(Press-News.org) The Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard is now accepting applications for its 2024 Media Boot Camp.
This annual program connects health/science journalists and editors with faculty from the Broad Institute, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Harvard University, and Harvard’s teaching hospitals for a two-day event exploring the latest advances in genomics and biomedicine. Journalists will explore possible future storylines, gain fundamental background knowledge, and build relationships with researchers. The program format includes presentations, discussions, and lab tours.
The 2024 Media Boot Camp will take place in person at the Broad Institute in Cambridge, MA on Thursday, May 16 and Friday, May 17 (with an evening welcome reception on Wednesday, May 15).
APPLICATION DEADLINE IS FRIDAY, MARCH 22 (5:00 PM US EASTERN TIME).
2024 Boot Camp topics include:
Gene editing
New approaches for therapeutic delivery
Cancer biology, drug development
Data sciences, machine learning
Neurobiology (stem cell models of psychiatric disorders)
Antibiotic resistance, microbial biology
Medical and population genetics, genomic medicine
Current speakers include: Mimi Bandopadhayay, Clare Bernard, Roby Bhattacharyya, Todd Golub, Laura Kiessling, Eric Lander, David Liu, Ralda Nehme, Heidi Rehm, William Sellers, Feng Zhang, with potentially more to come.
This Media Boot Camp is an educational offering. All presentations are on-background.
Hotel accommodations and meals during the program will be provided by the Broad Institute. Attendees must cover travel costs to and from Boston.
Application Process
By Friday, March 22 (5:00 PM US Eastern time), please send at least one paragraph describing your interest in the program and how you hope it will benefit your reporting, as well as three recent news clips, to David Cameron, Director of External Communications, dcameron@broadinstitute.org
Please contact David at dcameron@broadinstitute.org, or 617-714-7184 with any questions.
Aspects of this program are subject to change.
END
Broad Institute 2024 Media Boot Camp
Now accepting applications
2024-02-14
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
MEDIA ADVISORY: Mount Sinai doctors to present new research at 2024 SMFM Annual Pregnancy Meeting
2024-02-14
(New York, NY – February 9, 2024) – High-risk pregnancy specialists from the Mount Sinai Health System are presenting research at the Annual Pregnancy Meeting of the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine (SMFM) in Fort Washington, MD from February 10-14. Mount Sinai experts are available for interview about their research findings, and can also provide commentary on other women’s health topics, breaking news, and studies.
PRESENTATIONS and POSTER SESSIONS
(*All abstracts are under embargo until the below listed times*)
Sunday, February 11, 2024
FGR prevention: Is there a role for aspirin, heparin, ...
Significantly fewer births on weekends and holidays than weekdays, data analysis of over 21 million births from 1979-2018 in Japan shows
2024-02-14
Significantly more babies were born on a weekday instead of weekend day or holiday, reveals a large-scale analysis of 21 million births in Japan over almost four decades published February 14, 2024 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Miho Sassa from the University of Tokyo, Japan, and colleagues.
Medical resources are generally stretched during holidays (including weekends) due to factors like staffing and hospital policies. This may amplify holiday effects: disparities and variations of health outcomes between holidays and weekdays. Dr. Sassa and colleagues studied this holiday effect with a focus on birth, especially high-risk births as measured by babies born preterm ...
Vittrup Man crossed over from forager to farmer before being sacrificed in Denmark
2024-02-14
Vittrup Man was born along the Scandinavian coast before moving to Denmark, where he was later sacrificed, according to a study published February 14, 2024 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Anders Fischer of the University of Gothenburg, Sweden and colleagues.
Vittrup Man is the nickname of a Stone Age skeleton recovered from a peat bog in Northwest Denmark, dating to between 3300-3100 BC. The fragmented nature of the remains, including a smashed skull, indicate that he was killed in a ritualistic sacrifice, a common practice in this region at this time. After a DNA study found Vittrup Man’s genetic ...
Some Pre-Roman humans were buried with dogs, horses and other animals
2024-02-14
Some people from an ancient community in what is now northern Italy were interred with animals and animal parts from species such as dogs, horses and pigs. The reasons remain mysterious, but might indicate an enduring companion relationship between these humans and animals, or religious sacrificial practices, according to a study published February 14, 2023 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Zita Laffranchi from the University of Bern, Stefania Zingale from the Institute for Mummy Studies, Eurac Research Bozen, ...
Reported marital harmony—or conflict—accounts for nearly ten percent of the variation in mental health self-assessments in a broad study of Australian adults
2024-02-14
Australian adults who report a good relationship that meets their original expectations tend to score higher in mental health, while adults who report loving their spouse but wished they had never entered the relationship and note relationship problems tend to score significantly lower in mental health, according to a survey of almost 7000 Australian adults published February 14, 2024 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Bernard Kwadwo Yeboah Asiamah-Asare and colleagues.
Many recent studies have examined the possible social determinants of mental health. In this study, Yeboah Asiamah-Asare and colleagues looked specifically at how one’s ...
