CLS hosts a range of events for researchers using cohort data. Register for an upcoming event below, or visit the CLS Youtube channel to rewatch past events.
New to the CLS cohort studies? This webinar recording will give you an overview of four internationally renowned national cohort studies and the wide range of opportunities they offer to researchers.
This webinar recording highlights some examples of research on families and relationships using CLS’ unique series of UK national cohort studies.
Less than a week after the general election CLS hosted an event presenting the evidence on generational health drift. The event focused on data from the CLS cohorts, which provide a powerful tool to understand generational changes in health as well as inequalities in health.
This workshop introduces participants to linking small-area level data on the local physical (air quality, greenspace etc) and social (access to services, deprivation) environment to cohort and administrative data.
This webinar recording provides guidance on how to handle missing data in the 1970 British Cohort Study.
Comparative research initiatives are increasingly prominent components of health and social sciences, yet they require more specialised methods. This webinar recording discusses the challenges of cross-study comparative research and possible solutions.
This webinar recording highlights the genetic and epigenetic data available in our studies, and how to access them.
This webinar recording describes data on ageing and key life-course transitions using CLS cohort studies, and highlights future research opportunities.
This 90-minute session gives first-time users an overview of the 1958, 1970, Next Steps and millennium cohort studies – unique data resources available for researchers across the biomedical and social sciences.
An overview of the tools and strategies available to manage and visualise longitudinal cohort studies.
This webinar gives an overview of the data available on care and research opportunities in the four internationally-renowned cohort studies run by the Centre for Longitudinal Studies (CLS).
During this half-day in-person event attendees got an introduction to two new digital tools that were designed for researchers working with longitudinal data.
Richard Steele
Events and Marketing Officer
Phone: 020 7911 5320
Email: ioe.clsevents@ucl.ac.uk