LAURA SHEBLE Aj0151@wayne.edu 919.260.2031(cell)

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LAURA SHEBLEaj0151@wayne.edu 919.260.2031(cell)EDUCATIONPhD, Information Science, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, NC. May 2014.DISSERTATION (FIRST RUNNER-UP, 2015 INFORMATION SCHOOLS (ISCHOOLS) DOCTORAL DISSERTATION AWARD)Title: Diffusion of meta-analysis, systematic review, and related research synthesis methods: Patterns,contexts, and impact (ProQuest UMI No. 3622474).MLIS and Certificate, Archival Administration, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI. Dec 2002.BS, Botany, Auburn University, Auburn, AL. Aug 1995.WORK EXPERIENCEWayne State University, Detroit, MI, Aug 2017Assistant Professor, School of Information SciencesDuke University, Durham, NC, Jul 2015Visiting Research Fellow, Duke Network Analysis Center, Social Science Research Institute, Aug2017Margolis Fellow in Data Science, Robert J. Margolis, MD, Center for Health Policy, Feb-Aug 2017 Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation (CMMI) Palliative Care project: Provide practical dataanalytic solutions to assess the cost impact of palliative care on Medicare costs, and to develop newpayment models for Palliative Care that could be used by the Medicare program in the future.With the Duke Network Analysis Center, health-related network research using the Duke UniversityHealth System Electronic Medical Records; Studies of science, diversity, synthesis, and perspective.Develop and contribute to studies to complement CMMI research, for example, to describe and modelnetworks associated with cancer screening events using EHR and CMS FOIA referral data.Postdoctoral Associate, Duke Network Analysis Center, Social Science Research Institute, Jul2015-Feb 2017 Health-related network research with Duke University Health System Electronic Medical Records;Studies of science focused on diversity, synthesis, identity, and perspective.Consultant on contracts for network-based research program evaluation for UNC’s Clinical andTranslational Science Award; the UNC-hosted Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJ) Clinical Scholarsprogram; and, with the New York Academy of Medicine, the RWJ Health & Society Scholars program.Work with undergraduate and graduate students on health and science studies network research.Information Scientist, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, May 2014-Aug 2015Center for Health Equity Research (CHER), Dept. of Social Medicine, School of Medicine, May2014-Aug 2015 Bibliometric/informetric analysis, data visualization of systems science in health research;Research design, coordination, assessment for informetrics, content analyses;Contributed to meta-analysis of risky sexual behaviors and substance use in adolescents.Cancer Prevention & Control Research Network (CPCRN)/ Center for Health Promotion &Disease Prevention (HPDP), Aug-Nov 2014 Analysis and visualization of dynamic site-level collaboration networks; other data analysis.1

LAURA SHEBLEaj0151@wayne.edu 919.260.2031(cell)Research Assistant, National Evolutionary Synthesis Center (NESCent), May 2012-May 2014; bycontract: Aug-Sep 2014, Jan, Oct 2015 Research assessment of data, software, and publications using traditional and alternative informetrics;Investigated productivity differences among research groups.Instructor, Teaching & Research Assistant, School of Information & Library Science, UNC-Chapel Hill,Aug 2009-May 2012Instructor, Aug 2010-May 2012 Human Information Interactions (INLS 500), a core course for Information Science, Library Science, andHealth Communications Master’s programs. Cognitive, social, and contextual facets of everyday life,organizational, academic information seeking and use; scholarly communications; information theory.Teaching Assistant, Aug 2009-May 2010 Fundamentals of Information Science (INLS 101, undergraduate), Jan-May 2010: Developed, prepared,taught information representation & organization, scholarly communications units; Research Methods (INLS 780), Aug-Dec 2009: Assisted with two sections of this graduate course inwhich students write a research proposal for Masters’ papers.Research Assistant, VidArch