Inaugural best paper award goes to York professor, student

glasses and pen resting on notebook

A York faculty member and graduate student have won the inaugural Alexis de Tocqueville Award for the best conference paper on democracy and public opinion, an award given by the World Association for Public Opinion Research (WAPOR).

Andrew Dawson
Andrew Dawson

Andrew Dawson, an associate professor in the Department of Sociology at the Glendon Campus of York University, and Isabel Krakoff, a PhD candidate in the Department of Sociology, were announced as the winners during WAPOR’s 75th conference.

The paper “Political Trust and Democracy: The Critical Citizens Thesis Re-Examined” empirically assesses competing perspectives on the relationship between democracy and political trust. It draws upon data from the World Values Survey, the European Values Study and several other sources to undertake multi-level analyses using a cross-national panel dataset of 82 countries for the period 1990-2020.

The findings suggest there is a strong, negative relationship between democracy and political trust that cannot be easily dismissed as an artifact of model misspecification or response bias.

The authors re-examine the critical citizens thesis by disaggregating political trust into trust in partisan and non-partisan institutions, following recent studies suggesting that there are both theoretical and empirical rationales to do so.

Dawson is a member of both the Graduate Program in Sociology and the Master’s in Public and International Affairs Program and is an associate editor of the Canadian Review of Sociology. His primary areas of research interest are political sociology; violence and development, with a focus on state legitimacy; political and social trust; democracy and the rule of law. He has pursued an empirical and cross-national research agenda in these fields that draws upon both quantitative and comparative historical methods. This research has been published in various sociology and social science journals, including the British Journal of Sociology, Social Forces, Social Science History, World Development, and Nationalism and Ethnic Politics.

Krakoff is a fourth-year PhD candidate in the Department of Sociology. She completed her MA in international affairs with a concentration in global gender policy in 2018 at George Washington University in Washington, D.C. before moving to Canada for her PhD. She is currently working on her dissertation exploring the intersection of right-wing populism and human rights claims. Her research interests include political sociology, the study of race and racism, critical sexuality studies, global gender policy, and mixed methods research.

‘Ghostly’ neutrinos provide new path to study protons

close up graphic image of atoms

Researchers in York’s Faculty of Science have discovered a new way to investigate the structure of protons using neutrinos, known as “ghost particles.”

Scientists are that much closer to understanding protons after using a novel technique involving a high-energy neutrino beam to precisely measure their size, which could change how these kinds of experiments are done and answer many more questions, say researchers from York University.

“We need detailed information about protons to answer questions like which neutrinos have more mass than others and whether or not there are differences between neutrinos and their anti-matter partners,” says Tejin Cai, York University postdoctoral researcher and lead author of the paper “Measurement of the axial vector form factor from antineutrino-proton scattering,” published in Nature on Feb. 1. “Our work is one step forward in answering the fundamental questions about neutrino physics that are the goal of these big science projects in the near future.”

The research involved a series of experiments with neutrinos, often referred to as “ghost particles,” over nearly a decade. It was part of the international MINERvA collaboration, which studies neutrinos at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab).

Magnetic focusing horn used in the beamline at Fermilab that produces neutrino beams for MINERvA
One of two magnetic focusing horns used in the beamline at Fermilab that produces neutrino beams for MINERvA and other neutrino experiments. Photo by Reidar Hahn, Fermilab.

“While we were studying neutrinos as part of the MINERvA experiment, I realized a technique I was using might be applied to investigate protons,” says Cai, who did the research – involving an international team of scientists – while completing his PhD in the lab of Kevin McFarland, the Dr. Steven Chu Professor in Physics and the acting vice-provost for academic affairs at the University of Rochester.

Deborah Harris

They found that the proton radius as seen by neutrinos is 0.73 femtometres – a quadrillionth of one metre.

