
Canada Foundation for Innovation (Canada Foundation for Innovation)
Explorez tous les épisodes de Canada Foundation for Innovation
Date | Titre | Durée | |
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16 Nov 2022 | 10,000 ways | Why using sound to treat disease is beautiful music to Simone Dalla Bella's ears | 00:24:50 | |
(This podcast is available only in French)
Simone Dalla Bella of Montréal’s International Laboratory for BRAin, Music and Sound Research asks “How can music help us in our daily tasks? And how can it slow down the deleterious effects of diseases such as Parkinson’s?”
Why is it that some people who are perfectly capable of hearing a beat still can’t dance? Researchers at the International Laboratory for Brain, Music, and Sound Research are trying to establish a correlation between music and cognitive skills such as speech, memory, attention span and a host of other executive functions. Their research findings could lead to major breakthroughs for people with cognitive impairments. | |||
13 Sep 2016 | Episode 1: Fiscal Armageddon | 00:14:53 | |
Ce balado est uniquement disponible en anglais. When the Wall Street Journal calls Canada the “Banana Republic of the North”, Jean Chrétien and his new Liberal government prepare to take dramatic action to control the deficit. This threatens to make a difficult situation even worse for Canadian researchers. | |||
27 Sep 2016 | Episode 2: An unexpected opportunity | 00:13:57 | |
Ce balado est uniquement disponible en anglais. The Liberal government cuts spending across government so deeply, even Finance Minister Paul Martin faces a crisis of confidence. At the same time, university presidents try to convince Minister Martin that research in Canada is in serious trouble…and they offer an intriguing solution. | |||
04 Oct 2016 | Episode 3: The idea of CFI is born | 00:12:53 | |
Ce balado est uniquement disponible en anglais. The Liberal government suddenly finds itself facing a budget surplus for the first time in decades. Researchers, university presidents, government officials in the department of Finance and the PMO work on a plan to support research through an independent foundation that will invest in the cutting-edge labs and equipment researchers need. | |||
11 Oct 2016 | Episode 4: An idea becomes reality | 00:19:39 | |
Ce balado est uniquement disponible en anglais. The new Canada Foundation for Innovation begins to assemble a talented team that charts an exciting course for the organization, but must also address opposition from Quebec. Researchers try to adjust to a new “mind blowing” way of doing research. And…the Queen is not amused by the CFI’s early success. | |||
11 Aug 2016 | Our origin story - TRAILER | 00:01:20 | |
Ce balado est uniquement disponible en anglais. Two decades ago Canada’s federal government was struggling to contain a deficit that, in the words of one top finance official, was pulling the country towards "fiscal Armageddon." And yet, this was the moment when the government decided to make historic investments in research infrastructure. The creation of the Canada Foundation for Innovation was a game-changer for research in Canada. But how did it come to be? This podcast series tells this story through extensive interviews with key players in the federal government and the research community. It is an insider’s look at how Canada jumped to the front of the line in research capacity. | |||
09 Sep 2016 | Our origin story - PROMO - Canada is the "Banana Republic of the North" | 00:01:06 | |
Ce balado est uniquement disponible en anglais. In this excerpt, former Deputy Minister of Finance Scott Clarke describes former Prime Minister Jean Chretien's reaction to a Wall Street Journal article in the late 1990s that called Canada the "Banana Republic of the North." This is a promo clip for the upcoming release of "Our origin story", a new four-part podcast series that traces the Canada Foundation for Innovation's unlikely origin story. | |||
12 May 2017 | Episode 5: A new research strategy for Canada | 00:17:51 | |
Ce balado est uniquement disponible en anglais. To help reverse the brain drain that plagued Canada's research community in the 1990s, the newly established Canada Foundation for Innovation started outfitting Canadian universities with the state-of-the-art research infrastructure they sorely needed. But it would take more than funding a couple of new microscopes here and there — the CFI would need to turn the current system on its head to get the job done. | |||
09 Jun 2017 | Episode 6: The way forward | 00:33:52 | |
Ce balado est uniquement disponible en anglais. In the 2017 Federal Budget, the word “innovation” appeared 262 times. Innovation's future as a buzzword is secure but in this episode, CFI President & CEO Gilles Patry and Board Chair Kevin Smith look at what innovation in Canada looks like today. They also comment on what needs to be done to ensure Canadian research continues to thrive. | |||
02 Oct 2017 | Catherine Girard: Dealing with mercury in food | 00:18:27 | |
Disponible aussi en français: https://blubrry.com/fci_cfi/27727460/catherine-girard-attnuer-limpact-du-mercure-dans-la-nourriture/ At the Université de Montréal, Catherine Girard analyzes gut bacteria to understand the impacts of mercury in the human body. She is particularly interested in how mercury interacts with traditional foods in the North and the health impacts it has on those living there. Her PhD project has taken her to Resolute Bay, a remote hamlet in Nunavut, where she collects samples from the local Inuit population. In Montreal, she works in two CFI-funded biology labs and uses a gut simulator to conduct her experiments. | |||
24 Nov 2017 | Michael Houghton: His 30-year quest to cure Hepatitis C | 00:24:25 | |
Ce balado est uniquement disponible en anglais. Michael Houghton’s discovery of the Hepatitis C virus in 1989 — along with colleagues Qui-Lim Choo and George Kuo — led to blood screening tests that have protected tens of millions of people from contracting the disease. In this podcast, Houghton — Canada Excellence Research Chair in Virology at the University of Alberta — discusses the scope of Hep C infection worldwide, describes his discovery of the virus and explains his current search for a vaccine that will help the World Health Organization reach its goal of eradicating Hep C by 2030. | |||
15 Mar 2018 | Tefford Simpson: Sight for sore eyes - Researching the nerves of the cornea | 00:18:05 | |
Ce balado est uniquement disponible en anglais. Twenty years ago, University of Waterloo Optometry and Vision Science Professor Trefford Simpson began researching the nerves on the surface of the human eye, using a specialized machine called the pneumatic esthesiometer. In this podcast, he shares the insights gained over two decades of research, and discusses the elusive goal of modern lens-makers: to create a comfortable contact lens. | |||
19 Apr 2018 | Ghose, Damascelli, Hall and Pioro-Landrière: The solace of quantum | 00:18:19 | |
Ce balado est uniquement disponible en anglais. Sub-atomic research portends a second digital revolution that could solve some of our most vexing problems Building on the theories of Einstein and his contemporaries, today’s quantum physicists investigate the unique properties of sub-atomic particles, aiming to deepen our knowledge of the universe, and to usher in a new technological revolution. With applications in fields including computer science, pharmacology, clean energy, and many more, quantum science holds tremendous potential for innovative disruption.