Project, Aug 2007-Jun 2009 Developed Drupal-based prototype gateway for digital video curation community;Sub-project contributions included content analysis of contextual information for videos;Wrote final project report for the Library of Congress - National Digital Information InfrastructurePreservation Program (NDIIPP) contractTriangle Research Library Network (TRLN) Doctoral Fellow, Aug 2005-Jul 2007 Planning, evaluation, implementation of Information Commons at Duke Perkins Library: technologyneeds & staffing assessment, with the Library & Office of Information Technology.Wayne State University Library System, Detroit, MI, Jan 2001-Aug 2005 Electronic Resources Librarian & Electronic Resources Team Leader, Dec 2003-Aug 2005Systems Librarian, Detroit Area Library Network (DALNET), Mar-Nov 2003Graduate Student Assistant to the Dean of Libraries, Jul 2001-Dec 2002Office Manager, Library & Information Science Program, Jan-Jul 2001Consultant, Web Developer, 1999- (intermittently) Example projects include survey work in support of EHR implementation for health clinics; contentdevelopment for an Internet registrar; editing Engineering and Communications PhD dissertations.High School Teacher, Anadolu Ticaret Lisesi, Istanbul, Turkey, 1996-1997WORK IN PROGRESS Sheble, L., et al. Navigating patient complexity, differences, and disparities: Development of a web-basedco-diagnosis network visualization tool. Hassmiller Lich, K., Sheble, L., et al. System dynamics in public health: applications and opportunities.2

LAURA SHEBLEaj0151@wayne.edu 919.260.2031(cell)PUBLICATIONSEdited book (refereed) Southwell, B.G., Thorson, E.A., & Sheble, L. (Eds.). (2018). Misinformation and mass audiences. In A. Dillon(Series ed.), Information. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press.Journal publications (refereed) Borrett, S. R., Sheble, L., Amway, E. C., & Moody, J. (2018). Bibliometric Review of Ecological NetworkAnalysis: 2010-2016. Ecological Modelling. Sheble, L. (2017). Macro-level diffusion of a methodological knowledge innovation: Research SynthesisMethods, 1972-2011 [AIS Review]. Journal of the Association for Information Science & Technology,68(7), 2693–2708. https://doi.org/10.1002/asi.23864 Ribisl, K. M., Fernandez, M. E., Friedman, D.B., Hannon, P., Leeman, J., Moore, A., Olson, L., Ory, M.,Risendal, B., Sheble, L., Taylor, V., Williams, R., & Weiner, B. J. (2017). Impact of the Cancer Prevention andControl Research Network: Accelerating the translation of research into practice. American Journal ofPreventive Medicine, 52(3/S3), S233-S240. OA Baron, J.S., Specht, A., Garnier, E., Bishop, P., Campbell, C.A., Davis, F.W., Fady, B., Field, D., Gross, L.J.,Guru, S.M., Halpern, B.S., Hampton, S.E., Leavitt, P.R., Meagher, T.R., Parker, J.N., Price, R., Rawson, C.H.,Rodrigo, A., Sheble, L., & Winter, M. (2017). Sustaining synthesis centers as critical research infrastructure.BioScience. doi:10.1093/biosci/bix053 Science Base Sheble, L. (2016). Research synthesis methods and library and information science: Shared problems,limited diffusion. Journal of the Association for Information Science & Technology, 67(8), 1990-2008. Payne, J.L., Smith, F.A., Kowalewski, M., Krause, R.A., Jr., Boyer, A.G., McClain, C.R., Finnegan, S., NovackGottshall, P.M., & Sheble, L. (2012). A lack of attribution: Closing the citation gap through a reform ofcitation and indexing practices in the sciences. Taxon, 61, 1349–1351. Jasper, R.P., & Sheble, L. (2005). Evolutionary approach to managing e-resources. Simultaneously in G. Ives(Ed.), Electronic journal management systems: experiences from the field. Binghamton, NY: Haworth & TheSerials Librarian, 47(4), 55-70.Chapters Sheble, L. (2018). Misinformation and science: Emergence, diffusion, and persistence. In Southwell, B.G.,Thorson, E.A., & Sheble, L. (Eds.). Misinformation and mass audiences. