowledge work project into a domain. linear, progressive series of State Intended Audience: Leaders, coordinators, Transitions which are unique to and members of trans-disciplinary project the organization. teams with no established hierarchy, who seek to unify the focus of individual team members with differing approaches, strengths, and degrees of experience.

SCITS CONFERENCE 2018 Moody Gardens Conference Center https://www.scienceofteamscience.org/ 17 One Hope Boulevard [email protected] PROGRAM Galveston, Texas 77554 POSTER SESSION & HAPPY HOUR Monday, May 21 - 6:30pm Salons B & C TRAINING AND CURRICULUM POSTER 1 John Turner, Rose M. Baker, Kerry The Team Science Program at the University of North Texas Romine

POSTER 2

Bonnie Spring, Ekaterina A. Klyachko, Phillip W. Rak, Online Team Science Training for Health and Medical H. Gene McFadden, Angela Professionals: Teamscience.net Pfammatter, Donald Hedeker, Juned Siddique POSTER 3

Helen Yin, Christina Ahn, Marissa Developing Future LEADers: The Leadership Emerging in Academic Hansen, Traci Barros, Britany Departments Program Singleton, Suzanne Farmer, Byron Cryer POSTER 4

Diana Lowry, Melinda L. Irwin, The Transdisciplinary Research in Energetics and Cancer (TREC) Training Marian L. Neuhouser, Ruth E. Workshop Patterson, Jennifer Ligibel, Kathryn Schmitz, Graham Colditz, Linda Nebeling INTERPROFESSIONAL COLLABORATION POSTER 5

Tsion Habtamu, Mirinda Gormley, User-Centered Mobile Telestroke Platform Development Using Clinical Alfred Brown, Pamela Brown, Michelle Simulation-Based Usability Testing Stockner, Joshna Seelam, Sherita Chapman-Smith POSTER 6 The Faith Health and Family Collaborative: A Community-Based Kamisha Escoto, Chloe Dorsey, Crystel Roberson, Lorna Transdisciplinary Partnership H. McNeill POSTER 7

Arif Pendi, Jeffrey C. Wang, Frank Development of a Multi-disciplinary Team to Study Preoperative Anxiety in L. Acosta, Rana Movahedi, Adana Melkonian, Alan Spine Surgery: A Case Study Shahbazi, David Safani, Gligor Gucev POSTER 8 Joshna Seelam, Tsion Habtamu, Michelle Stockner, Pamela Brown, Using RE-AIM to Evaluate Mobile Prehospital Telestroke Intervention Alfred Brown, Mirinda Gormley, Sherita Chapman-Smith

18 MENTORSHIP POSTER 9 Sujin Horwitz Mosaic Mentoring and Cross-Cultural Training for Medical Professionals

POSTER 10

Ashlynn Kogut, Michele Norton, Role of Mentors in Multidisciplinary Innovation and Design Student Teams Amanda Garr, Michael Beyerlein

NETWORK ANALYSIS POSTER 11

Felichismo Kabo, Xiao Shi, From Networks to Research Funding: Transformative Impacts of a CTSA George Mashour

POSTER 12 Using Graph Networks to Manage Cross-Institution, Cross-Discipline Research Carrie Roever, Luke Sheneman, Programs Casey Blair, Rick Shumaker

POSTER 13

Damayanthi (Dayan) Ranwala, Impact of Pilot Project Funding on Collaborations: An Assessment of Team Jihad S. Obeid, Tami L. Crawford, Science Using Research Network Analysis Perry V. Halushka

DEFINING AND REVIEWING FOR TEAM SCIENCE POSTER 14

Hannah Love, Jenifer E. Cross, The Central Role of Women in the Development, Process and Outcomes of Ellen Fisher Scientific Teams

POSTER 15

Rachel Nelson Think About It: How Attitudes About Objectivity Influence Motivation

POSTER 16 Jon Zurn Editorial Teaming to Improve Research Proposal Quality and Competitiveness

POSTER 17

Deborah DiazGranados, What Does Team Science Look Like? Gerald F. Moeller

SCITS CONFERENCE 2018 Moody Gardens Conference Center https://www.scienceofteamscience.org/ 19 One Hope Boulevard [email protected] PROGRAM Galveston, Texas 77554 SciTS

We help researchers make new discoveries, collaborate with their colleagues, and give them the knowledge they need to find funding. We help governments and universities evaluate and improve their research strategies. We help doctors save lives, providing insight for physicians to find the right clinical answers, and we support nurses and other healthcare professionals throughout their careers. Our goal is to expand the boundaries of knowledge for the benefit of humanity

https://www.elsevier.com/

20 FEATURED SPEAKER

Vaccines, Autism, and Blue Marble Health

Time: Monday, May 21 (5:30 - 6:30pm) Ballroom #M2.4

Through Gavi, the Vaccine Despite these obstacles, Alliance, we have made a new generation of tremendous progress innovative vaccines is under on reducing deaths development, which could from childhood vaccine- build around the latest preventable diseases, with innovations in gene editing, an 80% or greater decrease single cell RNA sequencing, for some diseases since and other new technologies. 2000. However, our gains are fragile due to a failure in Suggested readings: public policy and advocacy https://jhupbooks.press.jhu. and the rise of an aggressive edu/content/blue-marble- Peter Hotez, MD, PhD anti-vaccine movement, health Dean, National School of Tropical Medicine especially in Europe and the Professor, Departments of America. These reversals of https://jhupbooks.press.jhu. Pediatrics and Molecular Virology & Microbiology gains and global goals may edu/content/vaccines-did- Baylor College of Medicine soon extend to the world’s not-cause-rachels-autism Director, Center for Vaccine large low- and middle- Development Texas Children’s Hospital income nations. In parallel, https://www.texasmonthly. there is an urgent need for com/articles/scientist-stop- translational medicine related measles-texas/ to new vaccines for emerging pandemic threats and poverty-related neglected diseases, but there too are serious policy failures, social determinants such as war and shifting poverty, climate change, as well as some key scientific hurdles.