“When we proposed MINERvA, we never thought we’d be able to extract measurements from the hydrogen in the detector,” says Professor Deborah Harris, a particle physicist in York’s Faculty of Science, a senior scientist at Fermilab and a co-spokesperson at MINERvA. “Making this work required great performance from the detector, creative analysis from scientists, and years of running the most intense high-energy neutrino beam on the planet.”

How do you measure a proton using neutrinos? That’s the novel part of this experiment. The use of a beam of neutrinos to investigate the structure of protons was once thought impossible. The MINERvA group used a high-power, high-energy particle accelerator, which produces the strongest source of high-energy neutrinos on the planet. This new technique offers scientists a new way of looking at the small components of an atom’s nucleus.

Although neutrinos are one of the most abundant particles in the universe, they are notoriously difficult to detect and study as they don’t have an electrical charge and nearly zero mass. They are often referred to as “ghost particles” because they rarely interact with atoms, but they play a large role helping scientists answer fundamental questions about the universe.

Atoms, and the protons and neutrons that make up an atom’s nucleus, are so small that researchers have a difficult time measuring them directly. Instead, they build a picture of the shape and structure of an atom’s components by bombarding atoms with a beam of high-energy particles. They then measure how far and at what angles the particles bounce off the atom’s components.

For example, if marbles were thrown at a box, they would bounce off it at certain angles, enabling someone to determine where the box was, its size and shape, even if the box was not visible.

“This is a very indirect way of measuring something, but it allows us to relate the structure of an object – in this case, a proton – to how many deflections we see in different angles,” says McFarland.

A new technique

A computer-rendered neutrino detector schematic as it appears in the journal Nature
A schematic of the MINERvA detector, including the support structure and access platform. The neutrino beam enters the detector from the left. Figure published in Nature.

Specifically, the researchers are hoping to use the technique to separate the effects related to neutrino scattering on protons from the effects related to neutrino scattering on atomic nuclei, which are bound collections of protons and neutrons.

“Our previous methods for predicting neutrino scattering from protons all used theoretical calculations, but this result directly measures that scattering,” says Cai.

McFarland adds, “By using our new measurement to improve our understanding of these nuclear effects, we will better be able to carry out future measurements of neutrino properties.”

What is a neutrino?

Neutrinos are created when atomic nuclei either come together or break apart. The sun is a large source of neutrinos, which are a byproduct of the sun’s nuclear fusion. If you stand in the sunlight, for example, trillions of neutrinos will harmlessly pass through your body every second.

Even though neutrinos are more abundant in the universe than electrons, it is harder for scientists to experimentally harness them in large numbers; neutrinos pass through matter like ghosts, while electrons interact with matter far more frequently.

“Over the course of a year, on average, there would only be interactions between one or two neutrinos out of the trillions that go through your body every second,” says Cai. “There’s a huge technical challenge in our experiments in that we have to get enough protons to look at, and we have to figure out how to get enough neutrinos through that big assembly of protons.”

A chemical trick

The researchers solved this problem in part by using a detector containing a target of both hydrogen and carbon atoms. A target of pure hydrogen wouldn’t be sufficiently dense for enough neutrinos to interact with the atoms.

“We’re performing a ‘chemical trick’, so to speak, by binding the hydrogen up into hydrocarbon molecules that make it able to detect sub-atomic particles,” McFarland says.

To isolate only the information from the hydrogen atoms, the researchers then had to subtract the background “noise” from the carbon atoms.

“The hydrogen and carbon are chemically bonded together, so the detector sees interactions on both at once,” Cai says. “I realized that a technique I was using to study interactions on carbon could also be used to see hydrogen all by itself once you subtract the carbon interactions. A big part of our job was subtracting the very large background from neutrinos scattering on the protons in the carbon nucleus.” 

Cai says the collective expertise of MINERvA’s scientists and the collaboration within the group was essential in accomplishing the research.