Learn more about emerging quantum technologies in this podcast featuring Dr. Shohini Ghose (Professor of Physics, Wilfrid Laurier University; VP elect, Canadian Association of Physicists ); Dr. Andrea Damascelli (Professor of Physics and Astronomy, University of British Columbia; Canada Research Chair in the Electronic Structure of Quantum Materials); Dr. Kimberley Hall (Professor and Canada Research Chair in Ultrafast Science, Dalhousie University); and Dr. Michel Pioro-Ladrière (Professor of Physics and Deputy Director of Institut Quantique, Université de Sherbrooke). | |||
23 Apr 2018 | Sheena Gurm: Seeking a treatment for ALS | 00:13:55 | |
Ce balado est uniquement disponible en anglais. PhD student Sheena Gurm looks deep into brain cells for clues to a deadly disease When viruses infected our ancestors millions of years ago, they left behind strands of their DNA embedded in human brain cells. At the University of Manitoba, Sheena Gurm studies these viral sequences, as part of a research team seeking to understand the causes of ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease. Her research may lead to new treatments, such as the use of antiretroviral drugs, to combat this debilitating and ultimately deadly affliction. With thanks to CKUW 95.9 FM Winnipeg for their assistance in producing this podcast. | |||
25 May 2018 | Carrie Bourassa: Knowledge, ceremony, and an Indigenous approach to research | 00:19:32 | |
Ce balado est uniquement disponible en anglais. Carrie Bourassa explains what Indigenous research methodology means, and why it matters When non-Indigenous scientists wish to conduct research in Indigenous communities, cultural misunderstandings can arise over issues including the methods of research; ownership of data; and interpretation of results. In this podcast, Carrie Bourassa – Research Chair in Indigenous and Northern Health and Senior Scientist at Health Sciences North Research Institute in Sudbury, Ontario – introduces listeners to the complexities of conducting research in First Nations communities and the philosophy of Indigenous research methodology.
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19 Oct 2018 | Chukwunonso Nzelu:Tiny fly, deadly bite | 00:12:03 | |
Ce balado est uniquement disponible en anglais. University of Calgary post-doctoral student Chukwunonso Nzelu studies the deadly tropical disease Leishmaniasis. Leishmaniasis is a devastating disease that kills tens-of-thousands of people every year. By studying the sandflies that transmit it, the University of Calgary’s Chukwunonso Nzelu is helping to zero in on a vaccine Raising sandflies is tricky, but with the help of Chukwunonso Nzelu’s expertise, researchers have grown a large, thriving colony of the insects at the University of Calgary’s high-level containment insectarium. It’s a critical resource for studying how the flies transmit Leishmaniasis to humans, with the goal of producing a vaccine against the disease which kills 30 000 people a year. What they learn could also inform the prevention of other insect-borne diseases like Lyme disease and malaria. | |||
19 Oct 2018 | Annie Castoguay: Better molecules for better medicine | 00:17:07 | |
Disponible aussi en français: https://blubrry.com/fci_cfi/41971985/annie-castonguay-de-meilleures-molcules-pour-une-meilleure-mdecine/ Annie Castonguay, a researcher at Quebec’s Institut national de la recherche scientifique, works to mobilize metals to destroy cancer cells and drug-resistant bacteria when traditional antibiotics and cancer treatments fall short. Cancer treatments like chemotherapy aren’t perfect. The drugs meant to kill cancerous cells aren’t choosy, so they take out healthy cells too, which can mean serious side-effects for the patient. And if cancer cells develop a resistance, the therapies might not result in a complete remission. Engineering new molecules that incorporate the power of metals to destroy diseased cells could not only lead to more effective cancer treatments, but also better defences against another serious health threat — multidrug resistant bacteria.
00:00:05 - 00:05:02 This podcast is brought to you by the Canada Foundation for Innovation. My name is Annie Castonguay and I'm an Assistant Professor of chemistry at INRS institute Armand Frappier. Metals are at the heart of Dr. Annie Castoguay's research. Her programme involves both fundamental and applied research. She is interested in the design of new organic metallic complexes for their use as catalysts and as therapeutics such as anti cancer and antimicrobial agents. She and her collaborators at the INRS Institute Armand Frappier are engineering new molecules to overcome some of the problems with current cancer therapies. Unfortunately metal complexes often have a bad reputation as therapeutic agents. Very often people mistakenly believed that they are too toxic to be used in medicine. What they do not know though is that metal complexes are widely used in clinics every day. It is reported that approximately fifty percent of all cancer patients who undergo chemotherapy are at some point treated with a metal complex. So for example a compound known as cisplatin which contains a platinum metal atom which is widely used in the world for cancer therapy. The compound is injected to the patient intravenously undergo some transformations and reaches its main target believed to be DNA so then the cancer cells die and the patient survives. Unfortunately there are many problems associated with chemotherapy. As we know firstly therapeutic agents become less and less effective due to the development of cancer cell resistance. Cancer cells learn how to recognize the drug and adapt to survive in its presence so moreover theraputic agents are not only toxic to cancer cells but are toxic to healthy tissues as well leading to numerous side effects. I wish i could say that researchers have now solved all these problems. But unfortunately this is not the case. The part of my research program which aims at developing novel anti-cancer drug candidates attempts to address those two problems. So my team develops compounds based on routeenium. Some routeenium complexes are known to linked to DNA but also to act through other modes of action so previously reported routeenium complexes were found to be very promising as drug candidates and some of them even in third clinical trials during the last few years. For example, an ongoing research project in my lab involves the preparation of multitasking metal complexes which consistent in the synthesis of compounds based on routeenium to which are coordinated molecules that can themselves display an anti-cancer activity. So the creation of metallic compounds able to act through different mechanisms simultaneously could lead to the development of new efficient treatments that induce less cancer cell resistance. Another ongoing project in my research group is the design of metal complexes that can display a higher selectivity towards cancer cells so to reached his goal we create thermal sensitive linkages between metal complexes and targeting molecules which can be disassembled at higher temperatures so those targeting agents with the special affinity with cell receptors or orginels of certain cancer cells are carefully chosen so that they can act as shuttles and helped the metal complexes to reach cancer cells or tumors more efficiently before being released either slowly at body temperature, thirty seven degrees or more rapidly with the use of a laser. So we hope this strategy to be beneficial for cancer patients by reducing the occurrence of side effects during their treatment. Dr. Thomas Sanderson is a professor of toxicology and he works with Dr. Castonguay at the Institute Armand Frappier. They hope the complex's they're testing will also work at starving ER positive breast cancer cells of the estrogen that they need to grow. And the other action of the same molecule would be to enter the micro environments of the tumor and enter the cells around the tumor that are actually producing the estrogens that feed the tumour and the enzyme involved there is called aromatase and the organic metal compounds that is producing have several aromatase molecules attached to it which are then released in these cells at least, that is the hypothesis and we'll be able to inhibit the enzyme that feeds the tumour 00:05:02 - 00:10:28 So if one of the components the mental part that is killing the tumor cells directly and the second components, the aromatase inhibitor. that prevents the food source of the tumor by inhibiting the enzyme in the in the surrounding tumor cells. This type of research is a painstaking process. Dr Castonguay explains that she and her colleagues are closer to the start than the finish in terms of developing a viable chemotherapy alternative. We didn't reach to the point where we would test even our best drug candidates