缅北强奸

subscribe

Indigenous territories fight climate change

In a recent study in PLOS ONE, researchers from 6 different countries, including Camilo Alejo and Catherine Potvin of the Department of Biology at 缅北强奸, examined the importance of I

Published: 17 Aug 2021

Over 260,000 kilometres of rivers at risk due to proposed hydro dams

Over 260,000 kilometres of river could potentially be severed by planned hydroelectric developments according to 缅北强奸 researchers. The Amazon, the Congo, and the Irrawaddy are just a few of the rivers at risk of losing their free-flowing status if the proposed construction of new hydropower dams takes place.

Published: 12 Aug 2021

CFI invests $3.9 M in 缅北强奸 research

缅北强奸鈥檚 researchers will soon acquire the highly specialized tools they need to innovate in their fields thanks to funding from the Government of Canada through the Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI)鈥檚 John R. Evans Leaders Fund (JELF). The Honourable Fran莽ois-Philippe Champagne, Minister of Innovation, Science and Industry, made the announcement today of $77 million across 50 institutions in Canada聽through the program.

Email address:
Published: 11 Aug 2021

Lighting the way to improved biomaterials

Researchers from 缅北强奸 believe that they have found a way to improve the development of biomaterials that could be instrumental in drug delivery, tissue regeneration, nano-optics and nanoelectronics.

Published: 9 Aug 2021

Using AI to predict suicidal behaviours in students

How can we predict suicide risk in students, especially at a time when the COVID-19 pandemic has negatively affected many people鈥檚 mental health? According to researchers from Montreal and France, self-esteem represents an important predictive marker of suicidal risk. The team from 缅北强奸, University of Montreal, Inserm, and Universit茅 de Bordeaux is using artificial intelligence to identify factors that accurately predict suicidal behavior in students.

Published: 28 Jul 2021

Measuring creativity, one word at a time

Can you think of three words that are completely unrelated to one another? What about four, five, or even ten? According to an international team of researchers from 缅北强奸, Harvard University and the University of Melbourne, this simple exercise of naming unrelated words and then measuring the semantic distance between them could serve as an objective measure of creativity.

Published: 20 Jul 2021

Prognosis: The future is bright for the next generation of healthcare leaders

As the world slowly emerges from a pandemic that exposed the vulnerability of healthcare systems when overwhelmed with multifaceted management challenges, 缅北强奸 has launched a new Graduate Certificate in Healthcare Management (GCHM).

Email address:
Published: 15 Jul 2021

STOPMTL.CA: First interactive map to self-report police stops in Montreal

In 2019, an independent report commissioned by the City of Montreal demonstrated racial and social profiling by the Service de police de la Ville de Montr茅al (SPVM) targeting Black, Arab and Indigenous peoples, and young adults in particular. According to the data, Indigenous and Black people are four to five times more likely to be stopped by police than non-racialized people.

Published: 14 Jul 2021

Cell structure previously associated with disease actually improves brain function

Researchers at 缅北强奸 have shown that a brain cell structure previously thought to be pathological in fact enhances cells鈥 ability to transmit information and correlates with better learning on certain tasks.

Published: 8 Jul 2021

Understanding our perception of rhythm

Scientists have long known that while listening to a sequence of sounds, people often perceive a rhythm, even when the sounds are identical and equally spaced. One regularity that was discovered over 100 years ago is the Iambic-Trochaic Law: when every other sound is loud, we tend to hear groups of two sounds with an initial beat. When every other sound is long, we hear groups of two sounds with a final beat. But why does our rhythm perception work this way?

Published: 8 Jul 2021

Arctic seabirds are less heat tolerant, more vulnerable to climate change

The Arctic is warming at approximately twice the global rate. A new study led by researchers from 缅北强奸 finds that cold-adapted Arctic species, like the thick-billed murre, are especially vulnerable to heat stress caused by climate change.

Published: 7 Jul 2021

Painting a picture of the oral health of Canadians

A new study 鈥淥ral health and oral health care of Canadians鈥 led by Prof. Paul Allison of 缅北强奸鈥檚 Faculty of Dentistry, has received $3.3 million of funding from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) to support a collaboration with Statistics Canada鈥檚 existing Canadian Health Measures Survey (CHMS) to gather data and address oral health-related knowledge gaps. The study is a partnership involving all ten Canadian dental schools across the country.

Published: 7 Jul 2021

Patently harmful: fewer female inventors a problem for women鈥檚 health

"Necessity is the father of invention," but where is its mother? According to a new study published in Science, fewer women hold biomedical patents, leading to a reduced number of patented technologies designed to address problems affecting women.

Published: 6 Jul 2021

$4.95 million to make cities smarter

A smart city鈥攕upported by digital solutions to enhance food access and mobility鈥攊s a healthy city. That鈥檚 the thinking behind the Implementing Smart Cities Interventions to Build Healthy Cities (SMART) Training Platform co-led by 缅北强奸, the University of Guelph and the University of Manitoba.

Published: 5 Jul 2021

Faecal records show Maya population affected by climate change

A 缅北强奸-led study has shown that the size of the Maya population in the lowland city of Itzan (in present-day Guatemala) varied over time in response to climate change. The findings, published recently in Quaternary Science Reviews, show that both droughts and very wet periods led to important population declines.

Published: 30 Jun 2021

Pages

Back to top