 So the behind the scenes work is the hardest work, I think. I just stand here and clap. So you all have half sheets in front of you again. And these actually are our workshop evaluations. So what I'd like to do is give you two or three minutes to it really, really gives us important feedback to know what you are taking away from today. And so if you could just take literally three minutes and jot down some ideas on there. If we weren't so tired, I would love to give you a minute to give a closing comment to your neighbor. But I'm going to ask us all to do that as one large group, because I think we all need a final word, just one word. And then I want to make sure that the organizers and hosts, Jennifer, Liz, Charlize, David, Elaine, Sima, if any of the organizers and hosts have anything you want to share at the end, any of the next steps that you're planning on, that would probably be helpful for us to hear, perhaps even as people are writing a little bit. Well, I will just reiterate a couple of things, which are, we will put together a report. I know some of you were here when I said that at the last workshop and it never entirely materialized. In my defense on that, the world changed very quickly, the terminology changed, and so the report was out of date about a month after the report, after the meeting. So this is a follow-up to that. We will do a report this time, for sure. And but we are very interested in continuing this dialogue that started here today. And I know that we've heard from some of you that you want to see materials, you want to share, you want to keep in touch with each other. And also, I think there are maybe this whole group or there are subgroups here that are interested in continuing on a perhaps a more focused dialogue, maybe focused in on one or two of the things that were highlighted in those sort of closing slides. So we'll be back in touch with you all. I'm gonna say that on behalf of Dave and Charlize, who will be back in touch with you all and providing that opportunity. But if any of you have thoughts here now or after you've left on how you'd like to keep that discussion going, that would be great. We're also gonna take this information forward with what we learned at the games think tank, what we learned at the original think tank and sort of the field as a whole to that panel at the Citizen Science Association meeting. So any of you that might happen to be at the CSA, please join us for that. I think that'll be an interesting meeting as well. And if you want input into what we're thinking about taking to that group, let us know that as well. And I'll turn it over to Dave and Charlize and Liz and the others, if you wanna add to that or subtract from it. And as Dave and Charlize are negotiating the one other seat I wanna plant for you all as our closing round robin for everybody, today I want to just hear from everyone sort of the one word, what's the top priority for you coming out of this meeting? What's like the biggest idea, the most important issue area that you wanna walk out of here, that you are walking out of here with. So that's kind of the one word that I'm gonna ask for as we go around the room to close. But, so just give that some thought while you listen attentively to Dave and Charlize next. Okay, so Dave will fill out his half sheet while I talk and then I'll fill out my half sheet while Dave talks. So just start with thank you to everybody in this room. I know like we tried reaching out to you for months and I know like there was a lot of kind of back and forth and then trying to get everybody to participate in the sessions. This was really a commitment. A lot of you traveled like across the country to come to this meeting. We asked you to do a lot more participation than I know a lot of the NIH meetings that you might have attended in the past or other academic type meetings that you might have attended. We really asked you to do a lot of work and we got so much out of it and we're going to have so much to process from all of your valuable comments and just my word for the day yesterday was gratitude and that I continue to have that feeling as I look around the room and look at all the notes that I've taken and we know that the work will be hard but it will be worth it to try to get some shape to everything that you've given us. So once again, thank you for your participation. Thank you for coming here. Thank you for being so engaged for a long two days of meetings. Well said, thanks. Yeah, I mean, obviously a second thank you to everyone for, I mean, you don't get any compensation. I don't, you know, speaking of motivations, you know, you get, yeah, you get no money for this. You don't get coffee. So we really appreciate you taking your very, very precious time and coming to share with us. It's very challenging to figure out who should be in the room. One side we didn't show you. Our group one came up with a list of other stakeholders that we need to talk to. And so we know there's a huge community out there but I mean, I think I speak for both of us when I say we're really proud of who came and what you all contributed. In terms of our next steps, and I mean, I haven't checked this with our folks but I mean, one thought about, so but I mean, I guess I'm just asking your willingness or interest. I mean, you don't have to raise your hands or anything but I mean, one thing I think would be very useful is