in mice. What we do for now is that we do in vitro studies and we also started to work with zebra fish models. So these are kind of accepted in vivo studies. Preliminary toxicity studies for drug design. Dr. Castonguay's work at the Institute Armand Frappier flows from a lifelong fascination with the scientific world. Her quest to understand the world around her began as a child long before she started building molecules. I come from Grandby which is a city located in between Montreal and Sherbrooke in Quebec. And i've always been interested in science. I remember finding myself in the basement of my parents house trying to challenge myself to work on a specific topic and try to learn as much as i could on the topic. Just by reading some of these Encyclopaedia that were available to me in that basement. I remember that I was interested in astronomy. Biology also in chemistry but not specifically in chemistry. I decided to go to Champlain regional college and i registered to a very broad scientific program. After that i started university and i went again to a general program because i chose to go in chemical engineering and so i i registered at the Ecole Polytechnic de Montreal and during that year and a half I really missed chemistry. I really understood that chemistry was missing. I really wanted to learn more about interactions between molecules so i decided to move on and registered to a bachelor degree in chemistry. So i registered to invest in Montreal, the building right beside but i remember that what really really caught my attention and what was really the highlight of my bachelor I would say was to take this course in the second year about mineral chemistry inorganic chemistry. It was a lab. I remember that I was amazed by the chemistry of metals. So after i decided that i really wanted to do a master degree in chemistry of metals so i chose to work with the group of David Sagarian at the University de Montreal and i also was directed at the time by Andre Beauchamps who is also very good inorganic chemists. So i worked with them I had an amazing time during my phd. I learned a lot of things. The main goal of my PhD was to prepare metallic complexes based on nickel which is a metal and i had to prepare... designing some complexes that we're going to be active to be catalysts for organic reactions so after my PhD I went to Tufts university in Boston and the during the training I worked with Molybdenum complexes. Molybdenum is another metal. It was a very challenging. When I was using a glove box so I had to work under inert atmosphere so i had to get very skilled at working with such compounds. Dr Castonguay's research into organic metallic compounds is driving cutting edge collaborations with scientists from a range of disciplines within the INRS. She began seeking out connections as a postdoctoral fellow where she worked at the intersection of chemistry, biology and therapeutics. I undertook to other post docs and both of them were at Mcgill University. The first of them was when i started to get more experienced. I would say a with organic synthesis and i undertook a very challenging project at preparing dendrimers. So I worked at preparing dendrimers that would have antimicrobial properties. So this is when i started to enter the world of biology and then i started to work with the collaborator of the group from do pharmacology and therapeutics department from McGill for my third post doctoral project so i was for the first time exposed to cell culture I was working with students would grow cancer cells in cell culture labs so that was very interesting to me. 00:10:28 - 00:15:02 I really enjoy doing that. When the INRS was seeking a professor of chemistry at the Institute Armand Frappier Dr. Castonguay said she was intrigued by the opportunity to work alongside so many different types of scientists. Her cross discipline research was seen as an asset. My experience in biology during my post doctoral studies allowed me to become interesting for people who were working here. And i found that i could establish a lot of different collaborations in different areas because i was a chemist, I was able to prepare molecules... interested in metals but i saw I had experience with anti-microbials in anticancer compounds. So here there are many researchers working in those areas along with immunology, toxicology, environment, .... There are all sorts of of research here. So i discovered that this place here was the size of a university department but there were so many different expertises in so many different fields of research. Metals may also be an innovative weapon in the fight against multi resistant bacteria. Dr Castonguay is testing some of her molecules on bacterial pathogens. Yeah as we know there is currently in an urgent need to develop new antibiotics that are active against multi-resistant bacteria so organometallic complexes are according to me not studied deeply enough for that purpose and this is why my group establishes collaborations with microbiologists from INRS with the hope to discover molecules with novel modes of action. So it was previously reported that some metallic complexes can interact with DNA... some enzymes and disrupt bacterial membranes. Complexes prepared in my lab are then tested against various multi resistant bacteria and some of those compounds recently screened were found to be highly active and selective against important patterns. Dr Frederic Verier is a researcher in microbiology at the Institute Armand Frappier. He's working with Dr. Castonguay to test compounds that may offer a much needed treatment for people infected with antibiotic resistant bacteria. So the research of professor Annie Castonguay is original in the sense that she synthesize organometallic molecule that are for the moment underexploited for the antibiotic properties. There are multiple evidence that this molecule could be the source of new antibiotics with ... properties. So with Annie we have already carry out several screen of different complex prepare in her laboratory to extract ... complex with bacteria... activity so we are now looking for the mode of action with the the hope that the mode of action we'd be original. And we also hope to discover molecules that act on several different targets simultaneously to avoid evolving resistance in the future. So in fact we have already identified a very promising molecule extracted from the screen which will soon be the subject of baton given it's high activity but also it's high selectively for some ample time pathogen specifically.... The professors INRS Institute Armand Frappier conduct their research in every corner of the scientific realm. But when Dr. Castonguay joined the team she identified a need for chemistry equipment that would make her work more efficient and she credits investments from the Canada Foundation for Innovation and the Quebec government for funding a suite of tools that are essential for the research she and her collaborators are doing. I'm very lucky. I got a lot of equipment and without that the equipment I would not have been able to make any of the research I'm doing right now. With what was what was available at the institute when i started because as you know there were not that many chemists here and that definitely not doing the same chemistry as I do. So as i mentioned earlier we have to prepare compounds under inert atmosphere. 00:15:02 - 00:17:02 So we have a trio of three really complimentary pieces of equipment. It's great now now that we are all fully equipped. It's very very nice. It's completely different than when i started four years ago. I mean there are many advantages for chemists to be here that's for sure but the downside is that if we need something that is chemistry related we cannot borrow it. We cannot use it from somebody else. We have to be self sufficient so this is where CFI was really really essential for me to be able to undertake my research program here because definitely yeah. I could not function if I could not have all that. We just want to emphasize on the fact that it's very very important for an early career researcher to be able to have to be allowed to apply for that equipment that CFI is providing because it is extremely important not only to be able to undertake the projects that these early researchers want to do but also to keep them at a competitive level with the other early researchers from other countries for example or other labs. The investments the CFI has made to further Dr. Castonguay's research help keep her on the leading edge of scientific study and in time, her innovations with organometallic complexes may offer new hope in the fight against cancer and drug resistant bacteria. Find more research stories like this at innovation dot ca slash stories and subscribe to the Canada Foundation for innovation through your favorite podcast app.
