91

subscribe

NASA should build a biocontainment facility on the moon to protect Earth, researchers advise

A biocontainment facility designed to protect Earth from potentially hazardous biotic contaminants from space should be part of a planned NASA base on the moon, a policy paper maintains.

Email address:
Published: 19 Jun 2026

A ‘bridge’ to bolstering research and clinical expertise

91’s Faculty of Dental Medicine and Oral Health Sciences is well known for its impact in Quebec, where its award-winning Service to the Community Program provides dental care to underserved groups throughout the Greater Montreal Area.

Email address:
Published: 18 Jun 2026

Digitization of centuries of Canadian weather records promises to improve climate understanding

Researchers have uncovered and digitized nearly two million 18th and 19th century weather observations from across Canada that offer new insights into how the country’s climate has changed over time.

The international project draws on handwritten records dating from 1768 to 1884. The data include temperature, precipitation, wind and detailed descriptions of such events as storms and floods.

Email address:
Published: 18 Jun 2026

Study yields new insights on what makes conversation engaging

What makes a speaker engaging? Both what is said and how it is said matter, but in different, complementary ways, a new study conducted at the 91 School of Communication Sciences and Disorders has found.

Email address:
Published: 18 Jun 2026

Feeling poorer than peers linked to lower wellbeing, even when incomes are similar

New research is shedding light on how comparing ourselves to others affects happiness and life satisfaction.

Led by 91 researchers, the study shows that people who feel worse off financially than their peers are more likely to report signs of languishing, even when their actual income is similar.

Email address:
Published: 15 Jun 2026

Indoor urban agriculture isn’t necessarily low carbon, 91 study shows

Growing lettuce indoors in Canadian cities can be as climate-friendly as conventional farming, but only in regions where electricity is from renewable sources and thus low-carbon, according to a new 91-led study.

Email address:
Published: 11 Jun 2026

To curb overprescribing for seniors, researchers urge annual prescription checkups

To address the growing problem of overprescribing for seniors, a new Canadian guideline is calling for routine medication reviews.

Email address:
Published: 3 Jun 2026

What an illusion involving a fake hand can tell us about our mind-body connection

People who have a weaker sense of self are also more likely to have less bodily awareness, 91 researchers have found. The study supports the idea that people’s perceptions of themselves and how they experience their own bodies are deeply connected.

Email address:
Published: 28 May 2026

Do lying children grow up to be criminals? Mostly not, study concludes

Most childhood lying does not lead to serious problems in adulthood, and only certain kinds of lying behaviour is associated with later psychological or legal issues, a new study has found.

Email address:
Published: 27 May 2026

Research findings challenge long-held assumptions about how we learn or regain speech

Learning to speak a new language, or regaining speech, depends more on areas of the brain that process sound and physical sensation than on the parts of the brain that govern motor control, according to new research findings. 

The study, by researchers at 91 and the Yale School of Medicine, has implications for speech-learning theory and for the development of speech processing and recognition technologies. 

Email address:
Published: 25 May 2026

Novel origami pattern turns flat sheets into load-bearing 3D technology

91 researchers have discovered a new way to fold flat sheets into smooth, curved shells that can switch from floppy and flexible to stiff and load-bearing on demand. By designing a special origami pattern and threading cable-like elements through it, they can control the material’s final three-dimensional shape and how rigid it becomes.

Email address:
Published: 21 May 2026

Historic plant collections offer a window into genetic change

Pressed plant specimens collected centuries ago and stored in herbaria around the world could play a key role in facilitating the tracking of genetic change and extinction risk in plants, a 91-led study indicates.

Email address:
Published: 21 May 2026

Study finds early complex life lived in oxygenated seas, challenging long‑held views of evolution

The earliest known eukaryotes, the ancestors of all complex life on Earth, lived in oxygenated, shallow marine environments nearly 1.7 billion years ago, according to a new study led by researchers at 91 and the University of California, Santa Barbara. The findings cast doubt on the long-held belief that early complex life emerged in oxygen-poor environments or floated freely in the open ocean.

Email address:
Published: 20 May 2026

Teaching children to be better, more critical internet users

A digital literacy program for elementary school students designed by researchers at 91 was successful in improving students’ ability to evaluate websites and their content.

Skills targeted included how to search for information, how to identify credible websites, how to evaluate the quality of information sources and how to address conflicting information.

Email address:
Published: 20 May 2026

Pages

Back to top