SCITS CONFERENCE 2018 Moody Gardens Conference Center https://www.scienceofteamscience.org/ 21 One Hope Boulevard [email protected] PROGRAM Galveston, Texas 77554 TUESDAY SCHEDULE - May 22 - Morning Sessions

On Tuesday, May 22, we will host featured speakers, thematic paper sessions and panels, and a special workshop sponsored by Knowinnovation, an organization that specializes in facilitating and accelerating academic, scientific, interdisciplinary innovation. This workshop will be held between 6:00 and 8:00pm, and dinner will be provided.

Ballroom

Welcome & Featured Speaker James Sallis, PhD

9am 1 hour # T 1.1

Ballroom

SciTS Recognition Awards Outstanding Paper Award & SciTS Meritorious Contribution Awards

10am 0.5 hour

Lead Facilitator Entry Hall

Networking Break

10:30am 0.5 hour Salon G, Salon H, Vine, & Ivy

Thematic Paper Sessions Salon Vasko Salon Norris Vine Anderson Ivy Wharton G Turner H Pena Soukup Cross

11am 1 hour # T 1.2

Ballroom

Buffet Lunch & Featured Speaker Anita Williams Woolley, PhD 12pm 1.5 hours # T 1.3

22 TUESDAY SCHEDULE - May 22 - Afternoon Sessions

Salon G, Salon H, Vine, & Ivy

Thematic Paper Sessions/Panels Salon Panel: Salon Chao Bhavnani Panel: G Salinero H Schwab Vine Pavlidis Ivy Wooten Turner Ahmadpoor 1:30pm 1.5 hours # T 2.1 Lead Facilitator Entry Hall

Networking Break

3pm 0.25 hour Salon G, Salon H, Vine, & Ivy

Thematic Paper Sessions/Panels Salon Salon Panel: Lee Vine Moon Ivy Panel: G Ranwala H Spell Schaeffer Hubbs McCormack Ladd 3:15pm 1.5 hours Kabo Spitzer # T 2.2 Entry Hall

Networking Break

4:45pm 0.25 hour Salon G, Salon H, Vine, & Ivy

Thematic Paper Sessions Salon Falk-Krzesinski Salon Bhavnani Ortiz Ivy Love G Tyshchuk H Struck Vine Lee Mitchell Sedlock Fisher 5pm 1 hour # T 2.3

Ballroom

Knowinnovation Sponsored Workshop & Dinner

6pm 2 hours # T 2.4

Anita Williams Woolley, PhD

SCITS CONFERENCE 2018 Moody Gardens Conference Center https://www.scienceofteamscience.org/ 23 One Hope Boulevard [email protected] PROGRAM Galveston, Texas 77554 FEATURED SPEAKER

Lessons Learned from Leading an Interdisciplinary Research Funding Program: From Teams to Studies to Application Time: Tuesday, May 22, Morning Session (9:00 - 10:00am) Ballroom #T1.1

Active Living Research was This presentation will

a 15-year funding program summarize key methods

supported by the Robert used to support the success

Wood Johnson Foundation of interdisciplinary teams

that facilitated development and present lessons learned

of a new and wildly related to team development

interdisciplinary research area and functioning, leadership,

to understand environment collaborative development

and policy drivers of physical of methods and measures,

James Sallis, PhD activity. Key disciplines developing study aims, Distinguished Professor Emeritus Department of Family Medicine and included public health, publication, and active Public Health UCSD School of Medicine exercise science, behavioral communication of results to

sciences, city planning, researchers, practitioners,

transportation, parks and policy makers, and advocates.

recreation, geography,

landscape architecture, and

policy science. Engaging this

wide range of disciplines was

essential for building relevant

evidence but presented

challenges.

24 SCITS RECOGNITION AWARDS

The SciTS Meritorious Contribution Awards & Outstanding Paper Award

Time: Tuesday, May 22, Morning Session (10 - 10:30am) Ballroom

The SciTS Meritorious The SciTS Outstanding Contribution Awards Paper Award acknowledges recognize abstract the single best full paper submissions that demonstrate submitted for the annual excellence in their relevance, conference that addresses research approach, clarity, significant theoretical or innovation, and significance practical issues of importance to important topics in team to the team science science. community. It is based on evidence, with potential to SciTS Meritorious Contribution impact team, organizational, Awards are bestowed in four or system level dynamics. categories: The Outstanding Paper in • Oral Presentation 2018 will also receive special consideration for publication • Emerging Scholar Oral Presentation in the Journal of Applied • Poster Presentation Behavioral Science.

• Emerging Scholar Poster Presentation Join us in congratulating this year’s awardees, to be announced at the meeting!

SCITS CONFERENCE 2018 Moody Gardens Conference Center https://www.scienceofteamscience.org/ 25 One Hope Boulevard [email protected] PROGRAM Galveston, Texas 77554 Accelerating Scientific Innovation

What We Do

Knowinnovation specializes in facilitating and accelerating academic, scientific, interdisciplinary innovation. In the simplest terms: we help smart people have interesting conversations about complex questions. This leads to novel ideas and innovative research.

We work in the realm of creativity, problem solving, leadership, managing change, research, technology – all the things that go hand-in-hand with innovation.

26 FEATURED SPEAKER

Collective Intelligence in Scientific Teams

Time: Tuesday, May 22, Lunch (12:00 – 1:30pm) Ballroom #T1.3

In this session, Professor Anita Williams Woolley will discuss recent research on collective intelligence in teams.

