Get Your Poster Printed at the HSHSL

Poster Printing Service


The HSHSL offers poster printing to all UMB faculty, students, and staff and University of Maryland Medical Center staff. Posters are printed in support of academic, professional, and research purposes. 

Posters are printed up to a maximum of 42″ x 72″.

You have your choice of material:

  • Our paper option is Glossy Photo Paper and costs $55.
    Great for class assignments and single-use displays.
  • Our fabric option is Matte Lightweight Poly Canvas and costs $55.
    Perfect for traveling exhibits and multiple-use displays.

Poster printing may take up to two business days, please plan accordingly.

All posters must be submitted as a PDF file. Please pay close attention to the information on sizing and formatting your poster.

Posters can be picked up at the Information Services Desk.

For questions, please e-mail poster@hshsl.umaryland.edu or call 410-706-7996.



Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged | Comments Off on Get Your Poster Printed at the HSHSL

Love Data Week 2022 Starts Monday, Feb 14!

Love Data Week (Feb. 14 to 18) is an international celebration of all things data! Each year, the Center for Data and Bioinformation Services (CDABS) at the Health Sciences and Human Services Library (HSHSL) looks forward to engaging our community on issues like data management, sharing, wrangling, and visualization, as well as open and reproducible science.

Want to participate in Love Data Week? Here’s how:

  • Join CDABS on Tuesday, Feb. 15, at noon for a virtual, interactive, introductory workshop on the Open Science Framework (OSF), a research project management and collaboration tool from the Center for Open Science. The University of Maryland, Baltimore recently became an OSF member institution. Learn more about what that means for you, and register here.
  • Adopt a Dataset or attend a webinar with ICPSR, the official Love Data Week organizers and an excellent place to find data! Visit their site for more information.
  • Join our friends at the National Library of Medicine throughout the week for their series of workshops on topics including Census Tools to Better Understand Your Community, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Data Sharing and Management Plan, DMPTool Basics, and Doing No Harm with Data Viz. (Note: You must sign up for a free NLM account to register).
  • Attend the Community Building Convention for NIH’s Artificial Intelligence/Machine Learning Consortium to Advance Health Equity and Researcher Diversity (AIM-AHEAD). The goal of AIM-AHEAD is to enhance diversity in the field of artificial intelligence and machine learning (AI/ML), with emphasis on reducing health disparities and promoting health equity. Listening sessions will be held for different communities throughout the week. Find your session and register.

Finally, as always, you can join the conversation on social media #LoveData22 and #UMBLovesData.

Questions? Contact Amy Yarnell, data services librarian, at data@hshsl.umaryland.edu.

The Center for Data and Bioinformation Services (CDABS) is the University of Maryland Health Sciences and Human Services Library hub for data and bioinformation learning, services, resources, and communication.

To read more of our content and stay informed please fill out the form to subscribe here: https://www2.hshsl.umaryland.edu/cdabs/communications

Posted in Announcement, Data/Bioinformation, Events, Research Data Management, Technology, Workshops | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Love Data Week 2022 Starts Monday, Feb 14!

Woven Stories: Faith and music inspire Anna-Marie

Woven Stories: Out of Many we are One imageThe HSHSL is currently collecting submissions for Woven Stories, a project aiming to highlight the diversity of UMB’s campus by sharing photographs and supporting stories of items of personal cultural significance.  The following is Anna-Marie Epp’s submission.  Anna-Marie is a Program Specialist in the Health Sciences and Human Services Library. Read on for inspiration and please consider submitting your own story!

Collage of two hymnal covers

I grew up in a Baptist church in a predominantly black community in Virginia where generations of my family prayed and worshiped, lived and worked. I Imagine, if there was one thing my family did since my great grandparents joined First Baptist Church in 1904, it was sing! It may be the reason music has always been what drew us closer in love and in faith. It’s why we’ve always known far more hymns than scriptures. It’s in our blood! 

Photograph of the cover of Gospel Pearls HymnalThese hymnals belonged to my Grandmother, Cleo Marie Wynn Bolling, a high school music teacher, church pianist, and choir director. The oldest of these is the Gospel Pearls Hymnal purchased by our church in the 1930’s and was likely her first hymnal. It holds old favorites like Amazing Grace, a hymn which my brother and I can still sing all 5 stanzas and not miss one word. 