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20 Feb 2019 | Gerry Wright: Keeping antibiotics ahead of infectious diseases | ||
Ce balado est uniquement disponible en anglais. Antibiotic resistance is an increasingly serious problem - threatening to alter modern medicine as we know it. It's an area of research that has captured Gerry Wright's attention for over two decades. As the director of the Michael G. DeGroote Institute for Infectious Disease Research at McMaster University, Wright and his team have made some exciting progress in identifying where resistant genes come from and how to beat them. Transcript: This podcast is brought to you by the Canada Foundation for Innovation. Imagine cancer chemotherapy without being able to control infection. Imagine open heart surgery. Organ transplantation. Saving premature babies. All of this stuff is based on our ability to control infection and without antibiotics, all those wonderful things we've come to expect from medicine evaporate. My name is Gerry Wright, I'm the director of the Michael G. de Groote Institute for Infectious Disease Research at McMaster University. Antibiotic resistance has been called an apocalyptic scenario by a number of public health leaders around the world. It's taking us back to what it was like before 1940 when the major reason people died was because of infection. Now your chances of dying of infection or about three percent whereas in say 1930 it was almost sixty percent so the reason for that is antibiotics and vaccines and all the wonderful things that control infection and we're at risk of losing that. In our lab we are investigating how to overcome antibiotic resistance so that includes finding out what the enemy is an then see what we can do in terms of being able to discover new drugs or new approaches to killing resistant bacteria. Resistance is spreading like wildfire across the the planet because of modern transportation because of all of these interventions that we're doing in hospitals and as a result we have a really significant problem. One of the biggest issues that we face is that we're not considering in terms of evolution. We think it's sort of a stochastic event but this is entirely predictable process and it's been going on for millennia. So we really need to rethink how we look at a microbes and think about them in terms of their evolutionary history. And then we'll start to be able to rationalize why antibiotic resistance is such a significant problem and maybe even get ahead of it instead of trying to react to it. We're very interested in thinking about antibiotic resistance on a global level and not just in pathogenic bacteria, disease causing bacteria but rather where do these resistance genes come from in the first place and what we found for example is that environmental bacteria that don't cause disease are actually large reservoirs of resistance genes. Probably the origins of antibiotic resistance and so these genes move throughout bacterial populations horizontally so from one organism to another they share DNA so bacteria are notoriously promiscuous having sex with each other all the time and as a result they share these these genes and we're trying to understand these mechanisms in order to use that against these organisms to solve this problem. We reported in, "Nature" a molecule that blocks one of the most important antibiotic resistance elements out there right now and that rescues antibiotic activity. That was a big day in the lab when we were actually able to give a mouse an infection with a lethal dose of of drug resistant organisms, add the antibiotic and add this compound and when this compound, this inhibitor of resistance is added the mice live so that was the big eureka sort of moment that we were really onto something hot... And so we're actually in the early stages of sort of a real drug discovery process where we're doing things that I never thought we would be able to do because we have this really this really hot molecule. So that's incredibly exciting and time will tell whether or not will actually be a drug that we can use for people but it's the closest I've come in the last twenty five years of dreaming about something like this. It's a pretty exciting feeling to go back and look at where we started and where we are now. It really shows that you can stay in Canada and get things done. This podcast is brought to you by the Canada Foundation for Innovation. If you're a researcher looking for funding opportunities click here. If you're a business looking for research facilities that can help you succeed click here.
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05 Mar 2019 | Robert Sawyer: Sci-fi writer imagines the future of Canadian science | 00:12:47 | |
Ce balado est uniquement disponible en anglais. This country’s extraordinary real-life research facilities provide a wondrous backdrop for Sawyer’s imagined futures, proving you don’t have to stray far from home to be inspired by leading-edge science Award-winning author Robert Sawyer dreamed of a career in science, but was discouraged by the state of Canadian research in the 1970s. So he decided to write science fiction instead. These days, he often sets his novels in Canada’s remarkable research labs, including the Canadian Light Source (where he was writer-in-residence) and SNOLAB (where part of his Hugo Award-winning novel Hominids is set). Speaking to a room full of researchers at a workshop for the country’s national research facilities in November 2018, he surveyed the state of Canadian science institutions from the time he was entering university in 1979 through to the world-class installations we have today. Prime Minister Sir Wilfrid Laurier said the 20th century would belong to Canada; Sawyer tells us why, as far as science is concerned and thanks to the CFI, he was off by a hundred years. Music credit: Soda Machine by Kabbalistic Village | @kabbalisticvillage Music promoted by www.free-stock-music.com Attribution-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported (CC BY-ND 3.0) creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/3.0/ Transcript: [SAWYER] I started out to be a scientist in this country in the 1970s. I was graduating from high school in 1979, and I wanted to be a dinosaurian paleontologist. [NARRATOR] This is Robert J. Sawyer, award-winning Canadian science fiction writer. He has written more than twenty novels, and his books can be read in over two dozen languages. Here he speaks to a room of about 85 Canadian researchers at a workshop hosted by the Canada Foundation for Innovation in Ottawa in November 2018. [SAWYER] My father taught economics at the University of Toronto, and he said, “Whatever you want to do, do a little research. Find out what the job opportunities are before you invest.” Because if you’re gonna become a scientist, you’re talking ten years to get your PhD. You’re going to invest a lot of time. So I started looking around, and at that time, 1979, there were precisely three dinosaurian palaeontologists in Canada. There are only 24 full-timers in the entire world. And so what I thought was a crazy dream, which was being an internationally successful science fiction writer, based in Toronto, based in Canada, actually turned out to be more practicable as a career choice than choosing science in this country in the 1970s. [NARRATOR] After he wrote his first novel in 1988, Sawyer was still troubled about not having become a scientist. He quotes David Suzuki, who was also reflecting on the state of Canadian science at the time. [SAWYER] He had said this in ’87. So, again, just to give us some perspective here, this was 31 years ago — “I was soon to see the difference between Canada and the United States. My American peers, starting out as assistant professors like me, could expect their first grants in the 30- to 40 thousand dollar range. I was told that National Research Council of Canada grants start at about 25 hundred dollars.” So there’s no question that, at the time I was thinking of becoming a scientist, and indeed in the early days of science in this country, we were undervaluing it. We didn’t have a lot of people who were making full-time careers in science. We were underfunding our institutions. We were depreciative of the great intellectual base we were producing here in Canada. Times change though. And I've been privileged as a science fiction writer