Then, she will identify some of the key leverage points for building smart teams from the ground up, including:

1. Identifying the right people to compose the team 2. Shaping the right goals 3. Fostering high quality collaboration

Anita Williams Woolley, PhD

Associate Professor of Organizational Behavior & Theory Tepper School of Business Carnegie Mellon University

SCITS CONFERENCE 2018 Moody Gardens Conference Center https://www.scienceofteamscience.org/ 27 One Hope Boulevard [email protected] PROGRAM Galveston, Texas 77554 THEMATIC PAPER SESSIONS - DETAIL Tuesday, May 22, Morning Session (11:00am – 12:00pm)

Future Directions Salon G #T1.2a

Moderator: Elias Samuels

Paper: Applying Artificial Paper: Complex Adaptive Intelligence, Neural Networks, Team Systems (CATS) (John and Machine Learning to Turner et al) SciTS (Stephanie Vasko)

Non-Academic Dimensions of Team Science Salon H #T1.2b

Moderator: M Scott Poole

Paper: The Integral Role of Paper: Policy Levers to Open Non-Scientific Specialists: Federal Laboratories and A UK Case Study Incentivize Public-Private R&D (Ruth Norris et al) Collaborations (Vanessa Pena)

Communication in Team Science - Analysis and Facilitation Vine #T1.2c

Moderator: Michael O’Rourke

Paper: Information Sharing Paper: Gaps and Overlaps Techniques to Close Gaps in in Healthcare Team Distance Collaboration Communication: Analysis of (Laura Anderson et al) Speech (Tayana Soukup et al)

Learning Environments for Team Science Ivy #T1.2d

Moderator: Anne Heberger Marino

Paper: Syncopated Pandemonium: Paper: Teaching Team Science Redesigning a College for (Jennifer Cross et al) Translational Science and Learning (Christopher Wharton et al)

28 THEMATIC PAPER SESSIONS/PANELS - DETAIL Tuesday, May 22, Afternoon Session 1 (1:30 - 2:50pm)

Panel - Establishing Trust in a Distributed Team to Cultivate Systemic Change Salon G #T2.1a

Moderator: Stephen Crowley

Panelists: Kennan Salinero, Anne Heberger Marino, Pips Veazey, Mery Miguez, Ulrike Kloiber, Andrea Chlopczik, Kimberley Brown Magnan

Leadership Salon H #T2.1b

Moderator: Heather Billings

Paper: Introduction to Paper: Contextual Factors Paper: Team Emergence Leadership Training for Pre- Influencing Collaboration: Leadership Development Doctoral Students Engaged in Using a Followership Lens and Evaluation Model Using Team Science (Karen Schwab) Complexity Theory (Celia Chao et al) (John Turner et al)

Team Performance Metrics Vine #T2.1c

Moderator: Felichism Kabo

Paper: Team-Centered Paper: Scholar Plot: Well- Paper: Decoding Teams: Informatics: Leveraging Team Abstracted and Scalable Team Output and Individual Science for Designing Effective Interface for Academic Productivity (Mohammad Informatics Solutions Performance Ahmadpoor et al) (Suresh Bhavnani et al) (Ioannis Pavlidis et al)

Panel - Team Scientists as Subjects: An Examination of Three Preliminary Studies Ivy #T2.1d

Moderator: Erin Blakeney

Evaluation of a Pilot Team An Exploration of How Emergent Randomized Trials to Understand Leadership Assessment Center Collaboration Patterns Relate to and Enhance Early-Career for Team Scientists (Kevin C. Project Performance of Embedded Collaboration in the CTSA Wooten et al) Interdisciplinary mHealth Teams Network: Refining Process and (Bonnie Spring et al) Outcomes (Larry Hawk et al)

SCITS CONFERENCE 2018 Moody Gardens Conference Center https://www.scienceofteamscience.org/ 29 One Hope Boulevard [email protected] PROGRAM Galveston, Texas 77554 THEMATIC PAPER SESSIONS/PANELS - DETAIL Tuesday, May 22, Afternoon Session 2 (3:15 - 4:35pm)

Panel - Case Studies and Lessons Learned in Promoting Team Science in Cross- Disciplinary Collaborations and Institutions Salon G #T2.2a

Moderator: Karen Demby Understanding Social Examples of Mechanisms Strategies and Challenges Team Science, Not Only Mechanisms of Team to Stimulate Cross- in Application of the About Science Science: Using a Case Disciplinary Team Evidence Base to Promote (Elizabeth Travis) Example of Individual Collaborations Translational Team Science and Team Level Analysis (Dayan Ranwala) (Allan Brasier) (Gaetano R. Lotrecchiano)

Building Teams in a Biomedical Context Salon H #T2.2b

Moderator: Maritza Salazar-Campo

Paper: Interprofessional Paper: Fault Lines and Best Paper: Using TL1 Teams Paper: Will They, or Team Approach for Practices in the Treatment to Transform Clinical & Not? Factors Associated Developing Sexual Assault of Substance Abuse Translational Science with Consulting a CTSA Assessment Training (Chester Spell et al) Training (Wayne (Felichism Kabo et al) (Wendy Lee) McCormack et al)

Team Science – The Student Perspective Vine #T2.2c

Moderator: John Kues

Paper: Student Paper: Student Reflections Paper: Case Study of Paper: Collaborative Perceptions Before and of Interprofessional Interdisciplinary Student Team Science Supports After Interprofessional Experiences in the Research Teams: Factors, Integrative Research in the Experiences in Biomedical Biomedical Sciences Outcomes, and Lessons Chesapeake Bay Training (Joon Moon et al) (August Schaeffer et al) Learned (Brent Ladd) (Suzanne Spitzer et al)

Panel - The Toolbox Dialogue Initiative: Evidence of Effectiveness and New Directions Ivy #T2.2d

Moderator: Michael Burnham-Fink

Panelists: Graham Hubbs, Bethany Laursen, Marisa A. Rinkus, Brian Robinson, Stephanie E. Vasko

30 THEMATIC PAPER SESSIONS - DETAIL Tuesday, May 22, Afternoon Session 3 (5:00 - 6:00pm)

Big Data Bibliography Salon G #T2.3a

Moderator: Michael Hoffman

Paper: Mendeley Science of Paper: First Steps to Team Science (SciTS) Library Systematic Review of Very (Holly J. Falk-Krzesinski) Large Biomedical Research Teams (Yulia Tyshchuk et al)

