The Evidence-based Toxicology Collaboration at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health aims to bring evidence-based medicine methods to toxicology
The first article in our journal illustrates three of our major editorial policies, around protocol publication, use of preprints, and transparency of decision-making processes. See the full manuscript here: https://t.co/5KwtEMeSvK
Join Dr Paul Whaley @ebtoxc and Dr Nikki Osborne on Wed 11 Jan 23 for a FREE 1hr #webinar when they discuss the challenges of peer reviewing #invitro studies & share a new tool to improve the consistency, transparency & community value of peer-review.
https://t.co/aooPZdVB3p
Update from EBTC: invitation to our next on-line symposium (30 Aug) on evidence-based approaches to mechanism-based chemical assessments, and a new publication! https://t.co/tKAcoZMAXR
Honored to have been part of this @ebtoxc 10 year Evidence based Toxicology event and a big thank to our @EFSA_EU trainees to make this short video! https://t.co/ttZqNZ8hMs
New from EBTC: Invitation to our March Symposium (Primer on Ontologies for Toxicology). Plus 2 new papers, one on how SR methods can help characterise uncertainty in risk assessment, one on getting past RR of >2 for large effects - https://t.co/kvUs7G8Lqu
Research standardisation in toxicology is getting *way* more interesting than you'd expect, as we e.g. discover that semantic technology can improve human performance in image evaluation. Sign up for the next EBTC symposium to learn more. 👍https://t.co/PdfQgTxJGT
EBTC Update: An invitation to our December Symposium (about surprisingly fascinating developments in research standardisation), plus a new WHO framework for SR in chemical risk assessment - https://t.co/NLtwrZSTBC
Happy to have @dverloo present at @ebtoxc 10th! Amazing progress and more to come in the next decade! Be a part of the conversation, join us November 11.