We are doing research on large language models such as ChatGPT, Bing AI, and Google Bard. We are interviewing and conducting diary studies with information professionals (e.g. finance, law, IT, business, academia, journalism, and consulting) who use these systems in their work. If you're open to sharing your experiences with these tools, you can choose to participate in a 10-workday diary study followed by an interview which could last between 30 to 90 minutes. As a token of our appreciation, participants will be offered a $60 Gift Card or payment if you choose to complete both the diary study and the interview. We are look forward to hearing from you!
This is a survey study to help us learn more about how high schoolers engage in life activities after an unexpected health event. The results of the study will be used to inform healthcare providers and educators so they can help teenagers do things they want to after these health events.
Pancreatic cancer has one of the lowest survival rates for all cancers, but there are some people who achieve long-term survival. We are looking at those patients, with the goal of identifying what are some treatments and experiences that do work. Learning about treatment combinations and unique therapies that have led to success can open doors for where our research should be focused moving forward.
Are you affiliated with a federal and/or state-recognized tribe and between the ages of 18-25? We want to learn about physical activity practices in the college-age Native American Community. Take our 30-minute survey answering questions about your environment, how your culture promotes physical activity, your access to physical activity, and what you do for physical activity.
Este estudio analizará el efecto que tiene la ideología de género y la ideología lingüística en algunas formas novedosas del español. In this study, we want to learn how gender and beliefs and attitudes about language affect how people feel about aspects of the Spanish language.
In this study, we want to learn if existing services meet the needs of people who experience crime in North Carolina. Specifically, we will focus on whether these services meet the needs of crime victims from historically underserved populations. We also want to learn whether service accessibility is different across the state. Although the assessment is meant to cover all North Carolinians, the GCC and research team have identified specific priority populations, including: veterans, immigrants, refugees, people with disabilities, older adults, LGBTQ+ individuals, teens, people from religious minority groups, people who are unhoused/experiencing homelessness, co-victims of homicide, indigenous communities, people with limited English proficiency, and people of color.
Parents are stressed out finding and managing health and nonmedical services for their transition aged children with intellectual and developmental disabilities. Building advocacy skills through peer-to-peer learning provides inspiration and life-long tools to address new questions and needs as they arise. Parents of youth aged 11-27 with IDD are invited to participate in this study. Parents will attend a group with other parents; the groups will meet 4 times, once a week for 1 hour.
The purpose of this study is to determine the extent to which various forms of language exposure affect a second-language Spanish speaker's production of a specific dialectal feature
Have you been diagnosed with oropharyngeal (tonsil or tongue base) cancer. If so, you may be able to take part in a research study testing markers to determine who may be appropriate for less aggressive therapy and markers to determine if recurrent tumors can be detected earlier.
Have you been diagnosed with cervical cancer? If so, you may be able to take part in a research study that aims to identify a new non-invasive biomarker (blood test) to 1) detect cervical cancer during screenings and 2) track response to treatment, detect early recurrence and guide personalized treatment decisions. In this study we will measure levels of Circulating Tumor Human Papilloma Virus DNA (ctHPVDNA) levels in the blood and urine of women with newly diagnosed cervical cancer prior to receiving any treatment, and then compare this to the levels in samples collected after treatment (surgery of chemoradiation).