Tools for Team Science Salon H #T2.3b

Moderator: Stephanie Vasko

Paper: Exploring Visual Analytics Paper: Team Disciplinary Paper: Assessing Quality as Boundary Objects in Diversity: Open Innovation Improvement Team Processes Multidisciplinary Science Teams of a Widget - A Meeting Observation Tool (Suresh Bhavnani et al) (Brooke Struck et al) (Emily Sedlock et al)

Collaborators – Who and How Vine #T2.3c

Moderator: Andi Hess

Paper: Stages in the Paper: Research Collaboration Formation of Laboratory in the Life Sciences Research Groups (Kyuseon Lee et al) (Jose Ortiz)

Team Evaluation Ivy #T2.3d

Moderator: Marisa Rinkus

Paper: The Connection Between Paper: Employing a Paper: Do Interventions for Team Development and Team Communication Chemistry Academic Scientific Teams Outcomes Framework to Advance Matter? (Ellen Fisher et al) (Hannah Love et al) Team-Based Cancer Research (Breeana Mitchell et al)

SCITS CONFERENCE 2018 Moody Gardens Conference Center https://www.scienceofteamscience.org/ 31 One Hope Boulevard [email protected] PROGRAM Galveston, Texas 77554 SPONSORED WORKSHOP & DINNER Tuesday, May 22 (6:00 - 8:00pm) Ballroom #T2.4

Dinner and a Grand Challenge: This workshop will use current Come Dine with Us & Tackle the work to explore how the science Opioid Use Epidemic and Other of team science could help to Grand-Challenge Areas through create new, and more effective, Engineered Team Science solutions to this and many other grand challenge-like problems. Collaborative interdisciplinary works are required to tackle This hands-on interactive difficult multi-faceted problems. workshop will: Knowinnovation would like to 1. Introduce you to welcome you for dinner and an Knowinnovation and the interactive session to learn about Substance Use Innovation one model being implemented Lab model for tackling across the federal government challenges requiring diverse and universities alike to tackle disciplines of knowledge. Co-Facilitators: these wicked problems. 2. Explore through group Donnalyn Roxey interactions how team At this workshop, members of science might help to Stavros Michailidis the Knowinnovation team will impact interdisciplinary demonstrate their model for research. strategic collaboration through an example they are currently The workshop could offer three deeply involved with: the opioid main benefits to attendees: use crisis in the . 1. Learning about a new This model, which was developed approach to generating in the UK, adopted by the NSF, novel research ideas, and NIH, NASA and others, and since collaborations, through adapted in partnership with the the deliberate creation of University at Buffalo CTSA and interdisciplinary teams. institutions around the US, is now 2. Creating a research agenda being disseminated to the CTSA for team science researchers network and beyond. in this area. 3. Formation of a network Deaths through opioid use have of researchers and risen dramatically over the last practitioners with a 10 years. Although significant focus on this topic. The efforts are being made to combat purpose of the network the problem, it seems likely that will be to accelerate the existing approaches will not be dissemination of innovative sufficient to bring the problem research ideas. under control. Intended Audience: All - researchers, students, and practitioners.

32 T1-T4 IN 3 (MINUTES) COMPETITION Wednesday, May 23 (3:30 - 5:00pm) Ivy #W2.3d

T1-T4 in 3 (Minutes) is an • Capacity to engage in adaptation of the University meaningful dialog with a lay of Queensland’s Three Minute audience Thesis (3MT®) competition, in • Capability of “commanding which PhD students must present an audience” their 80,000-word thesis in 3 - Confident stage minutes or less to a lay audience. presence This competition provides the - Eye contact and vocal opportunity for participants range to strongly and cogently - Pace present their ideas and research • Economy of scale for discoveries to non-specialists. presentation prop (single PowerPoint slide) Our adapted version, T1-T4 in 3 (Minutes), still requires a This competition provides travel awards for the first, second, Co-Facilitators: presentation in three minutes or Sharon Croisant, PhD less to a lay audience, but rather and third best translations, as than a thesis, the topics center determined by a panel of judges, Kelley Murfin, MSPH on the presenters’ research. The as well as a “people’s choice” purpose of this exercise is to award, as determined by the increase health and scientific audience. literacy among our communities, to bridge gaps between the TRCC Challenge scientific community and the This year, UTMB challenged Our competitors will compete for four prizes! public, and to improve the its sister CTSA institutions to a capacity of our trainees to statewide competition, to be effectively communicate complex held in conjunction with the First Place: $1000 science to a lay audience. 2018 Science of Team Science meeting. In preparation for this Second Place: $750 This single activity thus supports historic event, we provided an Third Place: $500 each of our other dissemination orientation and training session mechanisms by increasing and asked that each campus People’s Choice: $1000 our trainees’ confidence in identify a T1-T4 in 3 (Minutes) their ability to converse with “Champion” to manage the non-specialists regarding their process locally. research, including not only the public, but potential funders, UTMB staff provided all colleagues, and the media. This background materials and efficacy further increases these a training curriculum for trainees’ likelihood to participate conducting the competitions in additional opportunities to in , Dallas, and San share their research. Our trainees Antonio. are challenged to acquire skills including: The winners from each campus • Ability to convey context, received travel support, in relevance, and significance addition to the monetary prizes, • Confidence in public speaking to then compete in the statewide • Organization of thoughts competition, to be held during • Ability to communicate in the conference on Wednesday, language appropriate to a lay May 23. or non-specialist audience SCITS CONFERENCE 2018 Moody Gardens Conference Center https://www.scienceofteamscience.org/ 33 One Hope Boulevard [email protected] PROGRAM Galveston, Texas 77554 WEDNESDAY SCHEDULE - May 23 - Morning Sessions

On Wednesday, May 23, we will host another featured speaker, a featured panel, more thematic paper sessions and panels, a translational research student competition, and the conference closing session. Following the closing session, representatives of CTSA-funded institutions are invited to a special dinner meeting.