once we process this information and write out some, I think some kind of summaries to our two main questions of what we think we heard. I think feeding that back to you guys and using you as a sounding board, is that really what was said here and what are we missing? So to the extent you are willing to do that, I think my guesses will probably be asking something like that of you. And then subgroups and da, da, da, da. And just to follow up on specific issues. And just one insight that I'm taking forward, one thing that strikes me is that so many of you already know about enormous efforts that have gone on related to LC issues, work that's been done, tools have been developed. And so I think our charge is to not reinvent but build upon that and to take advantage of, I mean, the other thing I noticed is the enormous energy and commitment to this work from such a diverse community who have diverse interests and but all, I mean, in our group three discussion, it was sort of the tech people. And I mean, there were just like, there were probably, we didn't share that information, but there were probably like 30 ideas that came out. It was like, and they were all like nodding their heads at one another. I was like, I have no idea what you're talking about, but I'm writing it down. So I mean, it's clearly a hyper-energized community. I mean, you see that with the Twitterers and that was only a couple of them. So I mean, we really want to build on this energy and this commitment that this community has. And that's what I saw. Great, yeah. Thanks, David. And I think, thank you for the reminder of, because round three was important this morning because I think while the charge of this meeting was to come together to give, to advise on how to do it, to advise on NIH-funded research, I think it's also, we're here as actors in this world as well from all the different places where we stand and sit. And so I think thinking what we're personally walking out of here with to bring into our own communities of practice, I hope and trust that you all, that we've all been enhanced in that way by this conversation and exchange. And we'll summarize the round three stuff and give it back to you all as well because I mean, I think in some ways, at least what I heard is possible next steps, Elsie and not for some of the various communities represented here. And to the extent that's useful, we'll send it out. That's great. Yeah. Again, I want to reiterate that it would be useful to get the raw slides, not your summaries so that we can continue to add to them. And thank you. And I think, well, it sounds like we'll look on a shared space where we can make that available. Okay. Are we ready? I think we're ready to bring it to a close. Oh, we're gonna, and we'll get Pearl back for her last word here in a minute. And Jean, just to warn you, I want to start on your side of the room this time. But so I think what I do feel it's important you all have been really active participants throughout, including all of you back here. That's why I try to back the microphone up so I don't have my back to you all. So just for everyone to just have a literal last word, what are you walking away with? What's your priority coming out of here? And we'll just start over here and work our way around. You sort of mentally flooded with ideas. Great. I'm gonna use my 10 seconds to thank people we should have thanked, which is out there in the virtual space. The folks that joined us and were very active on the Twitter feed and elsewhere. Very interested in continuing to hear from you and engage you as well. And thanks to our capable Twitter master over there, Katrina and our video cast folks that have made the broadcasting outward and back inward possible. Great. So gratitude to Deb. Find common ground for a starting place. I know it's not one word, but. Phrases are welcome. Synergies. Connections. If you don't know what citizen science is, it is go participate in one and learn. Cultural change in the research enterprise. Agency change in the research enterprise as well. Still confused about definition. Translational. Let's go up through the middle there, Sokobi. Potentially transformative. Conversations. Actionable steps. Helping us identify priorities. Commitment to relationships and process as well as outcomes. Thank you. I'm gonna sweep back here and pick up this group and then come back that way. Let me start up there. Paradigm shift. Citizen scientists participate all through the research process. Case compilation. Opportunity for making the science more accessible to meet real needs. New public interfaces to research. Scientific continuum. Equity in partnerships. Let's remember that like other tools, however excited we are, citizen science can be used for good or for bad. Pushing boundaries and empowerment. No easy answers. An interesting start. Working together to solve biomedical issues. How can NIH intramural and other parts of NIH help? Adaptation. The politics of power. Opportunities for new research models and innovation at NIH. Thank you. And I think for mine, I would say, did we get everybody? What else? I would say, we're all in this together. Because of that, thank you so much. And thanks again to Charlize and Dave for all your behind the scenes work on getting this meeting pulled together and Jennifer and Liz for your leadership throughout this whole process and really to all of you. So thank you.