Research Day – November 2020

PDH invites all of our researchers and collaborators to join us for our annual Research Day on Friday 13 November 2020.

Audience

PDH researchers and students, collaborators, commercial partners, management, advisors, and board members. Note this is not a public event.

Agenda (as of 12 November)

TimeDurationItem
9:15 AM15 minIntroduction and Welcome
9:30 AM30 minSession 1: Project presentations

* 15 min – Clinical document semantic search – Edmond Zhang
* 5 min – Deepening understanding of surgical outcomes – Luke Boyle
* 5 min – Blockchains in healthcare records management – Arshad Khan
* 5 min – Enabling self-care through personalised mHealth – Rosie Dobson
10:00 AM15 minFeedback and discussion on Session 1
10:15 AM30 minSession 2: Keynote
Jon Herries, Ministry of Health
10:45 AM15 minBreak – morning tea
11:00 AM30 minSession 3: Project presentations

* 15 min – AI for skin cancer – Adrian Bowling
* 5 min – CureMyopia – Renoh Chalakkal
* 5 min – Predicting inpatient readmission risk – Pieta Brown
* 5 min – Greater engagement of mental wellbeing solutions through personalisation – Fiora Au (remotely)
11:30 AM15 minFeedback and discussion on Session 3
11:45 AM60 minSession 4: Project panel

* 15 min – Intelligent De-identification – Junjae Lee
* 15 min – VitalsAssist Integration Phase – Mirza Baig
* 15 min – Deep Learning Platform for GP Referral Triage – Ning Hua
* Q&A
12:45 PM45 minBreak – lunch
1:30 PM30 minSession 5: Project presentations

* 15 min – Analysis of lab result patterns for patient alerts – Samuel Wong
* 5 min – Whānau-driven data analytics – Neil Wilkinson
* 5 min – Mapping disability – TBC (remotely)
2:00 PM15 minFeedback and discussion on Session 5
2:15 PM45 minSession 6:

* Leadership Team panel
* Coordination of feedback including themes throughout the day
* General discussion
3:00 PMFinish

Location

Due to Auckland’s recent COVID-19 community case, the event will be virtual-only. Zoom access details have been provided to registered attendees.

If you did not receive details, please contact Kelly.

Zoom etiquette: All attendees are encouraged to have cameras on, and microphones muted. Presenters can share their own screen.

For Speakers

When preparing your presentation, please aim for a general audience. Use lay terms as much as possible. Explain specific concepts. Schedule pauses to check the audience’s understanding.

Regardless of length, each project presentation should cover:

  • What problem you are trying to solve and why / what the research questions are. Why is this important for NZ? Why is it important commercially?
  • What you have done/achieved so far and key points of interest.
  • What you plan to do next.
  • A demonstration and/or commentary on pathway to “real world” application (where suitable).
  • What help you need / what you would have done differently.

Questions?

Please contact Kelly.