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press. In B. Wildemuth (Ed.), Applications of social research methods to questions in information and libraryscience, 2nd ed. ABC-CLIO:Sheble, L., Brennan, K., & Wildemuth, B. (2016). Social network analysis. (pp. 339-350).Sheble, L., Thomson, L., & Wildemuth, B. (2016). Research diaries. (pp. 228-238).Sheble, L., Wildemuth, B., & Brennan, K. (2016). Transaction logs. (pp. 185-197). In B. Wildemuth (Ed.), Applications of social research methods to questions in information and libraryscience. Santa Barbara: Libraries Unlimited:Sheble, L. & Wildemuth, B. (2009). Research diaries. (pp. 211-221).Sheble, L. & Wildemuth, B. (2009). Transaction logs. (pp. 166-177).Proceedings: Refereed conference papers Sheble, L. (2016). Changing approaches to research synthesis affect social and intellectual structures ofscience. Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Association for Information Science & Technology, 53.3

LAURA SHEBLEaj0151@wayne.edu 919.260.2031(cell)PUBLICATIONS (CONTINUED) Sheble, L., & Chen, A.T. (2014). Contexts of diffusion: Adoption of research synthesis in Social Work andWomen’s Studies. In W.G. Kennedy, N. Agarwal, and S.J. Yang (eds.) Social computing, behavioral-culturalmodeling and prediction, Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 8393 (pp. 351-358). Lee, C. A., Capra, R., Clemens, R., & Sheble, L. (2008). I know it’s important, but what am I looking at?Strategies for using blog content to contextualize YouTube videos. Proceedings of the Second AnnualSociety of American Archivists Research Forum. Chicago, IL: Society of American Archivists, 2008. Sheble, L., Oh, S., Choemprayong, S., & Marchionini, G. (2006). Use of time-based visual metaphors inpregnancy PHR interface design. MedNet 2006: 11th World Congress on Internet in Medicine: ImprovingPublic Health through the Internet, Toronto, ON. Zhang, A., Witten, I.H., Olson, T., & Sheble, L. (2005). Greenstone in practice: Implementations of an opensource digital library system. [Panel]. Proceedings of the American Society for Information Science andTechnology, 42.Proceedings: Refereed conference posters Chen, A.T., Sheble, L., & Eichler, G. (2013). Topic modeling and network visualization to explore patientexperiences. Workshop on Visual Analytics in Healthcare VAHC, 16 Nov 2013, Washington, DC. Capra, R., Clemens, R., Lee, C.A., & Sheble, L. (2009). Contextual information from blogs in digital videocuration. Proceedings of DigCCurr 2009: Digital Curation Practice, Promise and Prospects, 2009, 196-198. Sheble, L., & Wall, T.B. (2007). Computing assistants pilot program evaluation. Evidence-Based Library andInformation Practice 4th International Conference: Transforming the Profession, Durham, NC. Sheble, L., Choemprayong, S., & Hank, C. (2007). Surveying bloggers’ perspective on digital preservation:Methodological issues. 3rd International Digital Curation Conference, Washington, DC. Hank, C., Choemprayong, S., & Sheble, L. (2007). Blogger perceptions on digital preservation. Proceedingsof the Joint Conference on Digital Libraries JCDL 2007, Vancouver, BC (p. 477). Choemprayong, S., Oh, S., & Sheble, L. (2006). Interfaces for the Personal Pregnancy Health Records(PregHeR) system: Facets in time. Annual symposium of the American Medical Informatics AssociationAMIA, Washington, DC. Oh, S., Sheble, L., & Choemprayong, S. (2006). Personal Pregnancy Health Records: Facets to interfacedesign, Proceedings of the 69th Annual Meeting of the Association for Information Science & TechnologyAnnual Meeting, 43, 296-300.Professional communications (Invited) Southwell, B.G., Thorson, E.A., & Sheble, L. (2017, Nov/Dec). The persistence and peril of misinformation.American Scientist, 105, 366-369. Sheble, L., Poole, N., & Michalak, S.C. (2012). The future of libraries and archives. A summary ofthe Information Professionals 2050 (IP 2050) Libraries and Archives [Panel discussion summary], Universityof North Carolina, Chapel Hill (June 4-5, 2012). rmationProfessionals-2050.pdf (pp.70-73) Hank, C., Sheble, L., & Choemprayong, S. (2009). Considerations for the preservation of blogs [Invitedbriefing paper for DigitalPreservationEurope].4