“The result of the analysis and the new techniques developed highlight the importance of being creative and collaborative in understanding data,” he added. “While a lot of the components for the analysis already exist, putting them together in the right way really made a difference, and this cannot be done without experts with different technical backgrounds sharing their knowledge to make the experiment a success.”

Declaration offers important consensus for reparations for survivors of conflict-related sexual violence

two people with their hands overlapping each other

York researchers release the “Kinshasa Declaration,” a collaboratively developed, survivor-centred document on the right to reparation and co-creation for survivors of sexual and gender-based violence in conflict situations.

Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies (LA&PS) Professors Anna M. Agathangelou and Annie Bunting co-led and co-organized an international conference in November 2021 that led to the recently completed survivor-centred Kinshasa Declaration.

Anna M. Agathangelou
Anna M. Agathangelou

The Kinshasa Declaration is an urgent call for survivor-centred participation in the articulation, co-creation and evaluation of sexual and gendered-based conflict-related transformative reparations, and toward peace and justice for women, men and children. The document outlines the right to reparation for survivors of conflict-related gender and sexual violence. The Declaration comes out of many years of collaboration with partners and the culminating meeting, It’s Time: Survivors’ Hearing on Transformative Reparations held in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

“Survivors place emphasis in the declaration on the key issues of their dignity; their capacity and leadership and need to be involved as equal partners in creating programs; a broad definition of conflict-related sexual violence and victimization; children born of sexual violence and male survivors of sexual and gender-based violence; and intergenerational harm,” said Bunting, a professor in the Law & Society program.

Annie Bunting
Annie Bunting

As part of the Conjugal Slavery in War Social Sciences & Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) Partnership Grant (2015-22), housed at the Harriet Tubman Institute, the partnership grant project led by Bunting with Agathangelou and other researchers, partners in Africa worked with the research team and the Global Survivors Fund to identify key themes for the survivors’ hearing in Kinshasa. 

Researchers, experts, civil society organizations and survivor activists from 12 African countries contributed to the development of the Key Principles on reparations at the survivors’ hearing over several years with the support of SSHRC Partnership Grant at York University. Partner organizations, survivors, graduate students and the drafting committee worked together to articulate the most important issues for meaningful transformative reparations, developing a consensus document on reparations for conflict-related sexual and gender-based violence. The document was finalized through workshops in Democratic Republic of Congo, Central African Republic, Chad, Guinea, Kenya, Liberia, Mali, Nigeria, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, South Sudan and Uganda.

“The Kinshasa Declaration is a tremendous achievement among partners across more than a dozen countries in Sub-Saharan Africa and many other international actors to make concrete change for survivors of sexual violence. York researchers’ leadership on this document and on the partnership that underpins it is remarkable,” said York Vice-President Research and Innovation Amir Asif.

The survivors’ hearing and the process was funded through SSHRC, the Global Survivors Fund, the Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies and the Office of the Vice-President Research & Innovation at York University, the Ford Foundation, the Global Fund for Women and the Government of Canada.

New appointees to Order of Canada have connections to York University

Order of canada medal laid out on black background

Four individuals with an affiliation to York University have been appointed to the Order of Canada. They are Justice Harry LaForme, philanthropist Pierre Lassonde, Holocaust educator and filmmaker Eli Rubenstein and environmentalist John Robert Lounds.

The individuals from the York University community are among 99 new appointments to the Order of Canada, including two companions (C.C.), 32 officers (O.C.) and 65 members (C.M.). Three appointments are promotions within the Order of Canada.

Officers of the Order of Canada

Justice Harry S. LaForme (O.C.)

Honoured with the appointment of officer of the Order of Canada is honorary degree recipient and Osgoode Hall Law School alumnus Justice Harry LaForme (LLD [Hons.] ’08, LLB’ 77). LaForme was appointed an officer of the Order of Canada in recognition of his work advancing national Indigenous rights as a groundbreaking jurist, and for championing underserved communities in Canada.

