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Blue Devil of the Week: Pushing Research Ideas Forward

Holly Williams supports researchers who submit protocol proposals for studies

Holly Williams helps Duke researchers make their project ideas reality. Photo by Stephen Schramm.
Holly Williams helps Duke researchers make their project ideas reality. Photo by Stephen Schramm.

Name: Holly Williams

Position: Director, Campus Institutional Review Board

Years at Duke: 22

What she does at Duke: All research involving humans done at institutions receiving federal funding must adhere to a strict set of regulations relating to safety, privacy and efficacy. At a university, the process of ensuring those federal regulations, as well as other government rules and internal policies, are met is the job of an institutional review board (IRB), a panel of faculty experts and unaffiliated community members who study proposed research projects, pointing out potential concerns and offering researchers guidance on how to move forward. Duke has two separate institutional review boards 鈥 one for medical research and one for educational and behavioral research. It鈥檚 Williams鈥 job to oversee the work of the latter, which is known as the .

鈥淲e look at each specific study and make sure people鈥檚 privacy and autonomy are being respected,鈥 Williams said.

Williams leads a five-person team that works with researchers to sharpen their proposals and develop procedures that will meet the standards of the IRB. With a wide range of research conducted at Duke, Williams said the kinds of projects she and her team help with are always surprising. She said that one day, she might be helping someone with a routine marketing study, or an exploration of how brains react to video games, or an exploration of gender equity in developing countries.

鈥淭he thing I say frequently about campus IRB work is that every single day is different,鈥 Williams said. 鈥淲e look at everything involving human subjects across the entire spectrum of campus departments, schools and institutes. And that鈥檚 extremely energizing. After 22 years, nearly every day, I鈥檓 coming across something I haven鈥檛 seen before.鈥

What she loves about Duke: Williams said that in her job, she has a unique vantage point on the science that unfolds at Duke. Seeing a research project go from a proposal to a reality never ceases to be a thrill. 

鈥淒uke is such a big, sophisticated, multi-layered, technical organization that has a life of its own,鈥 Williams said. 鈥淪o for me to be in the thick of that, and be able to watch it navigate its way into the future, on the cutting-edge of science, it鈥檚 just really fascinating to me.鈥

While working from home, Holly Williams has come to appreciate her standing desk. Photo courtesy of Holly Williams. Something helpful in her workspace: Williams has been working from home since the pandemic began. When she left her former workspace in Erwin Square, she took her standing desk with her, a move she appreciates each day.

鈥淚t鈥檚 huge because, when we were in the office, there was a lot of moving around, you鈥檇 go across the hall, or downstairs, or down the street to have lunch,鈥 Williams said. 鈥淏ut working full-time here, it鈥檚 just me, I don鈥檛 have to move as much. So having the standing desk can kind of replicate that.鈥

When she鈥檚 not working, she likes to: Williams, along with her horses, dogs and cats, lives on a 10-acre piece of land near Pittsboro in rural Chatham County. She enjoys soaking in the quiet of nature, looking for birds at her feeders or deer moving through the space by her house.

鈥淚 do spend an inordinate amount of time mowing grass on my tractor, though,鈥 Williams said. 鈥淏ut I don鈥檛 mind.鈥

Holly Williams enjoys caring for her horse named Brother. Photo courtesy of Holly Williams. Something most people don鈥檛 know about her: Williams has loved horses since childhood and briefly entertained thoughts of a career in the horse racing industry. But now, she鈥檚 found her passion in caring for horses of her own. She鈥檚 owned four horses through the years, three of which 鈥 including her current horse named Brother 鈥 were at one time in their lives groomed to race.

鈥淭here are a lot of organizations cropping up all over the country that take horses off the track and teach them a new job and help them find a good home,鈥 Williams said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what I look for.鈥

Lesson learned during the pandemic: With the lack of a commute freeing up around two hours of her day, Williams realized how important it is to fill her time with things she enjoys.

鈥淭he degree to which I didn鈥檛 carve time out for myself became glaringly apparent when my time as all my own to manage,鈥 Williams said.

During the past two years, she鈥檚 begun pursuing singing. Williams has always been a fan of music, but during the past year she鈥檚 enjoyed taking weekly voice lessons on Zoom.

鈥淚鈥檓 not going to get any gold records, or sing in front of thousands of people, I don鈥檛 even sing karaoke,鈥 Williams said. 鈥淚 just didn鈥檛 want to send people running away covering their ears if I burst into song. But now, if someone wants to sing Christmas carols, I feel confident in doing that.鈥

Is there a colleague at Duke who has an intriguing job or goes above and beyond to make a difference? Nominate that person for Blue Devil of the Week.