to watch those changes. In 2002, a novel of mine came out called Hominids, which is set in large part at what was then called the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory, and is now — because it has widened its mandate — SNOLAB. [NARRATOR] SNOLAB is a unique underground research facility in Sudbury, Ontario. Located in a nickel mine two kilometers underground, the lab specializes in neutrino and dark matter physics. In 2015, Canadian astrophysicist, Arthur McDonald, and his research partner won the Nobel Prize in Physics for their discovery that subatomic particles known as neutrinos have mass. [SAWYER] And I remember, very vividly, calling up Art McDonald, and I said, “You know, I want to write a novel set …” And he said, “Oh man, we had a mystery writer come here. We weren’t really happy with what they did, I don’t know.” And he said, “What do you want to do?” And I said, “Well, in the first chapter, I want to destroy the neutrino detector.” And he said, “You know how you can do that?” [SAWYER AND AUDIENCE LAUGH] And I actually used his scenario. So he immediately got engaged. And I loved the fact that, when I was writing this novel, I was able to … I was looking for a facility that was world-class, and unlike when I started writing in the late 80s, by the early 2000s, I could look around and have my pick of them to write and set novels at. But I started with the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory, as really, it’s a wonderful, amazing, facility. If you get the chance to go, go down. Have a look. I learned that SNOLAB, has the world’s deepest flushed toilets in the world. And I felt bad because you have to go down for four hours. That’s the only … so, I held it. I didn’t know. I should have used the toilet because then I would have been part of that record, right? I would have said, “Oh, wow! I used it.” It’s like going to the Louvre and not seeing the Mona Lisa, right? You’re missing out on the whole point of the trip, in some ways. [NARRATOR] Setting his novels in world-class research facilities is an idea Sawyer has returned to again and again in his fiction. By his twenty-third novel, Quantum Night, he found inspiration in the Canadian Light Source, Canada’s national synchrotron facility in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. [SAWYER] It was such a natural to set it there. I’ll just read you a paragraph from the novel. [READING] “Kayla and I made it to the Canadian Light Source a little after 9 a.m. I was amused to note that its street address, on the University of Saskatchewan campus, was …” What is it? [AUDIENCE MEMBER RESPONDS, SAWYER REPEATS] 44 Innovation Boulevard! [CONTINUES READING] “I suspect the other occupants of that street were hard-pressed to match the sort of things Kayla described as she gave me a tour. “A synchrotron,” she said, as we walked along, “is an amazingly versatile tool; it’s the Swiss Army knife of particle accelerators. You can tune its output to do almost anything, adjusting energy range, wavelength, resolution, photon brightness, and beam size. The researchers here do work in fundamental physics, archaeology, geology, botany, new fuel sources, materials science — you name it.” It’s incredible how much world-class, first-rate science is going on here. And that purpose-built machines — in a way that the synchrotron was, in the way that SNOLAB was — expand their mandate as time goes on. Who would have thought, when they were building the synchrotron, that one of its key areas of research would be archaeology? So incredible, once you have the infrastructure in place, what can be accomplished. [NARRATOR] Sawyer has drawn on powerhouse science facilities for his novels both internationally — including CERN, a particle physics lab in Switzerland — and across Canada, like the paleontology department at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto and the TRIUMF particle accelerator in Vancouver. He is committed to using his fiction to put a spotlight on Canadian science facilities. [SAWYER] I never want to look beyond Canada’s borders, unless I can’t fulfil my fictional need in Canada. For instance, I have a novel called Illegal Alien. Illegal Alien is a courtroom drama with an extraterrestrial defendant. The defendant is charged with murder. In the United States, that means the defendant can be facing the death penalty. In Canada, the defendant would be facing a stern talking-to. So I had to set it in the United States to have the dramatic stakes. But in every other circumstance, I look for the Canadian answer. And it has not failed me this century. [NARRATOR] Sawyer’s enthusiasm for Canadian science stems from his vantage point of aspiring-scientist-turned-writer. He has witnessed a transformation in research in this country over the decades. He talks about that in an interview after his presentation. [SAWYER] I think we’re at the best we’ve ever been, but that doesn’t mean we’re going to be the best we’ll ever be, in terms of Canadian science research. I think we’ve got real momentum moving forward, here. We had a Nobel Laureate in physics in 2018. We had a Nobel Laureate in physics three years prior to that. I suspect we’re going to see more and more Nobel medals coming to Canada in the sciences, and we’re also going to see more and more generations in Canadian science students staying here because there’s nowhere better to go. Because the best place in the world to do fundamental particle research is SNOLAB. The best place in the world to do all the variety of things that you can do with a synchrotron is the Canadian Light Source. The best place in the world to do Arctic research is aboard our icebreaker Amundsen. We have, not only now the best trained minds, but also the best facilities. And what we’re going to see come out of that is a recognition on the world stage. [NARRATOR] Sawyer’s optimistic view of where Canadian science is headed carries through to his approach to writing fiction. He sees science fiction as instrumental to influencing how we envision our future, and the role of research in shaping it. [SAWYER] I’m passionate about science fiction, not because, as is often erroneously thought, it predicts the future, because that’s not our job. Our job is to predict the multiplicity of possible futures, the smorgasbords of tomorrows, so that we can look and say, “Well that’s terrible! Everybody’s under surveillance all the time, there’s no privacy, there’s no freedom. We don’t want that!” You know, George Orwell reminded us of that. Or, if we start, “Okay, a lot of new technologies in reproduction, but if we just let men control them …” Well, Margaret Atwood gave us a science fiction novel about that — The Handmaid’s Tale, right? The problem with science fiction generally is those are the easy ones to write. The dystopian — “If this goes on, it’s going to go horribly wrong.” And I felt, what I’m passionate about, is finding the place on that smorgasbord of possibilities, where there hasn’t been a really appetizing one put out. I want to say if we do artificial intelligence right, we can have this world, where everybody is better off. If we do genomics and genetic research and the sharing of genetic information in a socialized medicine context, we can have better, longer, healthier lives for everybody. I think that when science fiction turns its speculative knack to positive futures, we can energize … it’s all well-and-good that I energize my readers. That’s incidental. I make my living doing that, but it’s incidental. What’s important is when those readers turn around and energize their representatives in government and say, “We want that! Give us that! Give us successful, safe A.I. Give us longer lifespans that are healthy. Give us a way to grow more crops than we ever grew before. Give us this future. Don’t give us the one where the robots take over. Don’t give us the one where we have no reproductive freedom. Don’t give us the one where we have no privacy. Choose those ones …” And I’m passionate about being the advocate for the positive futures that I know … Because we’ve had 150 years, now 151 years, of doing it in this country, of making positive futures come true. And we try to do it for everybody! And no other country on the globe has our track record of doing it. [NARRATOR] At the end of Sawyer’s presentation, he reminds the researchers in the room of their part in deciding the future of research in Canada. [SAWYER] My favorite science fiction writer, Arthur C. Clark, once said, “Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.” I don’t actually think that’s true. I think if you get too far into magic, you’re violating known physical law. But the spirit of it. That the more advanced science becomes … And look at how advanced we are, here in the second decade of the 21st century. Imagine how advanced we’ll be by the fifth decade, or the ninth decade, of this century. The more advanced science becomes, the more miraculous it will seem to the general public. The things that we’re able to do. You guys are getting the funding. You guys have a great custodian agency that you’re responsible to in CFI. You also have a great responsibility to your fellow men and women, to make sure you make the right decisions, as we move ahead into a wonderful future in which I, even I, could have been a scientist, had I been born today. | |||
