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Health - Social Sciences - 12.05.2025
Researchers highlight disparities in ’aging in place’ 
Study delved into the social factors that influence whether older adults are able to remain in their homes and communities  While health status is an important factor in whether a person is able to grow old in their home and community (age in place), researchers at McGill University have shed new light on the social factors that can also have an impact, both directly and through their impact on health over a lifetime.

Environment - Pharmacology - 09.05.2025
Antibiotics from human use are contaminating rivers worldwide
Researchers estimated about 8,500 tonnes of antibiotics end up in river systems each year after passing through the human body and wastewater systems Millions of kilometres of rivers around the world are carrying antibiotic pollution at levels high enough to promote drug resistance and harm aquatic life, a McGill University-led study warns.

Media - Social Sciences - 08.05.2025
Screens and sleep: beyond blue light
Almost all adults consult a medium at least once in the hour before bedtime, according to a study by a UdeM doctoral student. What impact does this have on their sleep? "I wanted to explore media use by a diverse population and its association with sleep variables," sums up Ajar Diushekeeva, a doctoral student in Research and Intervention, Clinical Psychology option, at the Université de Montréal, under the supervision of Antonio Zadra (Department of Psychology) and Santiago Hidalgo (Department of Art History, Cinema and Audiovisual Media).

Health - Chemistry - 08.05.2025
Ultrasound unlocks a safer, greener way to make hydrogels 
McGill researchers develop a method that could revolutionize biomedical and environmental applications  Researchers at McGill University, in collaboration with Polytechnique Montréal, pioneered a new way to create hydrogels using ultrasound, eliminating the need for toxic chemical initiators.

Paleontology - Environment - 07.05.2025
Arctic fossils reveal world's oldest salmon and carp relatives
Arctic fossils reveal world’s oldest salmon and carp relatives
Western researchers uncover a ancient polar ecosystem - and surprising birthplace for familiar fish Most people picture the time of dinosaurs as a steamy, tropical world. But during the Late Cretaceous period, northern Alaska was a different kind of wild. Located far above the Arctic Circle, it endured months of winter darkness and freezing temperatures - even as much of the planet remained warm.

Sport - 07.05.2025
Predicting hockey IQ: Researchers’ method of assessing young hockey talent could be a game-changer
Study suggests that combining hockey scouts' judgements with objective testing could help identify the players with the best 'game sense' In a study that is the first of its kind, a research team led by a McGill professor has developed a more objective way to identify ice hockey players' game intelligence, or "hockey IQ.

Music - Psychology - 06.05.2025
The joy of music at any age
The joy of music at any age
A new website offers video capsules and popular texts to inform the general public about the scientifically recognized benefits of playing and listening to music You don't have to be a violin virtuoso or a guitarist of the calibre of Jimi Hendrix to enjoy the benefits of music. Every amateur musician benefits from playing an instrument, even if it's just a few notes or a wooden spoon.

Environment - 01.05.2025
Practical new tool for detecting nanoplastics and microplastics in the environment
McGill researchers develop practical new tool for detecting nanoplastics and microplastics in the environment A team of McGill researchers has developed a cost-effective, high-throughput technology for detecting nanoplastics and microplastics in the environment. These particles are pervasive, posing health and environmental risks, yet detecting them at the nanoscale has been difficult.

Environment - Earth Sciences - 30.04.2025
Restoring oil wells back to nature with moss
Restoring oil wells back to nature with moss
Researchers use moss in new method capable of restoring peatlands damaged by oil and gas exploration   In what could represent a milestone in ecological restoration, researchers have implemented a method capable of restoring peatlands at tens of thousands of oil and gas exploration sites in western Canada.

Music - Life Sciences - 30.04.2025
Study suggests we don’t just hear music, but ’become it’ 
An international study co-authored by McGill psychologist Caroline Palmer suggests our brains and bodies don't just understand music, they physically resonate with it. These discoveries, based on findings in neuroscience, music, and psychology, support Neural Resonance Theory (NRT). NRT maintains that rather than relying on learned expectations or prediction, musical experiences arise from the brain's natural oscillations that sync with rhythm, melody and harmony.