Photograph of Peace Like a River Sheet musicMusic was the love of my grandmother’s life and among her favorite things to do was teach the stanzas of the hymns to our Junior Chorus. One of our favorites, Peace Like a River, is a hymn I still hum quietly to myself when I need to feel restored. My brother, cousins and I sang in that choir even after my grandmother’s passing in 1996 – after which my mother, Anna, became director.

Although I’ve changed and I no longer attend church often, I am in awe of each lesson, each value, each sweet line that I carry with me each day. Every time I think of a hymn, I sing it quietly with the joy of my young self, with the love of my grandmother and with the gratefulness to the faith (and the church) that raised me and made me who I am. 

 

Posted in Exhibits, Faculty, Students | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Woven Stories: Faith and music inspire Anna-Marie

NNLM Webinar: Commercial Determinants of Health: Tobacco Use, March 2, 1PM

Amanda Kong, PhD, MPH, Assistant Professor in the Department of Family and Preventive Medicine at the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center

Tobacco use remains the leading cause of preventable death, attributable to more than 480,000 deaths per year in the United States. Neighborhood availability of tobacco retailers (tobacco retailer density) is associated with tobacco use behaviors, such as smoking initiation and relapse, among both youth and adults. Additionally, several studies have documented a greater availability of tobacco retailers in neighborhoods with lower socioeconomic status and a higher proportion of some racial and ethnic groups. In this webinar, Dr. Kong will discuss and review findings from studies to demonstrate how place-based interventions and policies may help continue progress in reducing tobacco use equitably. 

By the end of this webinar, participants will be able to 

  • Discuss the relationship between the promotion and availability of tobacco and health inequities.
  • Identify interventions to address these inequities.

Amanda Kong, PhD, MPH, discusses findings from studies to demonstrate how place-based interventions and policies may help continue progress in reducing tobacco use equitably.

More information and register for Commercial Determinants of Health: Tobacco Use

Posted in Announcement | Tagged , , | Comments Off on NNLM Webinar: Commercial Determinants of Health: Tobacco Use, March 2, 1PM

February is Children’s Dental Health Month

Dental Health in Children
  • Attention parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles and healthcare providers: February is National Children’s Dental Health Month
  • Oral health books written for children are available for check-out from the Health Sciences & Human Services Library. Books focus on oral healthcare, going to the dentist, and general information about teeth & their importance.
  • To browse the books in this collection, visit the Children’s’ Dental Health Books subject guide at: https://guides.hshsl.umaryland.edu/dentistry/DentalBooksForChildren
Posted in Announcement, Dentistry | Comments Off on February is Children’s Dental Health Month

DABS (Data and Bioinformation Stuff): Get to Know the Open Science Framework (OSF)

OSF, a project of the Center for Open Science, is a free and open source project management and collaboration tool that supports researchers throughout the research lifecycle. It’s a great way to organize and share resources with your team and others! It also integrates easily with a number of other commonly used tools like Google Drive, Zotero, Mendeley, Figshare, and GitHub.

The University of Maryland, Baltimore is now an OSF Institution, which means you can log in to OSF with your UMID and password.  

Join CDABS for a virtual Introductory OSF workshop on Feb 15 at noon, where we will demonstrate the main features and potential use cases and get you started using OSF! Registration page

You will also be able to affiliate your public research with UMB on OSF and discover other affiliated research through our new UMB-OSF landing page. If your research is not yet public, now might be a good time to consider sharing your existing or future work. Conducting your research through UMB’s OSFI platform is a strategic way to enhance transparency, foster collaboration, and increase the visibility of your research. 

For more information, you can view help guides on signing in with your institution and affiliating your projects. In addition, you can join CDABS for a virtual Introductory OSF workshop on Feb 15 at noon, where we will demonstrate the main features and potential use cases and get you started using OSF! Registration page

Questions?

Contact: Amy Yarnell, Data Services Librarian and Jean-Paul Courneya, Bioinformationist – at data@hshsl.umaryland.edu.

The Center for Data and Bioinformation Services (CDABS) is the University of Maryland Health Sciences and Human Services Library hub for data and bioinformation learning, services, resources, and communication.