04 Feb 2021 | Constantin Polychronakos: Using genetics to find a cure for juvenile diabetes - Podcast | ||
Ce balado est uniquement disponible en anglais. Constantin Polychronakos has devoted his career to studying the genetics of juvenile diabetes and treating children afflicted with the disease. As head of the Child Health and Human Development Program at the Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre, he is working towards new interventions to replace the need for painful daily insulin injections. READ: Research institute puts Canada at the forefront of health care | |||
04 Feb 2021 | Jordan Grigor: Studying the tigers of the plankton aboard the CCGS Amundse | ||
Ce balado est uniquement disponible en anglais. PhD student in Oceanography at the Université Laval, Jordan Grigor, discusses his research on the Arctic arrow worm, known as the tiger of the plankton. He also gives a glimpse into life aboard the CCGS Amundsen, Canada's only dedicated Arctic research vessel. Image credit: Cyril Aubry | |||
04 Feb 2021 | Basil Petrof: Accelerating new treatments for respiratory diseases like asthma - Podcast | ||
Ce balado est uniquement disponible en anglais. Basil Petrof heads the Program for Translational Research in Respiratory Diseases at the Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre. His research group participated in a clinical trial that proved the efficacy of a new therapy that burns away the muscle tissue in the lungs of asthmatic patients to help open their airways. It’s this kind of cutting-edge discovery that Petrof expects will move more rapidly from concept to proven treatment thanks to the new facilities at the RI-MUHC. READ: Research institute puts Canada at the forefront of health care | |||
04 Feb 2021 | Michael Kramer: Examining the adverse outcomes of pre-term birth | ||
Ce balado est uniquement disponible en anglais. Pediatrician and epidemiologist Michael Kramer studies the long-term effects of pre-term births, including by Caesarean section or induced labour, as well as other adverse pregnancy outcomes such as still births and infant mortality. He will oversee these types of important population health studies as the director for the Centre for Outcomes Research and Evaluation at the Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre. READ: Research institute puts Canada at the forefront of health care | |||
04 Feb 2021 | Verena Tunnicliffe: The only woman on board | ||
Ce balado est uniquement disponible en anglais. The University of Victoria’s Verena Tunnicliffe recalls the open hostility she faced when she first began boarding research ships to conduct her oceanographic studies. In one instance, the cook refused to sail, saying it was either him or her. Guess who walked that plank? Tunnicliffe persevered, despite the male-dominated nautical culture, to answer fundamental questions about deep sea ecosystems off the west coast. She was one of the lead researchers who used CFI-funds to build VENUS, a system of interconnected underwater cables that beam real-time measurements from the sea floor to onshore computers. Such on-demand access has opened the field for many female researchers who would otherwise have had to choose between a career in science and raising a family. In this podcast, Tunnicliffe takes us to the deepest, darkest corners of the ocean where some of the creepiest experiments have occurred. Her story begins in the 1980s as one of the only woman on board a research ship at sea in the Pacific Ocean where she experienced a few dark moments. This podcast is part of an International Women’s Day podcast series called Groundbreakers. | |||
04 Feb 2021 | Michael Kramer: Understanding the long-term impacts of breastfeeding | ||
Ce balado est uniquement disponible en anglais. In 2001, pediatrician and epidemiologist Michael Kramer and his colleagues published the largest ever randomized trial on breastfeeding which followed 17,000 babies into their teenage years and showed links between how exclusively and for how long they were breastfed and improved cognitive development at an early school age. Kramer will oversee these types of important population health studies as the director for the Centre for Outcomes Research and Evaluation at the Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre. READ: Research institute puts Canada at the forefront of health care | |||
04 Feb 2021 | Leslie Weir: An innovative librarian who led the way to digital access | ||
Ce balado est uniquement disponible en anglais. Leslie Weir, the first female university librarian at the University of Ottawa, led a team who received $20 million from the CFI in 1997 to help 64 Canadian university libraries make the leap from print to digital. Prior to the Canadian Site Licensing Project, researchers — or their grad students, Weir says coyly — would physically track down articles in paper journals buried in the library stacks. After the project was launched in the early 2000s, Weir says researchers had access to more digital publications than they’d ever had before. That blast of on-demand information fundamentally shifted how research was done in Canada and became a model for countries around the world. In this podcast, Weir talks about her path to becoming the innovative librarian who led this project, with a story that begins on a day that tragedy shook the world. This podcast is part of an International Women’s Day podcast series called Groundbreakers. | |||
04 Feb 2021 | Ian Clark: Tracing contaminants in the earth | ||
Ce balado est uniquement disponible en anglais. Ian Clark, professor of Earth sciences at the University of Ottawa, explains how radiocarbon dating using an accelerator mass spectrometer can help resolve significant issues surrounding contaminated environments. This podcast is part of an in-depth report on the Advanced Research Complex. | |||
18 Feb 2021 | Jacques Genest: Developing new interventions to cure cardiovascular disease | ||
This podcast is only available in French. A researcher at the Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre studies the link between genetics and cardiovascular disease. In the 1980s, when Jacques Genest was starting out in the Faculty of Medicine, cardiovascular disease was the leading cause of death among Canadians. Dr. Genest and his team built on advances in molecular genetics to discover multiple genes that predispose people to early cardiovascular disease and tested many drugs to fight them. At the McConnell Centre for Innovative Medicine of the Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre, Dr. Genest continues to study familial hypercholesterolemia using genetic screening to identify other family members at risk of this asymptomatic disease and give them medical treatments to mitigate the danger. READ: Research institute puts Canada at the forefront of health care
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18 Feb 2021 | Tigran Galstian: Creating molecular lenses | ||
This podcast is only available in French. One of the co-founders of LensVector talks about the origins of their molecular lens. Tigran Galstian, professor in the Department of Physics, Engineering Physics and Optics at Université Laval and co-founder of LensVector, explains the invention of a molecular lens that could, among other things, improve our cellphones. Tigran Galstian received the David E. Mitchell Award of Distinction at the Ernest C. Manning Innovation Awards ceremony on October 22, 2014.