Music - Health - 28.04.2025
When art meets science: the hidden risks of musical expression
When art meets science: the hidden risks of musical expression
A study carried out at UdeM by Craig Turner and his doctoral supervisor Felipe Verdugo shows how pianists' "expressive intentions" may heighten their risk of long-term injury. Playing the piano involves much more than striking the keyboard. The pianist's entire body is in movement, from the torso to the fingers.

Life Sciences - 24.04.2025
Researchers identify two new crocodile species
Researchers identify two new crocodile species
The unexpected discovery on Mexican islands in the Caribbean makes it crucial to conserve the animals' habitats, Professor Hans Larsson says McGill researchers, in collaboration with Mexican scientists, have discovered two previously unknown species of crocodiles, one living on the island of Cozumel and the other on the atoll of Banco Chinchorro, both off the Yucatán Peninsula.

Life Sciences - 23.04.2025
Our brains can communicate wordlessly, through our eyes
McGill researchers have demonstrated something long assumed: that glances can transmit information about one's mental state to others without a single word being exchanged. They speculate that this primal ability may have played a role in assuring survival of human society at times when making a sound could have attracted predators.

Health - 22.04.2025
Trying to predict how an autistic child will develop cognitively
Although autism can be diagnosed very early, it remains difficult to plot a child's developmental trajectory. Now a team of UdeM-affiliated researchers is working to remedy this, via AI and genomics. Will a child who's evaluated for autism later develop an intellectual disability? Can this be accurately predicted? Early-childhood experts in Quebec say they've have come up with a way to better find out.

Pharmacology - Health - 22.04.2025
Drugs targeting ’zombie cells’ show promise for treating chronic back pain
In a preclinical study led by McGill researchers, two drugs targeting "zombie cells" have been shown to treat the underlying cause of chronic low back pain. The condition affects millions of people worldwide. Current treatments manage symptoms through painkillers or surgery, without addressing the root cause.

Geography - Architecture & Buildings - 22.04.2025
Prepare today to save lives tomorrow: SFU study finds gaps in B.C. extreme heat response plans
Local authorities must do more to prepare communities in British Columbia for the dangers of extreme heat, according to a new research paper from Simon Fraser University. Four years after the infamous 2021 heat dome, which killed more than 600 people in B.C. alone, the ground-breaking study found significant differences in how municipalities within the Metro Vancouver and Fraser Valley regional districts are preparing for heat events.

Health - 22.04.2025
Promising insights on treatment to improve speech after a stroke
Promising insights on treatment to improve speech after a stroke
UCalgary researchers investigate transcranial magnetic stimulation to treat aphasia caused by stroke Lucy Mulloor woke up one morning and realized something was terribly wrong. The 45-year-old single-mom could hear her two daughters in the kitchen but couldn't call out to them. She'd lost the ability to talk and to move the right side of her body.

Astronomy & Space - Earth Sciences - 17.04.2025
Evidence of a carbon cycle that operated on ancient Mars
Evidence of a carbon cycle that operated on ancient Mars
UCalgary scientist Ben Tutolo lead author in groundbreaking study published in the journal Science It wasn't long after Ben Tutolo started as a participating scientist on NASA's Mars Science Laboratory Curiosity Rover team that he started to understand just how much information was being collected on the red planet.

Environment - 17.04.2025
Measuring methane to protect communities
Measuring methane to protect communities
Waterloo researchers are at the forefront of responding to the climate crisis with purpose-driven research and technology, including an interdisciplinary team who are in the field measuring methane emissions to support Canada's net-zero gas emissions goals. Methane is a very powerful greenhouse gas - approximately 80 times more potent than carbon dioxide (CO2) over a 20-year period.

Life Sciences - Agronomy & Food Science - 15.04.2025
Plants, fungi and bacteria working together
Plants, fungi and bacteria working together
A new study examines the symbiotic relationship between mycorrhizal fungi in plant roots and bacterial communities in the soil. Since time immemorial, plants and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi have coexisted in a mutually beneficial relationship. The fungi colonize plant roots and help them absorb nutrients.
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