Ballroom

Welcome & Featured Speaker Laurie R. Weingart, PhD 9am 1.25 hours #W1.1

Entry Hall

Networking Break

10:20pm 0.25 hour

Ballroom

Featured Edward T. Kara L. Panel Palazzolo, PhD Hall, PhD

Maritza Michael Salazar, PhD O’Rourke, PhD Lead Facilitator 10:45 am 1.5 hours #W2.1

Ballroom & Salons F & G

Buffet Lunch (Ballroom) & Emerging Scholars Luncheon (Salons F & G)

12:15pm 1.25 hour

34 WEDNESDAY SCHEDULE - May 23 - Afternoon Sessions

Salon G, Salon H, Vine, & Ivy

Thematic Paper Sessions/Panels Salon Salon Panel: Qin Vine Dodd Ivy Panel: G Coleman H Burnman-Fink Wang Blakeney Bhavnani Park 1:30 pm 1.5 hours #W2.2 Fowler Entry Hall

Networking Break

3 pm 0.5 hour Salon G, Salon H, Vine, & Ivy

Thematic Paper Sessions Salon Kotarba Hess Salon Vine Salazar Laursen T1 - T4 G Poole H Freeth Falk-Krzesinski Ivy in 3 Crowley Wu Comp. 3:30 pm 1.5 hours #W2.3

Ballroom

Closing Session

5 pm 0.5 hour

Lead Facilitator Ballroom

CTSA Dinner

6:30 pm 1.5 hours

SCITS CONFERENCE 2018 Moody Gardens Conference Center https://www.scienceofteamscience.org/ 35 One Hope Boulevard [email protected] PROGRAM Galveston, Texas 77554 FEATURED SPEAKER

Team Collaboration and Conflict

Time: Wednesday, May 23, Morning Session (9:00 – 10:20am) Ballroom #W1.1

Almost by definition, research This keynote will discuss the teams require members role of perceptual gap-based to work across disciplines conflict in interdisciplinary and must integrate a teams and how teams can breadth of perspectives to harness that conflict via be effective. Yet, working effective conflict expression across boundaries is difficult and management. because our different knowledge bases and value systems cause us to define Laurie R. Weingart, PhD and approach problems Interim Provost Tepper School of Business differently – resulting in Richard M. and Margaret S. Cyert perceptual gaps. Professor of Organizational Behavior and Theory Carnegie Mellon University

36 FEATURED PANEL

Funding SciTS Research: Historical Perspectives, Practical Lessons Learned, and New Opportunities

Time: Wednesday, May 23, Morning Session (10:45am - 12:15pm) Ballroom #W2.1

The science of team Drs. Maritza Salazar and science aims to generate an Michael O’Rourke will share evidence-base and develop their experiences in obtaining translational applications to funding for SciTS research help maximize the efficiency through a federal agency and and effectiveness of team university support as well science. To achieve this goal, as more opportunistic and Edward T. Kara L. entrepreneurial approaches. Palazzolo, PhD Hall, PhD over the past decade, SciTS Program Manager Director, Science of scholars have leveraged They will discuss challenges, Social and Cognitive Team Science Networks Director, Theories a range of resources and lessons learned, and practical Army Research Office Initiative Health Behaviors strategies in order to conduct recommendations for Research Branch research and develop policies obtaining funding for SciTS National Cancer Institute and practices. research.

Dr. Kara Hall will begin with The panel will close with a historical perspective of featured speaker, Dr. Edward SciTS funding by providing a Palazzolo. Dr. Palazzolo will review of the funding sources discuss current funding reported in more than 100 opportunities for SciTS empirical SciTS studies and research in the Department Maritza Michael Salazar, PhD O’Rourke, PhD reflect on the implications of of Defense and Army Assistant Professor Interim Director, different funding sources for Research Office, as well as of Organization and MSU Center for Management Interdisciplinarity the type of research and its new directions for research in Paul Merage School of Professor of Philosophy, Business AgBio Research relationship to the growth of areas such as human-agent- University of Michigan State SciTS. teaming. California – Irvine University

SCITS CONFERENCE 2018 Moody Gardens Conference Center https://www.scienceofteamscience.org/ 37 One Hope Boulevard [email protected] PROGRAM Galveston, Texas 77554 THEMATIC PAPER SESSIONS/PANELS - DETAIL Wednesday, May 23, Afternoon Session 1 (1:30 - 3:00pm)

Panel - Team Science for All: But How Do We Make It Work? Salon G #W2.2a Moderator: Amanda Vogel

Team Science for All: Conception Team Science for All: Team Science for All: (Nana Coleman et al) Implementation Assessment (Kyler M. Godwin et al) (Alana Newell et al)

Team Science – Analytics Salon H #W2.2b

Moderator: Graham Hubbs

Paper: Collaboration Capacity: Paper: Interactive Bibliometric Paper: Accelerating Innovation Measuring the Impact of Network Mapping for in Multidisciplinary Scientific Cyberinfrastructure-Enabled Evaluating Interdisciplinary Teams through Visual Analytics Collaboration Networks Research Groups (Suresh Bhavnani et al) (Jian Qin et al) (Michael Burnman-Fink)

Enabling Collaboration – Community Structure Vine #W2.2c

Moderator: Christine Hendren

Paper: Key Factors for Paper: A HATENATHON Paper: Facilitating and Paper: Encouraging Self- Success of Transdisciplinary Approach Report on Implementing Team Organized Collaborations Research Teams Promoting SciTS in Japan Science During the ECHO’s at an Interdisciplinary (Paul Dodd et al) (GE Wang et al) Developmental Phase Research Institute (Christina Park et al) (Kristine Fowler)

Panel - Translating Team Training from Healthcare and Education to CTSA Research Teams

Ivy #W2.2d

Moderator: Bonnie Spring Panelists: Erin Blakeney, Brenda Zierler, Jennifer Sprecher