Pierre Lassonde (O.C.)

Promoted from within the Order of Canada to an officer, York University honorary degree recipient and the founding donor of the Lassonde School of Engineering, Pierre Lassonde (LLD [Hons.] ’14), is being honoured for his long-standing contributions to the gold industry and for his transformative philanthropy, notably in support of the arts and education.

Eli Rubenstein (O.C.)

York University alumnus Eli Rubenstein (BA ’84) is a Holocaust educator, writer and filmmaker. He was appointed as an officer of the Order of Canada for his significant contributions and innovative programs in Holocaust education as a writer, storyteller, film producer and community organizer.

Member of the Order of Canada

John Robert Lounds (M.C.)

York University alumnus John Robert Lounds (MES ’81) works to preserve Canada’s biodiversity and protect some of the country’s most threatened landscapes. He was appointed a member of the Order of Canada in recognition of his substantial contributions to land conservation across Canada.


Since its creation in 1967, the Order of Canada has honoured more than 7,600 people whose service has shaped society, whose innovations have ignited imaginations, and whose compassion has united Canadian communities. The announcement was made December 29 by Governor General Mary Simon.

Word, Sound, Power annual celebration shines spotlight on Black artists

Members of the York University community are invited to celebrate Black artistic talent during a showcase of performances on Feb. 8 when the Jean Augustine Chair in Education, Community and Diaspora presents Word, Sound, Power: An Annual Celebration of Black Artistic Expression.

The Black History Month event spotlights Black cultural and artistic expression through performance, which this year includes drumming and dance, spoken word, a jazz ensemble, an R&B ensemble, The Toronto Gospel Choir and more.

An opportunity to highlight Black artists and creativity, the event will be open to the community and is free to attend. It begins at 5:30 p.m. with a welcome reception in the CIBC Lobby, Accolade East Building at the Keele Campus, and performances will run from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. in the Tribute communities Recital Hall, Accolade East Building.

“As usual, we will be hosting a Black History Month event at which time we will be showcasing and celebrating the talents, artistry and ingenuity of Black university and high school students through their music, poetry, dance and singing. Our annual event recognizes the contributions of Jean Augustine to this national recognition of Black presence in Canada” says Professor Carl James, the Jean Augustine Chair and Senior Advisor on Equity and Representation. 

Featured performances include:

• York University doctoral student Miss Coco Murray with Coco Collective with a presentation in drumming and dance;
• Peel District School Board student Marie Pascoe with a spoken word performance;
• a performance by York’s Oscar Peterson jazz ensemble;
• a spoken word performance by Canadian poetry slam champion Dwayne Morgan;
• a performance by York’s R&B ensemble;
• a performance by spoken word artist Ryan Burke;
• a presentation by the Toronto Gospel Choir; and
• a spoken word presenation by York University student Ashley Keene.

Remarks will be offered by Jean Augustine, the first Black woman elected to the Parliament of Canada, and champion of the unanimous vote in 1995 that saw February designated as Black History Month; Robert Savage, dean, Faculty of Education; and humanities Professor Andrea Davis, special advisor, Anti-Black Racism Strategy, Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies. Representation from York’s Division of Equity, People and Culture, along with Christine Maclin of Unifor – a sponsor of the event, will also share remarks.

Word, Sound, Power is co-presented by the Faculty of Education, the School of the Arts, Media, Performance & Design, the Department of Humanities (Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies) and the Division of Equity, People and Culture.

Tickets, which are free, are available online.

Doris Anderson Award honours for two York University grads

Award stock image banner from pexels

The awards, which commemorate the trailblazing legacy of Chatelaine magazine editor Doris Anderson, celebrate Canadians who exemplify the grit and ingenuity, two characteristics often used to describe Anderson.

The iconic Canadian magazine announced the awards earlier this month. York grad Birgit Uwaila Umaigba (MEd ’18, BScN ’16) leads the list of recipients of the award, and Osgoode Hall Law School grad Michelle O’Bonsawin (LLM ’14) received an honorable mention.