To read more of our content and stay informed please fill out the form to subscribe here: https://www2.hshsl.umaryland.edu/cdabs/communications

Posted in Announcement, Data/Bioinformation, Research Data Management, Technology, Workshops | Tagged , , | Comments Off on DABS (Data and Bioinformation Stuff): Get to Know the Open Science Framework (OSF)

HSHSL Updated Hours Starting February 7, 2022

HSHSL Building

The HSHSL’s building hours will expand beginning Monday, February 7th.  The new hours are:

Monday – Sunday 8:00 am – 8:00 pm

Policies

The HSHSL is open to:

  • UMB, students, faculty, and staff with UMB One Cards.
  • UMMC & VA staff with IDs

KN95 masks are required

Posted in Announcement | Tagged , , | Comments Off on HSHSL Updated Hours Starting February 7, 2022

Need an Article or Book the HSHSL Does Not Have? Order an Interlibrary Loan!

Do you need an article or book that the HSHSL does not have access to? UMB faculty, staff and students can order interlibrary loans (ILL). The turn-around time is fast and the service is free for students.

From the HSHSL’s homepage, click the drop-down list for “Resources” and choose “Request Articles & Books.” Next, click on the big blue button that says “Login with UMID and Password.”  If you are a first time user there will be a short registration process (you will need the 14-digit number on the back of your UM One Card id badge).

Choose which type of request you need from the list on the left-hand side of the page: journal article, book, or book chapter.  Fill in the form with the required citation information and click the blue “Submit Request” button. 

You can also make requests when you are searching databases.  If you need something we do not own, click on the yellow “Find It” button and choose “Order a Copy of This Item.”  You will be directed to the ILL form with the citation data already filled in.  Click “Submit Request” and your order will be processed promptly.

Questions? Contact Resource Sharing at 410-706-3239 or email rs@hshsl.umaryland.edu.

Posted in Announcement | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Need an Article or Book the HSHSL Does Not Have? Order an Interlibrary Loan!

HSHSL Closed 1/17/22 in Observance of the MLK Holiday

Martin Luther King Day

The HSHSL building will be closed on Monday, January 17 for the Martin Luther King Holiday. We will return to our regular hours, M-F, 8am – 6pm on Tuesday, January 18. Questions? Email hshsl@umaryland.edu.

Posted in Announcement | Tagged , , | Comments Off on HSHSL Closed 1/17/22 in Observance of the MLK Holiday

Woven Stories: Christina’s caldero

Woven Stories: Out of Many we are One image

The HSHSL, through its Woven Stories Project, invites campus community members to share a photograph of an item or items that represents their personal culture.  Woven Stories aims to capture the diversity of UMB’s campus through photographs of items of cultural significance like a recipe, a book, a piece of art, food, creative work, clothing, a musical piece, an instrument, or a textile, to name just a few.  

The following story highlights Christina Pabon-Buck’s beloved caldero. Christina is a Research and Education Librarian at the Health Sciences and Human Services Library.

Collage of photographs: top image, a steel pot sits on a wooden table, the lid is off the pot, photographed from the top; bottom left, same metal pot with lid on it photographed from the side; bottom right, same pot from top with lid on it, in this image you can see the two handles.

When I think about my family, my culture, and significant events, I think about this little well-seasoned caldero, the unsung hero behind so many delicious meals.  From arroz con pollo to carne guisada this little caldero played an important part.  A caldero is a steel pot with a tight lid used for cooking rice, braising meats, and making stews.  The caldero our family used until a few years ago was a gift to my mom in 1972.  I can only imagine how many dishes were cooked in the caldero.  Recently, my mother gave my son his own caldero.  After seasoning it for a month, we made our first batch of arroz con gandules.  Seeing my son measure out rice, water, and add in sofrito to his dish was a full circle moment.  I love that he too can appreciate his Puerto Rican heritage through something that feeds the body and the soul.

To submit your own photographs and memories, go to the Woven Stories page.  Submissions should be in the form of a photograph and a paragraph describing its importance to you.  Photographs should be at least 1200 x 1200 pixels.  Multiple submissions are welcome and can be made anonymously by leaving the name and email fields on the form blank. 

For questions or concerns, contact: diversity@hshsl.umaryland.edu

 

Posted in Exhibits, Faculty, Students | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Woven Stories: Christina’s caldero