Just a few sites of exceptional fossil preservation may significantly distort the phylogenetic record for birds, scaly reptiles and dinosaurs
2024-02-14
Just a few sites of exceptional fossil preservation may significantly distort the phylogenetic record for birds, scaly reptiles and dinosaurs
###
Article URL: https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0297637
Article Title: Quantifying the effects of exceptional fossil preservation on the global availability of phylogenetic data in deep time
Author Countries: USA
Funding: CHW: Richard Estes Memorial Award (No grant number); Society of Vertebrate Paleontology; www.vertpaleo.org; NO - CHW: Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Grant (No grant number); American Museum of Natural History; www.amnh.org; NO - CHW: EAR-PF 2305564; ...
Emojis are differently interpreted depending on gender, culture, and age of viewer
2024-02-14
Gender, culture, and age all appear to play a role in how emojis are interpreted, according to a study published February 14, 2024 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Yihua Chen, Xingchen Yang and colleagues from the University of Nottingham, UK.
Stylized images of faces expressing different emotions, emojis can add both emotional nuance as well as potential ambiguity to electronic messages.
To understand how gender, age, and culture may influence emoji interpretation, Chen, Yang and colleagues recruited a group of 253 Chinese and 270 UK adults (51 percent women and 49 percent ...
Global health photographers navigate murky ethical waters for clients
2024-02-14
Global health photography is often caught between photojournalistic intentions of accurately reflect local communities, and marketing directives to create attention-grabbing imagery, according to a study published February 14, 2024 in the open-access journal PLOS Global Public Health by Arsenii Alenichev from Oxford Population Health, the University of Oxford, United Kingdom, and colleagues. Standing at such representational crossroads, photographers are forced to engage with numerous—and often unresolvable — ethical and practical dilemmas.
Photographers ...
New immunotherapy for multiple myeloma proves in the lab to be more effective than CAR-T treatment already in use
2024-02-14
Researchers at the Spanish National Cancer Research Center (CNIO) and the 12 de Octubre University Hospital have developed a new cell-based immunotherapy to treat multiple myeloma
The new immunotherapy is based on STAb cells and has yet to pass clinical trials.
The study is published in Science Translational Medicine, with head of the H12O-CNIO Cancer Immunotherapy Clinical Research Unit Luis Álvarez-Vallina as senior author.
Immunotherapy is already improving treatment options for many cancer types, but research groups keep exploring ...
Liver cancer: a promising avenue for more effective immunotherapies
2024-02-14
Laval, February 14, 2024 – A research team of Canadian and French scientists, led by INRS professor Maya Saleh, has been investigating immunotherapy resistance in certain patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) associated with steatotic liver disease. The findings are published in the journal Cell Reports.
Hepatocellular carcinoma is associated with known risk factors such as chronic hepatitis B or C infection, alcohol abuse, and metabolic dysfunction. It is the most common type of liver cancer. ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Prebiotic in diet linked to less impulsivity in gambling rats with TBI
Gestational weight gain and pregnancy outcomes after GLP-1 receptor agonist discontinuation
Increasing postpartum use of GLP-1 receptor agonists
Patients who discontinued GLP-1s had more weight gain, complications during pregnancy
Untreated sleep apnea raises risk of Parkinson’s, study finds
Prevalence, characteristics, and genetic architecture of avoidant/restrictive food intake phenotypes
Cardiometabolic parameter change by weight regain on tirzepatide withdrawal in adults with obesity
US burden of disorders affecting the nervous system
Social media detox and youth mental health
One in two people in the US is affected by a neurological disease or disorder
Colliding ribosomes signal cellular stress
New doctoral network aims to establish optical vortex beams as key technology for advanced light-matter interaction
Vegan diet—even with ‘unhealthy’ plant-based foods—is better for weight loss than Mediterranean diet, finds new study
JMIR Publications joins STM and integrates STM’s Integrity Hub
NCSA receives honors in 2025 HPCwire Readers’ and Editors’ Choice Awards
New study reveals that differences between parent and child views best assess quality of life after pediatric liver transplant
Shapeshifting cancers’ masters, unmasked
Pusan National University researchers develop model to accurately predict vessel turnaround time
Nanowire breakthrough reveals elusive astrocytes
Novel liver cancer vaccine achieves responses in rare disease affecting children and young adults
International study finds gene linked with risk of delirium
Evidence suggests early developing human brains are preconfigured with instructions for understanding the world
Absolutely metal: scientists capture footage of crystals growing in liquid metal
Orangutans can’t master their complex diets without cultural knowledge
Ancient rocks reveal themselves as ‘carbon sponges’
Antarctic mountains could boost ocean carbon absorption as ice sheets thin
Volcanic bubbles help foretell the fate of coral in more acidic seas
Inspired by a family’s struggle, a scientist helps uncover defense against Alzheimer’s disease
The Einstein Foundation Berlin awards €350,000 prize to advance research quality
Synthetic stress hormone dexamethasone could reduce breast cancer metastases
[Press-News.org] Broad Institute 2024 Media Boot CampNow accepting applications







