Responsible Conduct of Research (RCR) Training: May 2, 2025

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May 2, 2025

Maintaining confidentiality and security in the peer review process

College of Health and the Office of Research Integrity are hosting a nine-month Responsible Conduct of Research (RCR) Training Program on the first Friday of each month. Complete your RCR training requirements in monthly sessions with presentations by OSU faculty and staff. This program will allow recipients of NIH career development and training grants to meet their 8-hour, face-to-face training obligations, and for other researchers to meet their requirements and recommendations from other funding agencies. All are welcome to attend.

In-person-only: Hallie E. Ford Center room 115

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Speakers

Laurel Kincl, PhD, CSP

Laurel Kincl is a Professor of Environmental and Occupational Health and the Associate Dean for Academic and Faculty Affairs at Oregon State University's College of Health. She holds a PhD in Occupational Safety and Ergonomics and an MS in Industrial Hygiene from the University of Cincinnati. With over two decades of experience, Dr. Kincl's research focuses on quantifying, communicating, and controlling occupational and environmental exposures to health and safety hazards in high-risk industries such as commercial fishing, construction, logging, and healthcare. Before joining OSU in 2011, she served as a Research Fellow at the Centre for Research in Environmental Epidemiology (CREAL) in Barcelona, Spain, and as a Research Associate at the University of Oregon's Labor Education and Research Center. Dr. Kincl has led numerous NIH- and CDC-funded projects aimed at reducing adverse health outcomes through targeted interventions.

Sam Logan, PhD

Sam Logan is an Associate Professor of Kinesiology at Oregon State University's College of Health and the Director of the Disability and Mobility Do-it-Yourself Co-Op. He earned his PhD in Kinesiology from Auburn University, following BA and MS degrees in Psychology and Exercise Science from the University of Delaware. Dr. Logan's interdisciplinary research bridges Kinesiology, Psychology, and Pediatric Rehabilitation, focusing on promoting independent mobility among children with disabilities to enhance their development in language, cognition, play interactions, and motor behaviors. Prior to joining OSU in 2014, he completed a Post-Doctoral Fellowship at the University of Delaware's Infant Motor Lab, where he managed projects such as the Modified Ride-on Car Study.
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