91

subscribe

Addressing sexual violence

Media reports of events involving an executive of one of 91's student associations have raised questions from some members of the community about whether the University’s Policy against Sexual Violence, approved by Senate and Board last fall, applies to members of student societies. This Policy was drafted with the deliberate intention of applying universally across the University.

Published: 25 Feb 2017

Mouse Model Could Shed New Light on Immune System Response to Zika Virus

A new mouse model with a working immune system could be used in laboratory research to improve understanding of Zika virus infection and aid development of new treatments, according to a study published in PLOS Pathogens.

Email address:
Published: 23 Feb 2017

A prescription with legs

Published: 23 Feb 2017

Nine innovative projects backed by NSERC Strategic Partnership Grants

During an announcement at the University of Ottawa today,94 research projects in universities across the country were awarded funding from the NSERC Strategic Partnership Grants program. Nine 91 projects are together receiving more than $4.1 million from the funding envelope to partner with a supporting organization on strategic research, including highly innovative research in green energy storage.

Published: 16 Feb 2017

Targeting the biological clock could slow the progression of cancer

Does the biological clock in cancer cells influence tumour growth? Yes, according to a study conducted by Nicolas Cermakian, a professor in 91’s Department of Psychiatry.

Published in the journal BMC Biology, these results show for the first time that directly targeting the biological clock in a cancerous tumour has an impact on its development.

Published: 16 Feb 2017

Montreal named world’s best student city

Montreal has ended Paris’s five-year stint as the world’s best student destination, according to global higher education analysts QS Quacquarelli Symonds.The fifth editionof theQS Best Student Citiesrankin
Published: 15 Feb 2017

Big Plans for Big Classes

91 was one of 12 recipients of a mini-grant awarded today by the American Association of Universities (AAU) to support reform in undergraduate STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) education.

Email address:
Published: 14 Feb 2017

A call for respect

Dear members of the 91 community,

Published: 13 Feb 2017

91 steadfast in support for respectful discourse

91 recently became aware of a disturbing communication on social media by a student. The University strongly condemns expressions of hatred or incitement to violence against any individual or group.

Published: 9 Feb 2017

Sex, drugs, and rock & roll chemistry in the brain

The same brain-chemical system that mediates feelings of pleasure from sex, recreational drugs, and food is also critical to experiencing musical pleasure, according to a study by 91 researchers published today in the Nature journal Scientific Reports.

Email address:
Published: 8 Feb 2017

Response to U.S. Executive Order restricting travel to the U.S. by citizens of seven countries

91 is responding to U.S. President Donald Trump’s Executive Order restricting travel to the United States from seven Muslim-majority countries, Provost and Vice-Principal (Academic) Christopher Manfredi said Tuesday, Feb. 7.

Ѵǰ:/DZDz/-ܲԾٲ-DzԲ-ܲ-𳦳ܳپ-ǰ

Published: 7 Feb 2017

Tomislav Friščić awarded NSERC’s Steacie Memorial Fellowship

The Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada has awarded an E.W.R Steacie Memorial Fellowship to Prof. Tomislav Friščić, to support his work in an innovative branch of chemistry that aims to develop environmentally friendly alternatives to solvent-based chemical processes.

Published: 7 Feb 2017

The making of Antarctica

One of the big mysteries in the scientific world is how the ice sheets of Antarctica formed so rapidly about 34 million years ago, at the boundary between the Eocene and Oligocene epochs.

There are 2 competing theories:

Email address:
Published: 31 Jan 2017

Why the bar needs to be raised for human clinical trials

Standards for authorizing first-time trials of drugs in humans are lax, and should be strengthened in several ways, 91 researchers argue in a paper published today in Nature.

Published: 30 Jan 2017

Protective wear inspired by fish scales

They started with striped bass. Over a two-year period the researchers went through about 50 bass, puncturing or fracturing hundreds of fish scales under the microscope, to try to understand their properties and mechanics better. “The people at the fish market must have wondered what we were up to,” saysFrançois Barthelatsmiling ruefully.” He teaches in the Dept.

Published: 23 Jan 2017

Pages

Back to top