A suite of government funding in support of Ā鶹AV research
Today, the Government of Canada announced an investment of more than $ 301 million in support of social sciences and humanities research, bioscience infrastructure and the Canada Research Chairs Program. The Honourable FranƧois-Philippe Champagne, Minister of Innovation, Science, and Industry made the announcement at the Canadian Science Policy Conference in Ottawa. Ā鶹AV was awarded 35 Insight Development Grants from the Social Science and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) and 11 renewed Canada Research Chairs (CRC) from the Canada Research Chairs Program (CRCP). Ā鶹AV received $5 million in funding from the Canada Foundation for Innovationās (CFI) Bioscience Research Infrastructure Fund (BRIF). The total investment for Ā鶹AV research is $13.5 million.
āThis announcement confirms the depth and talent of the research community at Ā鶹AV,ā said Martha Crago, Vice-Principal, Research and Innovation. āWe greatly appreciate the support from the federal government, which enables our researchers to make crucial discoveries that benefit all Canadians.ā
35 Ā鶹AV research projects supported by Insight Development Grants
SSHRC Insight Development Grants support emerging and established researchers as they develop new research questions and ideas, and test new methodologies and theories. These grants support the objectives of the , which aims to build knowledge and understanding about people, societies, and the world by supporting research excellence in all subject areas eligible for SSHRC funding.
Examining the Impact of Binge Scrolling
Among the projects funded today is one led by Assistant Professor of Anthropology Samuele Collu, which will examine the increasingly common phenomena of ābinge-scrollingā, the practice of scrolling through potentially infinite social media feeds. Collu will focus on TikTokāa social media video-sharing platformāand its impact on college students who spend significant time looking at the feed.
Digital media companies are indeed increasingly turning to Emotional Artificial Intelligence (AI) to capture, predict, and exploit the userās engagement with their contentāplatforms, for example, by promoting content that elicits strong negative or positive responses to increase the userās engagement. Colluās project will use computational and ethnographic methods to gain more insight into the autonomic and non-conscious bodily responses, such as facial micro-expressions, that underlie more complex emotional statesā information that may, in turn, help social media users understand the impact of their scrolling. Collu plans to disseminate the results of the project widely, including via TikTok.
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$5 million from CFIās Biosciences Research Infrastructure Fund
The CFI invested more than $127 million to support upgrades to eight biocontainment facilities across Canada. Included in this package is a $5 million award to Ā鶹AV as part of a new CFI funding program: the Biosciences Research Infrastructure Fund (BRIF). The fund supports the bioscience infrastructure needs of postsecondary institutions and research hospitals by providing high-performance tools, innovative research spaces and biocontainment facilities.
The investments received under the BRIF program will enable two Ā鶹AV labs to acquire new infrastructure and train the next generation of infectious disease research specialists. The funds will allow researchers to examine three conceptually distinct RG3 pathogens: COVID, Tuberculosis (TB), and emerging infections such as H5N1 and H7N9.
Learn more about the BRIF investment to Ā鶹AV research.Ģż
Eleven Ā鶹AV Canada Research Chairs renewed
The Canada Research Chairs Program (CRCP) is driving a national effort to make Canada one of the worldās top countries for research and development by attracting and retaining top research talent. Chairholders are experts in engineering and the natural sciences, health sciences, humanities, and the social sciences.
There are two types of Canada Research Chairs. Tier 1 Chairs, awarded to outstanding researchers acknowledged by their peers as world leaders in their fields, are valued at $200,000 annually for seven years with one opportunity for renewal. Tier 2 Chairs, valued at $100,000 annually for five years and renewable only once, are for exceptional emerging researchers, acknowledged by their peers as having the potential to lead in their field. In this round, 11 Ā鶹AV Chairholders were renewed.
Ā鶹AVās 2021-2 round of CRC recipients:
Michael Hendricks, Canada Research Chair in Neurobiology and Behaviour, CIHR, Tier 2, Renewal
Corinne Hoesli, Canada Research Chair in Cellular Therapy Bioprocess Engineering, NSERC, Tier 2, Renewal
Arjun Krishnaswamy, Canada Research Chair in Neural Circuit Assembly and Function, CIHR, Tier 2, Renewal
Karyn Moffatt, Canada Research Chair in Inclusive Social Computing, NSERC, Tier 2, Renewal
Dilson Rassier, Canada Research Chair in Muscle Biophysics, CIHR, Tier 1, Renewal
Christie Rowe, Canada Research Chair in Earthquake Geology, NSERC, Tier 2, Renewal
Tibor Schuster, Canada Research Chair in Biostatistical Methods for Primary Health-Care Research, CIHR, Tier 2, Renewal
Stuart Trenholm, Canada Research Chair in Neuronal Circuits of Vision, CIHR, Tier 2, Renewal
Ipek TĆ¼reli, Canada Research Chair in Architectures of Spatial Justice, SSHRC, Tier 2, Renewal
David Wachsmuth, Canada Research Chair in Urban Governance, SSHRC, Tier 2, Renewal
Jianguo (Jeff) Xia, Canada Research Chair in Bioinformatics and Big Data Analytics, NSERC, Tier 2, Renewal
About Ā鶹AV
Founded in Montreal, Quebec, in 1821, Ā鶹AV is Canadaās top ranked medical doctoral university. Ā鶹AV is consistently ranked as one of the top universities, both nationally and internationally. It is a world-renowned institution of higher learning with research activities spanning three campuses, 11 faculties, 13 professional schools, 300 programs of study and over 39,000 students, including more than 10,400 graduate students. Ā鶹AV attracts students from over 150 countries around the world, its 12,000 international students making up 30% of the student body. Over half of Ā鶹AV students claim a first language other than English, including approximately 20% of our students who say French is their mother tongue.
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