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18 Feb 2021 | Stéphane Laporte: Using genetics to eliminate the side effects of drugs | ||
This podcast is only available in French. A researcher at the Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre explores ways to improve drugs Stéphane Laporte, a researcher at the Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre, became interested in pharmacological research when he noticed just how often drugs were associated with harmful side effects. In his lab at the Centre for Translational Biology, Laporte and his team are working to understand how pharmaceutical drugs work on the body in order to find ways to minimize unwanted side effects. READ: Research institute puts Canada at the forefront of health care | |||
18 Feb 2021 | Julie Carrier: Taking on sleep medicine | ||
This podcast is only available in French. Une chercheuse à l’Université de Montréal se concentre sur le sommeil des femmes. Julie Carrier of the Université de Montréal has devoted her academic career to the fascinating world of sleep, using equipment she received from the CFI to monitor the slumber patterns and sleep disorders of her test subjects. When she began her studies more than 20 years ago, little was known about women and sleep. Now, an aging population and the effects of menopause on sleep make Carrier’s research more relevant than ever. In celebration of International Women’s Day, Carrier has pledged to focus her research more on women and sleep. She begins this podcast by telling us why women weren’t considered ideal candidates for these kinds of studies when she first started her research. This podcast is part of an International Women’s Day podcast series called Groundbreakers. | |||
19 May 2022 | 10,000 ways | How does Anna Blakney use TikTok to help people understand mRNA vaccines? | 00:26:37 | |
For many, RNA vaccines seem to have appeared out of nowhere. The curious and the hesitant have wondered how a vaccine to fight COVID-19 could have been brought to market so quickly. In fact, messenger RNA (mRNA) vaccines have been in development for over three decades. Here is the story about a persistent RNA vaccine pioneer and her socially connected admirer, University of British Columbia researcher, Anna Blakney. | |||
08 Sep 2022 | 10,000 ways | Learn how Leyla Soleymani's curious nature is making life less sticky! | 00:25:58 | |
Leyla Soleymani is Canada’s Research Chair in Miniaturized Biomedical Devices. Her passion for the miniature world of nanotech and her commitment to collaboration have led her and her colleagues at McMaster University to inventions ranging from rapid tests that use pig saliva to disease detection to a plastic wrap that repels pathogens like rain drops off a lotus leaf. | |||
14 Sep 2023 | 10,000 Ways | Reinforcing the reliability of our vulnerable electricity grid | 00:23:07 | |
Welcome to 10,000 ways. This is a podcast about curious researchers, leading-edge science, and the joys of discovery.
York University’s Pirathayini Srikantha studies power grid systems with the aim of keeping Canada’s infrastructure safe from fluctuations and hackers. Find out why she’s passionate about power.
Our power grid is vulnerable. For one thing, it’s aging. For another, it’s prone to hackers. In the meantime, climate change means we need to find ways to integrate renewable energy sources that are intermittent with the shining sun or blowing wind. To avoid the crippling cost of replacing this infrastructure, jurisdictions must find ways to adapt. Pirathayini Srikantha, from York University’s, Lassonde School of Engineering, is an award-winning engineer who is confronting these multiple challenges.
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17 Nov 2023 | 10,000 ways | Science (sea) star | 00:22:50 | |
(Available only in French)
This is a podcast about curious researchers, leading-edge science and the joys of discovery.
Our podcast gets its name from Thomas Edison who said, “I have not failed. I’ve successfully found 10,000 ways that will not work.”
Ocean science research is at a pivotal moment according to Guillaume St-Onge, Director of the Institut des sciences de la mer de Rimouski at Université du Québec à Rimouski.
Canada abounds with ocean science expertise and technology, yet its fleet of research vessels has seen better days.
Should we be concerned about how this will impact Canadian research in marine geology, physical oceanography, marine biology and marine chemistry?
In this episode, a professor of marine geology at Université du Québec à Rimouski and Canada Research Chair in Marine Geology lets us in on his thoughts.
Want to know more?
Guillaume St-Onge:
Guillaume St-Onge's personal page on ISMER's website (French only)
Guillaume St-Onge's personal page on UQAR's website (French only )
Canada Research Chair in Marine Geology (French only )
Profile of Guillaume St-Onge on the Fonds de recherche du Québec website (French only )
Facility and partnerships:
Navigator's profile for the Paleomagnetism and Marine Geology Laboratory
Institut des sciences de la mer de Rimouski (ISMER) of Université du Québec à Rimouski (French only)
Paleomagnetism and Marine geology Laboratory
Réseau Québec maritime (RQM) (French only)
Institut France-Québec maritime (IFQM) (French only)
Articles about Guillaume St-Onge’s research (in publication order, from most recent to oldest):
L’UQAR obtient le renouvellement de sa Chaire de recherche du Canada en géologie marine [UQAR gets its Canada Research Chair in Marine Geology Renewed], by Jean-François Bouchard, published in UQAR-INFO (August 30, 2023)
L'UQAR et ses partenaires reçoivent 154M$ du Fonds d’excellence en recherche Apogée Canada pour l’action climatique et le rôle des océans [UQAR and its partners receive $154 million in funding from the Canada First Research Excellence Fund for climate action and the role of oceans], from the UQAR communications department (May 4, 2023)
Remonter dans le temps pour mieux connaître les risques de séismes dans l’estuaire [Going back in time to better understand the risks of earthquakes in the estuary], by Julie Tremblay, published in Radio-Canada ICI Bas-Saint-Laurent (January 19, 2023)
Le chercheur Guillaume St-Onge à l’honneur dans Québec Science [Researcher Guillaume St-Onge in the spotlight with Québec Science], with Bis Petitpas, episode on Radio-Canada’s Bonjour la Côte (January 19, 2023)
Tremblements de fleuve [River earthquakes], by Joël Leblanc, published in Québec Science(January 12, 2023)
Un chercheur de l’UQAR figure pour une quatrième fois parmi les dix découvertes de l’année de Québec Science [UQAR researcher named for the fourth time in Québec Science’s top ten discoveries of the year], by Jean-François Bouchard, published in UQAR-INFO (January 12, 2023)
Apogée, un programme de recherche sur les océans sans précédent [An unprecedented marine research program], by Jean-François Bouchard, published in UQAR-INFO (January 9, 2023)
Articles of interest on topics addressed in the podcast:
Prédire le comportement futur du champ magnétique terrestre [Predicting the future behaviour of Earth’s magnetic field], by Pauline Gravel, published in Le Devoir (February 20, 2016)
Le secret du cratère des Pingualuit [The secret of the Pingualuit crater], by Joël Leblanc, published in Québec Science (December 13, 2012)
Information about the research vessels mentioned in the podcast:
The Coriolis II, ISMER web page (French only)
The Coriolis II, REFORMAR web page
Le Coriolis II, un laboratoire flottant pour des recherches océanographiques [The Coriolis II, a floating laboratory for marine research], by Valérian Mazataud, Guillaume Levasseur, Alexis Riopel, published in Le Devoir (August 12, 2023)
The Listening River , dossier written by Pascaline David, photos by Benjamin Rochette and sound from besidemedia · BESIDE in partnership with Novarium 2
The Amundsen
The JOIDES Resolution, press release from the National Science Foundation of the United States: Climate can grind down mountains faster than they can rebuild
Daily reports from the JOIDES Resolution Science Operator (International Ocean Discovery Program)
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15 Mar 2024 | 10,000 ways | Should bodies of water have the same legal status as people? | 00:24:08 | |
This podcast is about curious researchers, leading-edge science and the joys of discovery and gets its name from Thomas Edison who said, “I have not failed. I’ve successfully found 10,000 ways that will not work.”