LAURA SHEBLEaj0151@wayne.edu 919.260.2031(cell)PUBLICATIONS (CONTINUED)Conference presentations (Abstracts only, selected) Bachrach, C., Daniel, S., Moody, J., Realmuto, L., Sheble, L., & Weiss, L. (2017, June). Effects of aninterdisciplinary postdoctoral program on interdisciplinary science. Science of Team Science (SciTS), 12-14Jun 2017, Clearwater Beach, FL. Sheble, L., Wu, E., & Moody, J. (2017). Visualization through complexity: the challenge of exploiting newanalytic tools for identifying network relationships in health data. Paper presented at SCCI 2017, 6thAnnual Symposium on Communicating Complex Information, 27-28 Feb 2017, Greenville, NC. Sheble, L. (2013). Adaptations to research synthesis methods: A Comparison of Social Work and Women’sStudies. Society for the Social Studies of Science (4S) Annual Meeting, 9-12 Oct 2013, San Diego, CA. Sheble, L. (2012). Research synthesis: Negotiating and adapting methods for social science knowledgeintegration. Society for the Social Studies of Science (4S) / European Association for the Study of Science &Technology (EASST) Annual Meeting, 17-20 Oct 2012, Copenhagen, Denmark. Hank, C., Sheble, L., & Choemprayong, S. (2007). Informing blog appraisal through blogger’s perspectiveson selection and preservation. DELOS Appraisal in the Digital World, Rome, Italy. Sheble, L., Olson, T., Zhang, A., & Witten, I.H. (2005). Greenstone: Installation to production [Panel]. ALAAnnual Conference 2000, Chicago, IL.Posters (Abstracts only, selected) Bhavsar, N.A., Olson, A., Sheble, L., Phelan, M., Goldstein, B., Kassner, C., Harker, M., & Taylor, D.H.Jr.(2017, June). Describing end-of-life health care markets from the patient perspective. 2017 AcademyHealthy National Research Meeting, 25-27 June, New Orleans, LA. Bhavsar, N.A., Olson, A., Sheble, L., Phelan, M., Goldstein, B.A., Kassner, C., Harker, M., & Taylor, D.H. Jr.(2017, May). Defining end of life health care markets. Duke University Cancer Control & PopulationSciences (CCPS) 6th Annual Science Research Poster Fair, 25 May 2017, Durham, NC. Sheble, L. (2016). Adopting and adapting to methods of synthesis. International Symposium on the Scienceof Science (ICSS 2016), 22-23 Mar 2016, Washington, DC. Sheble, L. (2014). Adoption of research practices and collaboration: The case of research synthesismethods. Science of Team Science (SciTS), 6-8 Aug 2014, Austin, TX. Cené, C.W., Sheble, L., Gaurav D., Hassmiller Lich, K., Ritchwood, T.D., & Corbie-Smith, G. (2014). Aninformetric analysis to illuminate best practices and gaps in applying systems science methods to addresshealth disparities. Complex Systems, Health Disparities & Population Health: Building Bridges, 24-25 Feb2014, Bethesda, MD. Sheble, L., Ramdeen, S., & Murillo, A. (2012). Public repertoires and private sets: Notes of interdisciplinaryresearchers collaborating together and alone. Document Academy (DOCAM) Conference, London, ON.Other contributions Realmoto, L., Daniel, S., Weiss, L., Moody, J., Sheble, L., & Bachrach, C. (2017). The Robert Wood JohnsonFoundation Health & Society Scholars: A structured evaluation [Report, to be disseminated at a later date]. Sheble, L., Hassmiller Lich, K., Frerichs, L., Dave, G., & Corbie-Smith, G. (2016). Systems science in PublicHealth: building capacity, navigating language with MeSH? [Letter]. BMJ esponses5

LAURA SHEBLEaj0151@wayne.edu 919.260.2031(cell)PUBLICATIONS (CONTINUED) Rebich-Hespanha, S., Hampton, S.E., Adams, B., Hespanha, J.P., Hackett, E.J., Parker, J.N. & the SensibleScience Working Group (2016). Assessing Synthesis and Synthesis Centers. Topic model data for titles,abstracts and keywords from 398,444 academic journal articles published between 1996 and 2013 in thefields of biodiversity conservation, ecology, evolutionary biology, fisheries & forestry [Data set] OpenICPSR. Sheble, L. (2015). Complex but approachable problems: research-informed research systems for policyenabled, socially supported socio-environmental health equity and sustainability research.ICT4Sustainability Workshop, iConference 2015, Newport Beach, CA. 24 March 2015.http://iconf2015ict4s.120cell.org/ (See ‘Papers’, Submission 8) Sheble, L. (2012). Research synthesis: Overview of an intersection with ILS [First place, SIG-MET studentpaper award], ASIS&T Annual Meeting, SIG-Metrics Workshop, 26 Oct 2012, Baltimore, MD. Sheble, L. (2010). Greenstone user and developer survey results [Report]. University of North Carolina,Chapel Hill. http://greenstonesurvey.wordpress.com/ Marchionini, G., Tibbo, H., Lee, C.A., et al. (2009). VidArch: Preserving Video Objects and Context finalreport [Report]. esearch/TR-2009-01.pdf Sheble, L. (2006). Greenstone user survey [Report]. University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.http://www.ils.unc.edu/ sheble/greenstone/survey-report.htmlINVITED LECTURES & PRESENTATIONS (SELECTED) Sheble, L., Wu, E., Chen, M., & Moody, J. (2016, Nov 10). Visualizing co-diagnostic networks: From ICD-9codes to an ego-net tool to support clinical decision-making. Data Dialogue speaker series, informationinitiative at Duke (iiD), Durham, NC. Sheble, L. (2016, Oct 12). Misinformation and Mass Audiences. Humanomics Open Research Seminar.Aalborg University, Copenhagen, Denmark. Sheble, L., Moody, J., & Lucas, J. (2015, Dec). Health networks. Social Science Research Institute all-staffresearch series. Duke University, Durham, NC. Moody, J., Lucas, J., & Sheble, L. (2015, Oct) Health Connectivity: Identifying social relations underlyinghealth and health disparities. Social Science Challenge, Duke University, Durham, NC. Cené, C.W., & Sheble, L. (2014, Dec 8). Systems science methods and health, part 1: System dynamics andnetwork analysis. Duke Network Analysis Center (DNAC), Duke University, Durham, NC.https://dnac.ssri.duke.edu/seminar-series.php Ribisl, K., Sheble, L., Leeman, J., Williams, R., Olson, L.T., & Weiner, B. (2014, Oct 14). Collaborationnetwork analysis, 2004-2014. Cancer Prevention & Control Research Network (CPCRN). Sheble, L. (2013, Oct). Diffusion of research synthesis. Advancing scientific synthesis theory & researchworking group. National Evolutionary Synthesis Center (NESCent), Durham, NC. Sheble, L. (2013, Oct). Bibliometric methods (Invited lecture), Research Methods (INLS 780), School ofInformation & Library Science, UNC at Chapel Hill.6

LAURA SHEBLEaj0151@wayne.edu 919.260.2031(cell)FELLOWSHIPS, AWARDS & HONORS (SELECTED)Visiting Research Fellow, Duke Network Analysis Center, Social Science Research Institute, Duke University,2017-2018.Margolis Fellow in Data Science, Robert J. Margolis, MD, Center for Health Policy, Duke University, Durham,NC, 2017.Postdoctoral Associate, Duke Network Analysis Center, Social Science Research Institute, Duke University,2015-2017.Science & Society Communications Fellow, Duke Initiative for Science & Society, 2016-2017.First runner-up, 2015 iSchools Doctoral Dissertation AwardDoctoral Fellowship, Triangle Research Library Network (TRLN), 2005-2007.Patricia B. Knapp Award, Wayne State University, Library & Information Science Program, Detroit, MI, 2003.RESEARCH SUPPORT & CONTRACT CONTRIBUTIONS (Contract): Health Behavior Department, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of NorthCarolina, Chapel Hill. Data analysis and visualization: MRTP research bias project. (with PIs A. Seidenberg,K. Ribisl) (Fall, 2017, 2500).Status: New/Ongoing (Duke Internal) Duke 2017 Data Program, information initiative at Duke (iiD), Identifying rare diseases inDuke University Health System, describing their distribution and utilization, and building capacity for stateand national rare disease initiatives, Richesson (Faculty Lead/Sponsor).Role: Co-InvestigatorStatus: Selected, Data Program (Summer, 2017) (Duke Internal) Bass Connections Program, SSNAP: Scientific Social Network Analysis Project, Moody (PI).Role: Postdoctoral Researcher and Mentor Status: Completed (2016-2017)Contracts (via Duke Network Analysis Center): Network and bibliometric analyses of collaboration andinterdisciplinarity. Clients: NC TraCS (2015-2016; 2016-); New York Academy of Medicine (2016-2017) (Duke Internal) Duke 2016 Data Program, information initiative at Duke (iiD), Health networks &disparities, Moody (PI).Role: Supervisor and mentorStatus: Completed (05/2016-08/2016) (Duke Internal) Social Science Research Challenge, Social Science Research Institute, Health Networks:DUHS Electronic Medical Record project; Moody (PI).Role: Postdoctoral AssociateStatus: Ongoing National Science Foundation (NSF) EF-0905606 National Evolutionary Synthesis Center (NESCent),Rodrigo/Smith (PIs).Roles: Research Assistant for Assessment of Center Activities (05/2012-05/2014)Investigator/Sub-contractor for WBSE 333-1140 through Duke University, Status: Completed (2014-2015)Library of Congress - National Digital Information Infrastructure Preservation Program (NDIIPP) contract,Preserving Video Objects and Context: A Demonstration Project (VidArch), Marchionini (PI), 2007-2009Role: Research Assistant (08/2007-06/2009) Status: CompletedInstitute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS), Educating the Next Generation of Academic LibraryProfessionals: A Dynamic Partnership Approach. Marshall (PI), 2003-2006Role: Fellow (2005-2007)Status: Completed 7

