Filter Out Graymail
The UTHealth Houston IT Department has implement a graymail filtering system called Abnormal, offering a modern solution to tackle nuisance email content.
“Graymail” refers to pesky emails that aren’t quite spam but aren’t important either. They clutter an inbox, cause distractions, and make it harder to find critical messages. This includes newsletters, promotional offers, and notifications from social media platforms. While not outright malicious, graymail can still be a nuisance.
To opt in to this feature, log on to the UTHealth Houston Graymail filter page, authenticate using UTHealth Houston credentials, and click “Subscribe.” Once activated, email classified as graymail will be automatically filtered out of the inbox and into the junk email folder.
The same webpage can be used to unsubscribe.
Traditional email filters often struggle with graymail because they can’t discern the subtle nuances that differentiate graymail from a legitimate communication. As a result, graymail often slips through the cracks, causing inbox overload and productivity loss.
The Abnormal platform utilizes behavioral profiling, automated remediation, and self-learning AI to improve filtering accuracy and declutter inboxes, striking the right balance between productivity and security. It keeps inboxes organized, reduces distractions, and ensures that important emails don’t get lost in the noise.
Save the Date: Geriatric Trauma Symposium
Save the date, Friday, Nov. 15, for the 2024 Geriatric Trauma Symposium hosted by the Department of Emergency Medicine. The Geriatric Trauma Symposium Planning Committee invites students, residents, fellows, faculty, and researchers to submit scientific abstracts for consideration for poster presentation at the symposium.
Abstracts and case reports are encouraged to pertain to education, quality improvement, research, policy, patient experience, and/or clinical practice of older adults with trauma.
Abstracts must be submitted by 5 p.m., Sept. 3, and should be a maximum of 450 words and include an introduction, materials and methods, results, conclusion, and discussion. Abstracts can be submitted to Kim Vu at kim.vu@memorialhermann.org.
Join the EpiEx CME Series
The Texas Institute for Restorative Neurotechnologies invites you to join the bi-monthly Epilepsy Exchange Meeting at the Texas Medical Center (EpiEx). The Epi-TMC research initiative unites luminaries from esteemed institutions including McGovern Medical School, Baylor College of Medicine, Rice University and area hospitals to confront research and development barriers head on. Each EpiEx meeting revolves around a crucial challenge within the realm of epilepsy, and each meeting is approved for 1.5 hours of CME credit.
Research subjects span optimized care, neurostimulation techniques, genetic susceptibility, brain imaging innovations, biomarker discovery, novel anti-epileptic drugs, epilepsy surgery advancements, comorbidities, neurobiology insights, clinical trial progress, and global epidemiological studies.
For more information and a list of upcoming speaker sessions, click here.
|