Team Training with Team Training with Practicing Incorporation of Lean-R into Interprofessional Health Healthcare Teams Team Science Professions Faculty

38 THEMATIC PAPER SESSIONS - DETAIL Wednesday, May 23, Afternoon Session 2 (3:30 - 4:50pm)

Identifying Tasks and Roles to Enhance Team Science Salon G #W2.3a

Moderator: Deborah DiazGranados

Paper: The Role(s) of the Paper: Enhancing Team Paper: Is Collaboration a Consultant in Team Science Science Through Mobilizing Scientific Virtue? (Joseph Kotarba et al) the Diversity-Creativity (Stephen Crowley) Tension (Marshall Poole et al)

Creating Innovators Salon H #W2.3b

Moderator: Hannah Love

Paper: Building Interdisciplinary Paper: Some Like It Cool: Paper: Only Diamond Can Cut Capacity for Team Science: The Tracking Changing Temperatures Diamond in Science Interdisciplinary Translation of Interdisciplinary Team (Lingfei Wu) Initiative (Andi Hess) Dynamics (Rebecca Freeth)

Improving Our Practices Vine #W2.3c

Moderator: Dayan Ranwala

Paper: Measuring Cognitive Paper: Evidence for Integrative Paper: Interdisciplinary Team Interaction Capability in Reasoning in Interdisciplinary Science Proposal Development Teams: Scale Development and Team Science (Holly J. Falk-Krzesinski) Validation (Maritza Salazar et al) (Bethany Laursen et al)

T1 – T4 in 3 (Minutes) Competition Ivy #W2.3d

Moderators: Sharon Croisant & Kelley Murfin

SCITS CONFERENCE 2018 Moody Gardens Conference Center https://www.scienceofteamscience.org/ 39 One Hope Boulevard [email protected] PROGRAM Galveston, Texas 77554 THURSDAY - May 24 - Team Science Training

Our innovative new Team Science Training workshop will engage a small group of participants in hands-on learning specifically relevant to investigators participating in team science, including topics like: - The discipline of team science and best practices for becoming a better team scientist - - Transformational leadership skills that you can use to assess and enhance your ability - - Brainstorming for innovation and exploration of relevant team dynamics and best practices -

Ballroom

Team Science Training: Welcome & Opening Remarks Allan R. Brasier, MD 8:30am

Team Science Training: Status of Team Science

Kara L. Hall, PhD 8:45am 1 Hour #TH1.1

Ivy

Team Science Training: Track 1 Transformational Leadership Skills for Translational Sciences

Kevin Eugene Wooten, PhD Frazier 9:30am 2.5 hours #TH1.2 Lead Facilitator

Vine

Team Science Training: Track 2 Brainstorming for Innovation in Team Science Maritza Salazar, PhD 9:30am 2.5 hours #TH1.3 Lead Facilitator

Ballroom

Team Science Training: Lunch & Conclusion

12pm12:15pm 1 hour1.25 hour

40 TEAM SCIENCE TRAINING

Welcome & Opening Remarks

Time: Thursday, May 24, Training Session 8:30am Ballroom

Welcome & Opening Remarks

Allan R. Brasier, MD, is this He has received 10 patents year’s SciTS conference chair to date, and his 240 and is the Executive Director publications have been of the Institute for Clinical cited more than 10,000 and Translational Research times. Dr. Brasier is a Allan R. Brasier, MD (ICTR) at the University of distinguished leader with a Executive Director, Institute for Clinical and Translational Research Wisconsin-Madison. Dr. passion for creating highly Senior Associate Dean for Clinical and Translational Research Brasier was a faculty member effective multi-disciplinary University of Wisconsin – Madison at the University of Texas research teams. Medical Branch in Galveston from 1991 to 2018. At UTMB, he served as the director of the Institute for Translational Sciences, director of the Sealy Center for Molecular Medicine, and the Nelda C. and H.J. Lutcher Stark Distinguished Professor in the Department of Internal Medicine.

SCITS CONFERENCE 2018 Moody Gardens Conference Center https://www.scienceofteamscience.org/ 41 One Hope Boulevard [email protected] PROGRAM Galveston, Texas 77554 TEAM SCIENCE TRAINING

Status of Team Science

Time: Thursday, May 24, Training Session (8:30 - 9:30am) Ballroom #TH1.1

CURRENT STATE OF TEAM SCIENCE • What Do We Know • What Do We Not Know • Research-Based Best Practices • Becoming a Better Team Scientist

Kara L. Hall, PhD, is Program development of special Director and health scientist journal issues, serving in the Behavioral Research as a driving force for the Program of the Division annual SciTS conference, of Cancer Control and and contributing to Kara L. Hall, PhD Population Sciences at the internationally visible Director, Science of Team Science Director, Theories Initiative, National Cancer Institute reports on SciTS, including Health Behaviors Research Branch National Cancer Institute (NCI) of the National Institutes as a member of the National of Health (NIH). She also Academies committee, serves as NCI’s Director of which produced the the Science of Team Science report: “Enhancing the (SciTS) and Director of NCI’s Effectiveness of Team Theories Initiative. Her SciTS Science.” Dr. Hall also work is designed to help aims to enhance team build an evidence base science across the scientific for effective team science enterprise through activities approaches and support the such as serving on external translation and dissemination advisory committees of emerging knowledge and for large team science best practices into practical initiatives and for efforts tools and resources. Beyond across funding agencies conducting SciTS research, Dr. aimed at enhancing Hall contributes to advancing support for team science. the SciTS field by leading the

42 TEAM SCIENCE TRAINING

Track 1: Transformational Leadership Skills for Translational Science

Time: Thursday, May 24, Training Session (9:30am - 12 pm) Ivy #TH1.2

TOPICS • Distinction Between Types of Leadership • Self-Assessment of Transformational Leader Strengths • The Kouzes & Posner Leadership Challenge Model • Case Analysis and Discussion • Behavioral Exemplars and Best Practices in Applying the Leadership Challenge Model to Leading Scientific Teams • Back-Home Application Planning

Kevin Wooten, PhD, is Eugene Frazier is a Senior Chair and Professor of Talent and Organization Management and Human Development Consultant at the University of Texas Kevin Wooten, PhD Resource Management at the Medical Branch. Mr. Frazier Consulting Director of Tracking and University of Houston at Clear Evaluation is highly recognized for his University of Texas Medical Branch Lake. He serves as Consulting expertise as an executive Director of Tracking and coach and innovative Evaluation for the University skill-set in the field of of Texas Medical Branch’s Leadership Development. Institute for Translational He is the co-author of Sciences, as well as lead team competency based science consultant. modeling and developer of the community of practice for the scientific mindset within UTMB’s Institute for Translational Sciences.

