@green_jakuta Thanks for reading and great point! Our small study (n=46) was to estimate exposures within personal vehicles, though so important to expand this work to other commuting modes
vs. ~50,000 tons from the VW defeat devices, which were estimated to be associated with 10 to 350 excess deaths. @CoralMDavenport https://t.co/U0LC7UE9AQ
Thanks @CaraFrankenfeld! We have an awesome (and growing) group of epidemiologists and biostatisticians with Cara and @AZPollack, @jhumkagupta, @HelenBChin , @ProfessorBloom, and others! Come join us!
We are recruiting a tenure track or tenured biostatistician https://t.co/Ca4NGrH3fd
I would be happy to answer questions about the department, @MasonCHHS, living in the DC area, etc.
The recording of Keith Baggerly's Project TIER webcast, "The Importance of Reproducibility in High-Throughput Biology," is now available for viewing. Keith's webcast originally aired March 27th and was moderated by 2017/18 TIER Fellow @kralljr.
https://t.co/Dt7VSaBlPH
New paper out on estimating traffic-related particulate matter using personal and vehicle monitoring, led by the wonderful @kralljr https://t.co/lrkeYz9XjY
Dr. Jenna Krall discusses what we could learn about air pollution from reductions in traffic during stay at home orders in @NPR article, Traffic Is Way Down Because Of Lockdown, But Air Pollution? Not So Much
https://t.co/gG9HQKpjq3
Tune in today at 1:00pm (EDT) for Keith Baggerly's presentation, "The Importance of Reproducibility in High-Throughput Biology: Case Studies in Forensic Bioinformatics." Moderated by @kralljr and sponsored by @SloanFoundation.
https://t.co/Dt7VSaSXeh
@sctyner@RLadiesDC Hey! Just saw this-- we met at WIS in 2014. I'm in Fairfax, VA! Would love to see some @RLadiesDC (or maybe RLadiesNoVA?) activities! Want to chat about it?