Researcher Kelsey Leonard, member of the Shinnecock Nation and founder of the Wampum Lab at the University of Waterloo, delves into ocean, water and climate justice.
Shinnecock is a dialect derived from the Algonquian language. It means “people of the stony shores.” It’s along the stony shores of the Shinnecock Nation, on the Atlantic-facing eastern coast of New York’s Long Island that Kelsey Leonard developed her passion for the water. Undergraduate studies took her to Samoa and graduate studies brought her to the University of Waterloo, where she is now the Canada Research Chair in Indigenous Waters, Climate and Sustainability. | |||
08 May 2024 | 10,000 ways | Meet Acadian researcher Céline Surette, for whom interdisciplinarity is second nature | 00:23:45 | |
(The audio content of this podcast is only available in French.)
Céline Surette embodies both the chemistry of living things and interdisciplinarity to serve the real needs and questions of communities. And to achieve this, and ensure that critical thinking triumphs, she'll pull out all the stops.
Céline Surette is Dean of the Faculty of Science and Professor in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry at the Université de Moncton. She has a unique perspective on natural ecosystems as well as New Brunswick’s research community, including mentors and students, for whom she is a guiding light. And she isn’t easily thrown off course, even in the face of attempts to criticize science. Listen to Céline Surette talk about all the dimensions of her work in the field and in the lab.
Want to know more?
Biography: Dr. Céline Surette, Environmental Scientist
Group of Shediac, N.B. residents calling for bylaw to ban pesticides - New Brunswick | Globalnews.ca
Tracadie- Sheila looking at by-law to ban the use of glyphosate
Manganese in water tied to kids' low IQ | CBC News
Protecting the health of our oceans: Fisheries and Oceans Canada | |||
21 Oct 2024 | 10,000 ways | The future of flight depends on sustainability that goes beyond biofuels | 00:25:04 | |
The University of Waterloo’s Suzanne Kearns is a global leader in sustainable aviation, but her flight path wasn’t without turbulence.
Suzanne Kearns grew up in Wiarton, Ont., where she would lie in the grass and watch airplanes from the local airport take flight overhead. Her dreams of flying led to a fixed-wing licence at 16 and helicopter licence a year later. At 24, she was a full-time university lecturer on aviation. Today, as the founder of the Waterloo Institute for Sustainable Aeronautics, she is helping curb the environmental impacts of flight and inspiring the next generation of aviation professionals in the process.
Want to know more?
Suzanne Kearns biography from the University of Waterloo.
More about the history, mission and vision of the Waterloo Institute of Sustainable Aeronautics (WISA), its research studies and its flight simulator lab.
Pipistrel Aircraft , a light aircraft manufacturer aiming to provide sustainable and environmentally-friendly solutions to the aircraft industry.
Read about University of Waterloo alum Jeremy Wang and his company Ribbit, an innovator in pilotless planes. | |||
18 Nov 2024 | 10,000 ways | How neuroendocrinology crosses sectors to create promising new insights | 00:23:26 | |
(This podcast is only available in French)
Nafissa Ismail focuses on the effects of hormones on the brain to pin down the interactions between our organs and our emotions
Epidemiological data shows that the roots of depression form during puberty or adolescence for 75 percent of adults experiencing it.
Nafissa Ismail is a professor at the University of Ottawa's School of Psychology and a leading figure in mental health research.
Her work is making a significant contribution toward understanding the causes of mental disorders and how to treat them. | |||
21 Jan 2025 | 10,000 ways | Researchers from the University of Saskatchewan are global leaders in pandemic preparedness | 00:24:09 | |
In 2002, German researcher Volker Gerdts relocated to Saskatoon. Cutting-edge vaccine research was the attraction. Now he is at the helm of the Vaccine and Infectious Disease Organization (VIDO)
World-renowned infectious disease specialist Volker Gerdts calls himself a “builder” who is carefully assembling a passionate team working to stop disease outbreaks in their tracks. His passion is infectious as he strives to keep people in Canada safe from future pandemics.
The Vaccine and Infectious Disease Organization (VIDO), working out of the University of Saskatchewan, is at the frontline of Canada’s pandemic preparedness initiatives.
Want to know more?
Learn more about VIDO and how it’s helping to build a healthier world
Click here if you’re interested in knowing more about immunology and vaccinology
Find out how VIDO is working to identify future diseases in order to control and contain initial outbreaks
Visit VIDO’s profile on the Research Facilities Navigator to learn more about research and business opportunities | |||
24 Mar 2025 | 10,000 ways | Pooneh Maghoul: Working at the forefront of geotechnical engineering | 00:21:04 | |
(Available only in French)
Can our critical infrastructure withstand the effects of climate change?
Pooneh Maghoul and her research team are working to make our bridges, roads and other critical infrastructures more resistant to climate change and extreme environments on Earth and in space.
She founded the Sustainable Infrastructure and Geoengineering Lab at Polytechnique Montréal. In this podcast, she explains the complexities of permafrost engineering and shares the most important lesson life has taught her.
Some of the additional content for this podcast is only available in French.
Read Pooneh Maghoul's biography on the Polytechnique Montréal website;
Read the La Presse article: Du permélisol... jusqu'à la Lune!
Read the blog post from the school of engineering at Polytechnique Montréal: An earthworm robot ... for the Moon!;
Awards and honours:
Winner of the prestigious ISSMGE (International Society for Soil Mechanics and Geotechnical Engineering) award;
Recognized by the
Canadian Geotechnical Society | |||
08 Mar 2023 | 10,000 ways | The healing power of food: how nutrition and Carla Prado help treat cancer | 00:24:51 | |
On a cold March 2, 2004, Carla Prado arrived on the doorsteps of the University of Alberta. She left behind her native Brazil to fulfill a dream of studying abroad. Today, she is an academic leader in body composition research who passionately shares the benefits of protein-rich diets in the treatment of cancer. She uses social media and classic movies like The Wizard of Oz to help explain the science behind by her research. | |||
15 May 2023 | 10,000 ways | Alex Langlois fell in love with the Arctic. Find out why he's fired up! | 00:24:09 | |
(This podcast is available only in French)
Alexandre Langlois is passionate about all aspects of his job. As a researcher in Northern Canada, he studies the fastest-warming place on the planet and presents data on the issues that await us in terms of climate change.
Like a high-level athlete, Alexandre Langlois has been training since the age of nine to live in extreme cold conditions. Today, his research in physical geography provides him with a unique understanding of the evolution of the Earth, past and future and his observations on the relationship between man and nature leave him with clear insights about the impact of humans on the climate and environment. |