Eugene Frazier Senior Talent and Organization Development Consultant University of Texas Medical Branch

SCITS CONFERENCE 2018 Moody Gardens Conference Center https://www.scienceofteamscience.org/ 43 One Hope Boulevard [email protected] PROGRAM Galveston, Texas 77554 TEAM SCIENCE TRAINING

Track 2: Brainstorming for Innovation in Team Science

Time: Thursday, May 24, Training Session (9:30am - 12 pm) Vine #TH1.3

TOPICS • Innovation and Translational Team Science • Team Dynamics, Structure, and Creativity • Steps and Stages of Facilitating a Brainstorming Session • Best Practices to Generate Team-Based Innovation

Maritza Salazar, PhD, Dr. Salazar is the recipient of is an Assistant Professor numerous research awards, of Organization and including a major multi-year Management at the grant from the National University of California – Science Foundation focused Maritza Salazar, PhD Irvine’s Paul Merage School of on studying and facilitating Assistant Professor of Organization and Management Business. Her research focuses the integrative capacity of Paul Merage School of Business University of California – Irvine on learning and innovation interdisciplinary science in teams and organizations. teams. She is the Team Her scientific research yields Science program director novel insights that enhance for both UCI’s Institute for the competitiveness of firms, Clinical and Translational the effectiveness of teams, Science and UCLA’s Clinical and the quality of the work and Translational Science experience for individuals. Institute.

44 THURSDAY - May 24 (9:00am - 2:00pm)

FIELD TRIPS

GALVESTON NATIONAL LABORATORY NASA-JOHNSON SPACE CENTER Thursday, May 24, Half-day visit (9am - 2pm) Thursday, May 24, Half-day visit (9am - 2pm)

This field trip features

a half-day visit

to the Galveston

National Laboratory

(GNL) on the UTMB

Galveston campus. This field trip features a half-day visit to the official

The GNL is a high- NASA-Johnson Space Center’s Visitors Center involving

security National many historical exhibitions, a tram tour of the JSC

Biocontainment complex, Saturn VI rocket park, historic and new

Laboratory. It is one of only two such facilities in the mission control facilities, and an actual Space Shuttle

United States, and it is the largest one in the world exhibit. located on an academic campus. Its scientists and research staff exemplify numerous aspects of productive, Lunch and transportation from and back to the hotel innovative team science practice. are included.

Lunch and transportation from and back to the hotel are included.

SCITS CONFERENCE 2018 Moody Gardens Conference Center https://www.scienceofteamscience.org/ 45 One Hope Boulevard [email protected] PROGRAM Galveston, Texas 77554 COMMITTEE MEMBERS

SCIENCE OF TEAM SCIENCE (SCITS) ORGANIZATION EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE

Heather Billings, PhD Assistant Professor of Medical Education, Center for Clinical and Translational Science (CCaTS) Mayo Clinic

Holly J. Falk-Krzesinski, PhD Vice President, Research Intelligence—Global Strategic Networks Elsevier Senior Adjunct Instructor, Philanthropy and Nonprofit Organizations—School of Professional Studies Northwestern University

Stephen Fiore, PhD Professor, Cognitive Sciences, Department of Philosophy and Institute for Simulation and Training Director, Cognitive Sciences Laboratory University of Central Florida

Kara L. Hall, PhD Director, Science of Team Science Director, Theories Initiative Health Behaviors Research Branch National Cancer Institute

Julie Thompson Klein, PhD Professor of Humanities Emerita, English Wayne State University

Gaetano R. Lotrecchiano, EdD, PhD Associate Professor of Clinical Research and Leadership School of Medicine and Health Sciences George Washington University

Michael O’Rourke, PhD Interim Director, MSU Center for Interdisciplinarity Professor of Philosophy, AgBio Research Michigan State University

Maritza Salazar, PhD Assistant Professor of Organization and Management University of California – Irvine

Amanda Vogel, PhD, MPH Global Health Evaluation Specialist Leidos Biomedical Research, Inc.

Kevin Wooten, PhD Faculty Chair and Professor of Management College of Business University of Houston – Clear Lake

46 COMMITTEE MEMBERS

SCIENCE OF TEAM SCIENCE 2018 CONFERENCE PLANNING

Conference Leadership

Allan Brasier, MD (chair) Lisa Velasquez Executive Director, Institute for Clinical and Research Project Manager Translational Research Institute for Translational Sciences Senior Associate Dean for Clinical and University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston Translational Research University of Wisconsin – Madison Lori Wiseman Associate Director for Administration Michael O’Rourke, PhD (co-chair) Institute for Translational Sciences Interim Director, MSU Center for Interdisciplinarity University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston Professor of Philosophy, AgBio Research Michigan State University Kevin Wooten, PhD Faculty Chair and Professor of Management College of Business University of Houston – Clear Lake

Conference Administration

Lori Wiseman (chair) Kelley Murfin, MSPH Associate Director for Administration Informational Writer Institute for Translational Sciences Institute for Translational Sciences University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston

Alisha Goldberg, MS (co-chair) Binu Pappachan Research Communications Manager Systems Analyst Institute for Translational Sciences Institute for Translational Sciences University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston

