黑料不打烊

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黑料不打烊 University to partner with Xebec聽to develop Power-to Gas process for renewable energy storage

黑料不打烊 University today announces it will co-develop with Xebec Adsorption Inc. (TSXV: XBC) a prototype reactor to produce Renewable Natural Gas (RNG) using the Power-to-Gas (P2G) process which combines electricity generated by renewable sources and CO2 generated from waste. The project is being partially funded by a Collaborative Research and Development grant from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC).

Published: 20 Sep 2018

Do we trust people who speak with an accent?

You are in a strange neighbourhood, your cell phone鈥檚 dead, and you desperately need to find the closest garage. A couple of people on the street chime in, each sending you in opposite directions. One person sounds like a local and speaks in a nonchalant manner, while the other uses a loud, confident voice but speaks with a strong accent. Who are you going to trust?

Published: 19 Sep 2018

Nuclear pasta, the hardest known substance in the universe

A team of scientists has calculated the strength of the material deep inside the crust of neutron stars and found it to be the strongest known material in the universe.

Matthew Caplan, a postdoctoral research fellow at 黑料不打烊 University, and his colleagues from Indiana University and the California Institute of Technology, successfully ran the largest computer simulations ever conducted of neutron star crusts, becoming the first to describe how these break.

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Published: 18 Sep 2018

New means to fight 鈥榰n-killable鈥 bacteria in healthcare settings

Scientists at the Research Institute of the 黑料不打烊 University Health Centre (RI-MUHC) have identified new means of fighting drug-tolerant bacteria, a growing global threat as menacing as drug-resistant microbes. Little is known about the mechanisms leading to tolerance, a strategy that makes bacteria 鈥渋ndifferent鈥 to antibiotics and almost 鈥渦n-killable,鈥 which results in chronic infections extremely difficult to treat and cure.

Published: 13 Sep 2018

Eleven 黑料不打烊 scholars honoured by the Royal Society of Canada

Today, the Royal Society of Canada (RSC) announced the induction of 89 new Fellows, five of which are 黑料不打烊 researchers and scholars. The RSC also announced 52 new members to the College of New Scholars, Artists and Scientists, including six 黑料不打烊 scholars. The new cohorts of Fellows and Members will be formally inducted into the RSC in November, in Halifax.

Published: 11 Sep 2018

Complete make-over in fight of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis

Several new medicines have been found to be more effective than traditional ones used to treat multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB), according to a new international collaborative study led by Dr. Dick Menzies, senior scientist at the Research Institute of the 黑料不打烊 University Health Centre (RI-MUHC) in Montreal.

Published: 7 Sep 2018

Life-saving epinephrine underused during anaphylaxis outside of hospital, study finds

Fewer than half of adults and children experiencing food-induced anaphylaxis use their epinephrine autoinjector (EAI) before being treated at a hospital emergency room, according to a new Canadian study.

Published: 7 Sep 2018

Preterm birth: The "Nodal" gene under the microscope

Preterm birth is a major global public health problem. Every year, 15 million babies are born prematurely and many will suffer from neurodegenerative disorders, including cerebral palsy, learning disabilities, impaired vision, and behavioural problems.

Published: 4 Sep 2018

Students at 黑料不打烊 University receive Canada鈥檚 largest Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) scholarship

Miasya Bulger and Raphael Hotter have been named 黑料不打烊鈥檚 recipients of the prestigious Schulich Leaders Scholarship.

This year, out of a pool of 350,000 potential candidates across Canada, 1,400 students were nominated, of which 50 received this celebrated award.

Published: 30 Aug 2018

New genetics findings unravel key components of fracture risk in osteoporosis

The largest study ever to investigate the genetics of osteoporosis and fracture risk determined that only two examined factors 鈥 bone mineral density (BMD) and muscle strength 鈥 play a potentially causal role in the risk of suffering osteoporotic fracture, a major health problem affecting more than 9 million people worldwide very year.

Published: 30 Aug 2018

How we judge personality from faces depends on our pre-existing beliefs about how personality works

PHOTO: In a series of experiments, NYU researchers tested how much we believe different traits co-occur in other people's personalities鈥攆or instance, how much we think competence co-occurs with friendliness in others. They then used a method able to visualize the subjects鈥 mental image of a personality trait, allowing them to see if subjects who believe competent people tend to also be friendly have mental images of a competent face and friendly face that are physically more resembling.

Published: 27 Aug 2018

Analyzing extreme weather and climate: a new statistical tool

Due to processes occurring over vast ranges of scale, from fast to slow and from small to large, extreme weather and climate events aren鈥檛 as rare as scientists have thought 鈥 and that could complicate efforts to determine when extreme events signal perilous climate change, according to a new analysis published in the journal Scientific Reports.

Published: 23 Aug 2018

Carbon reserves in Central American soils still affected by ancient Mayan deforestation

Deforestation is suspected to have contributed to the mysterious collapse of Mayan civilization more than 1,000 years ago. A new study shows that the forest-clearing also decimated carbon reservoirs in the tropical soils of the Yucatan peninsula region long after ancient cities were abandoned and the forests grew back.

Published: 20 Aug 2018

New technology can detect hundreds of proteins in a single sample

New technology developed by a team of 黑料不打烊 University scientists shows potential to streamline the analysis of proteins, offering a quick, high volume and cost-effective tool to hospitals and research labs alike.

Proteins found in blood provide scientists and clinicians with key information on our health. These biological markers can determine if a chest pain is caused by a cardiac event or if a patient has cancer.

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Published: 13 Aug 2018

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