Tracy Nolan Institution-verified
Sourced from institutional research profiles (UAMS TRI or ARA).
Instructor
faculty
Biomedical Informatics, College of Medicine
Research Areas
Biography and Research Information
OverviewAI-generated summary
Tracy Nolan is an instructor in Biomedical Informatics at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences College of Medicine. Her work focuses on the application of informatics principles within the medical field, contributing to the understanding and advancement of health sciences research and education. Nolan's role involves educating future professionals in the use of data and technology for healthcare.
Grants & Funding
- Pragmatic Randomized Trial of Proton vs. Photon Therapy for Patients with Non-Metastatic Breast Cancer Receiving Comprehensive Nodal Radiation: A Radiotherapy Comparative Effectiveness (RADCOMP) Trial - Continuation Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute - Pass Through: Washington University Co-Investigator
- TCIA Sustainment and Scalability - Platforms for Quantitative Imaging Informatics in Precision Medicine NIH Co-Investigator
- TCIA Sustainment and Scalability - Platforms for Quantitative Imaging Informatics in Precision Medicine - Year 4 - Continuation NIH/Nat. Cancer Institute Co-Investigator
- Pediatric Head Models for Improved Imaging of Neurological Development NIH/National Institutes of Health - Pass Through: Electrical Geodesics, Inc. Co-Investigator
- TO4 Moonshot BioBank – Support to IROC NIH/Nat. Cancer Institute - Pass Through: Leidos Co-Investigator
- TO3 TCIA NLST SupportL Radiology/Pathology NIH/Nat. Cancer Institute - Pass Through: Leidos Co-Investigator
- TCIA TO7 Apollo NIH/Nat. Cancer Institute - Pass Through: Leidos Co-Investigator
- Pragmatic Randomized Trial of Proton vs. Photon Therapy for Patients with Non-Metastatic Breast Cancer Receiving Comprehensive Nodal Radiation: A Radiotherapy Comparative Effectiveness (RADCOMP) Trial Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute - Pass Through: Washington University Co-Investigator
Frequent Collaborators
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