Donna Adams, MSE Christi Rich Training Manager Strategic Event Specialist Institute for Translational Sciences University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston Liz Ruiz Research Project Manager Glenda Brents Institute for Translational Sciences Graphic Designer, Institute for Translational Sciences University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston

Gilbert Mireles Lisa Velasquez Systems Analyst, Institute for Translational Sciences Research Project Manager Institute for Translational Sciences University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston

SCITS CONFERENCE 2018 Moody Gardens Conference Center https://www.scienceofteamscience.org/ 47 One Hope Boulevard [email protected] PROGRAM Galveston, Texas 77554 COMMITTEE MEMBERS

SCIENCE OF TEAM SCIENCE 2018 CONFERENCE PLANNING CONTINUED

Program Subcommittee

Stephen Crowley, PhD (chair) Gaetano R. Lotrecchiano, EdD, PhD Associate Professor, Department of Philosophy Associate Professor of Clinical Research and Boise State University Leadership, School of Medicine and Health Sciences George Washington University Deborah DiazGranados, PhD (co-chair) Assistant Professor, School of Medicine Michael O’Rourke, PhD Virginia Commonwealth University Interim Director, MSU Center for Interdisciplinarity Professor of Philosophy, AgBio Research Donna Adams, MSE Michigan State University Training Manager, Institute for Translational Sciences University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston Marshall Scott Poole, PhD Director of I-CHASS, Holly J. Falk-Krzesinski, PhD David L. Swanson Professor Vice President, Research Intelligence—Global University of Illinois Strategic Networks Elsevier Maritza Salazar, PhD Senior Adjunct Instructor, Philanthropy and Nonprofit Assistant Professor of Organization and Management Organizations—School of University of California – Irvine Professional Studies Northwestern University Kevin Wooten, PhD Faculty Chair and Professor of Management College of Business University of Houston – Clear Lake

Fundraising Subcommittee

Allan Brasier, MD (co-chair) Stephen Fiore, PhD Executive Director, Institute for Clinical and Professor, Cognitive Sciences, Department of Translational Research Philosophy and Institute for Simulation and Training Senior Associate Dean for Clinical and Director, Cognitive Sciences Laboratory Translational Research University of Central Florida University of Wisconsin – Madison Alisha Goldberg, MS Michael O’Rourke, PhD (co-chair) Research Communications Manager Interim Director, MSU Center for Interdisciplinarity Institute for Translational Sciences Professor of Philosophy, AgBio Research University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston Michigan State University Kelley Murfin, MSPH Laura Anderson, PhD Informational Writer Research Staff Member - Accelerated Discovery Lab Institute for Translational Sciences (ADLab) University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston IBM Almaden Research Center

Holly J. Falk-Krzesinski, PhD Vice President, Research Intelligence—Global Strategic Networks Elsevier Senior Adjunct Instructor, Philanthropy and Nonprofit Organizations—School of Professional Studies Northwestern University

48 COMMITTEE MEMBERS

SCIENCE OF TEAM SCIENCE 2018 CONFERENCE PLANNING CONTINUED

Communication/Outreach Subcommittee

Julie Thompson Klein, PhD (co-chair) Alisha Goldberg, MS Professor of Humanities Emerita, English Research Communications Manager Wayne State University Institute for Translational Sciences University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston Anne Heberger Marino, MSW (co-chair) Senior Program Director, Keck Futures Initiative Patricia Jones, DrPH, MPH The National Academies of Sciences, Program Director, Division of Clinical Innovation Engineering & Medicine National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences Stephen Beck, PhD Associate Vice President Kelley Murfin, MSPH Louisiana State University Informational Writer Institute for Translational Sciences Holly J. Falk-Krzesinski, PhD University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston Vice President, Research Intelligence—Global Strategic Networks Michael O’Rourke, PhD Elsevier Interim Director, MSU Center for Interdisciplinarity Senior Adjunct Instructor, Philanthropy and Nonprofit Professor of Philosophy, AgBio Research Organizations—School of Professional Studies Michigan State University Northwestern University

Awards Subcommittee Liz Ruiz Christine Ogilvie Hendren, PhD (chair) Research Project Manager Assistant Research Professor, Civil and Environmental Institute for Translational Sciences Engineering University of Texas Medical Branch at Executive Director, Center for the Environmental Galveston Implications of NanoTechnology Duke University Daniel Stokols, PhD Chancellor’s Professor Emeritus, Stephen Crowley, PhD Departments of Psychology and Social Associate Professor, Department of Philosophy Behavior & Boise State University Urban Planning and Public Policy University of California – Irvine Kara L. Hall, PhD Director, Science of Team Science Kevin Wooten, PhD Director, Theories Initiative, Health Behaviors Faculty Chair and Professor of Management Research Branch College of Business National Cancer Institute University of Houston – Clear Lake

Julie Thompson Klein, PhD Professor of Humanities Emerita, English Wayne State University

SCITS CONFERENCE 2018 Moody Gardens Conference Center https://www.scienceofteamscience.org/ 49 One Hope Boulevard [email protected] PROGRAM Galveston, Texas 77554 COMMITTEE MEMBERS

SCIENCE OF TEAM SCIENCE 2018 CONFERENCE PLANNING CONTINUED

Evaluation Subcommittee

Amanda Vogel, PhD, MPH (chair) Anne Heberger Marino, MSW Global Health Evaluation Specialist Senior Program Director, Keck Futures Initiative Leidos Biomedical Research, Inc. The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering & Medicine Heather Billings, PhD Assistant Professor of Medical Education Lisa Velasquez Center for Clinical and Translational Science (CCaTS) Research Project Manager Mayo Clinic Institute for Translational Sciences University of Texas Medical Branch at Julie Thompson Klein, PhD Galveston Professor of Humanities Emerita, English Wayne State University

50 NOTES

SCITS CONFERENCE 2018 Moody Gardens Conference Center https://www.scienceofteamscience.org/ 51 One Hope Boulevard [email protected] PROGRAM Galveston, Texas 77554 SciTS