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Only University of Maryland faculty and graduate students whose research interests fall within MPRC’s research
objectives are eligible to become affiliated. Interested individuals most show evidence of a scholarly research
program or the potential to build such a research program in population-related issues; and (for faculty) consistent
past, current and/or anticipated success in obtaining population-related grant and contract research.
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To better serve our researchers, MPRC maintains a library of population-related journals and notifies faculty
when new issues arrive by emailing them the table of contents. In addition, MPRC maintains table of centralized
journal information that includes journal websites as well as archive and JSTOR search links.
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MPRC realizes the important role publishing plays in the academic lives of our researcher. So, in order to better
help them, MPRC maintains a webpage of useful links to the
submission guidelines of many population-related journals. To find out what is required to submit a paper to a
particular journal, check out this page.
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MPRC has dedicated a large amount of financial resources and energy to helping our younger faculty develop
research programs and compete successfully for external funding, especially at NICHD. We have targeted the R03
mechanism because most of our faculty had never applied to NIH for funding and many had projects well suited to
this mechanism. Our method of aiding faculty is organized, systematic, and rigorous. The workshop meets every week
and typically has four or five young scholars working on new projects.
To better serve our researchers, MPRC's Computing Core Staff created a Frequently
Asked Questions (FAQs) List from the many common SAS questions received from students
and faculty. : : MORE
The Seed Grant Program at Maryland has five goals for the development of faculty research: (1) to facilitate the
development of strong individual research proposals, especially NIH and NSF applications, (2) to support junior
faculty in proposal development, (3) to encourage faculty in allied fields or faculty who have not previously
sought funding from NIH to develop grant proposals, (4) to encourage grant development that involves faculty from
more than one discipline, and (5) to support high-risk/high-return projects or projects where time-sensitive funding
is needed. : : MORE
The Computing Core offers training in SAS and Stata. Each semester, and during the summer, we offer intense four
week training classes in SAS and Stata. Increasingly, faculty and graduate students demand higher level training on
specific computational issues. As a result, the Computing Core plans to expand its course offerings to more advanced
topics, including Computing Models with Correlated Error Structures using AML, Calculating Standard Errors for
Models with Complicated Error Structures using Stata, Using ERISA products for Geographic Analysis and Data
Construction, and Parallel and Distributed Computing using Matlab and Intel Math Kernel Libraries.
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The Maryland Population Research Center (MPRC) is pleased to announce a partnership with the Population Research
Institute (PRI) at Penn State University to provide easy access to SAS data sets online. PRI offers a long history
of supporting population research by providing access to a variety of data, and SodaPop, their newest interface,
continues this valuable effort. SodaPop (Simple Online Data
Archive for POPulation Studies) is a web-based system that allows PRI, and now
MPRC, affiliates to extract data from SAS data sets online, as well as view codebooks and documentation. MPRC and
PRI staff look forward to working together to maintain the many data sets available in SodaPop so that our
affiliates always have access to the latest data in the formats they need for analysis.
: : ACCESS SodaPop.
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