LAURA SHEBLEaj0151@wayne.edu 919.260.2031(cell)TEACHING & MENTORINGWayne State UniversityLIS 6080 Information Technology (Online)LIS 8410 Special Topics (Misinformation)Duke UniversityHealth Networks & Disparities: Usability of a network interface (Supervisor, UG Special Project)Health Networks & Disparities: Network interface development (Supervisor, UG Special Project)SSNAP: Scientific Social Network Analysis Project (Research Seminar, Occasional ct2016-2017Health Networks & Disparities (Data Summer-Intensive UG Fellowship Program, works-and-disparitiesUniversity of North Carolina, Chapel HillHuman Information Interactions (UNC, Instructor)Fundamentals of Information Science (UNC, TA)Research Methods (UNC, TA)PROFESSIONAL SOCIETY MEMBERSHIPSAssociation for Computing Machinery (ACM)Association for Information Science & Technology (ASIS&T)International Network for Social Network Analysis (INSNA)Society for the Social Studies of Science (4S)American Sociological Association (ASA)AFFILIATIONS & WORKING GROUPSDuke Network Analysis Center, Social Science Research Institute, Duke University, Durham, NCCenter for Health Equity Research, Dept. of Social Medicine, School of Medicine, UNC-CHAdvancing Scientific Synthesis Theory and Research (Invited participant). Sponsored by the National Center forEcological Analysis & Synthesis (NCEAS) and National Evolutionary Synthesis Center (NESCent). PIs: J.N.Parker & E. Hackett.Digital STS Workshop (Invited participant). Consortium for the Science of Sociotechnical Systems (CSST) &Center for Network Culture (CNC), Copenhagen, Denmark, 16 Oct 2012.8

LAURA SHEBLEaj0151@wayne.edu 919.260.2031(cell)SERVICEReviewer: Scientometrics, Translational Behavioral Medicine (special issue, networks section), Journal ofInformetrics, Social Media & Society (special issue), PLOS One, Association for Information Science &Technology SIG-Metrics Workshop (2012)Wayne State University School of Information Sciences Undergraduate program exploratory committee (2017-2018) Doctoral program exploratory committee (2017-2018)Contributor, NC TraCS Social Network Analysis & Evaluation Project Planning Team, 2015 Social network analysis and evaluation project planning for the North Carolina Translational & ClinicalSciences Institute (NC TraCS), which is supported by the NIH CTSA program.Programs Officer, SIG-Metrics, Association for Information Science & Technology, 2012-2013Committee Membership: School of Information & Library Science, UNC, Chapel Hill Full Time Representative, Doctoral Student Association, Jan-Dec 2011;Doctoral Student Representative, Undergraduate Committee, Aug 2010-Jul 2011;Doctoral Student Association: Research Symposium Program Committee, Fall 2009.Istanbul Coordinator, Global School Project (GSP), Istanbul, Turkey, 1999 American Sociological Association (ASA, Associate Member)WORKSHOP PARTICIPATION (SELECTED)SciComm Fellow Program science communications workshops, Duke Initiative for Science & Society, DukeUniversity, Fall 2016.Social Networks & Health, Duke Network Analysis Center, Duke University, May 2016.ICT4Sustainability. iConference 2015 workshop, 24 Mar 2015.Agent Based Modeling Boot Camp for Health Researchers. North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC, 4-8Aug 2014.9

LAURA SHEBLE aj0151@wayne.edu 919.260.2031(cell) 1 EDUCATION PhD, Information Science, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, NC. May 2014. DISSERTATION (FIRST RUNNER-UP, 2015 INFORMATION SCHOOLS (ISCHOOLS) DOCTORAL DISSERTATION AWARD) Title: Diffusion of meta-analysis, systematic review, and related research synthesis methods: Patterns,