The two York grads were named among a 2022 cohort that includes such luminaries as Canadian politician Anita Anand and Olympian Marie-Philip Poulin.

Birgit Uwaila Umaigba

Birgit Uwaila Umaigba. Image by @ amybrathwaite (www.amybrathwaite.com)
Birgit Uwaila Umaigba. Image by @ amybrathwaite (www.amybrathwaite.com)

Umaigba was named a Doris Anderson Award recipient for elevating the voices of Canadian nurses on the front lines of pandemic care. Umaigba has a masters of education and a bachelor of science in nursing from York University.

Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, Umaigba was on the front line highlighting to the media the stories and struggles of Canadian nurses. A clinical instructor and professor at Centennial College’s nursing program, Umaigba has an intimate understanding of the issues Canada’s nursing sector faces.

As a new mother, clinical instructor and master’s student, Umaigba decided to work as an agency nurse while she juggled the many demands in her life. Agency nurses work outside the facilities where they are employed and have no benefits, paid sick days or job security. During the pandemic, she became well known as she spoke out about the challenges that health-care workers and in particular, agency nurses, faced during the pandemic.

Through her advocacy, Umaigba has raised awareness about how racialized and poor communities have borne the brunt of the pandemic, the mental health struggles nurses face and the injustice of Ontario’s Bill 124.

Michelle O’Bonsawin

Michelle O'Bonsawin. Image courtesy of the Supreme Court of Canada
Michelle O’Bonsawin. Image courtesy of the Supreme Court of Canada

In 2022, O’Bonsawin became the first Indigenous justice named to the Supreme Court of Canada. A member of the Abenaki First Nation of Odanak, she’s a champion of using Gladue principles – a judicial approach that takes into consideration Indigenous oppression.

With a distinguished legal career that has spanned more than 20 years, O’Bonsawin is a highly respected jurist. She was first appointed to the Ontario Superior Court of Justice in Ottawa in 2017. Prior to her appointment, she was general counsel for the Royal Ottawa Health Care Group for eight years. In this role, she developed a thorough understanding of legal issues related to mental health and performed significant research regarding the use of Gladue principles in the forensic mental health system, appearing before various administrative tribunals and levels of courts, including the Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario, the Consent and Capacity Board, the Ontario Review Board, the Ontario Superior Court of Justice, the Ontario Court of Justice, and the Ontario Court of Appeal.

She began her legal career with the legal services at the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and was then counsel with Canada Post, specializing in labour and employment law, human rights, and privacy law. O’Bonsawin has taught Indigenous law at the University of Ottawa’s Common Law Program and was previously responsible for the Indigenous Relations Program at the Royal Ottawa Health Care Group. She is a frequent guest speaker on Gladue principles, Indigenous issues, as well as mental health, labour and privacy law.

More about the Doris Anderson Awards

In 2021, Chatelaine magazine renamed their annual Women of the Year honours to celebrate Doris Anderson, who began as the magazine’s senior editor in 1957. Over the course of her 20-year tenure as editor of the magazine, Anderson became well-known for her her tenacity, grit and determination. In her vision for Chatelaine, Anderson set out to create a women’s magazine that gave its readers information to re-imagine their lives, moving away from the “perfect, little hem-stitched housewife” that magazines during the 1950s were urging woman to be. Instead, Anderson published features on abortion, birth control and reproductive rights, equal pay, universal childcare and more, long before many of these topics were covered by other forms of media. Anderson died in 2007, the awards commemorate her enduring legacy.

Grad student Collette Murray earns two awards for work advancing diasporic dance styles

Toronto Botanical Garden – Edwards Music Series, Hit & Run Dance Productions (image courtesy Arthur Mola Photography)

A York University graduate program assistant and doctoral student was named among six recipients of the 2022 Women Who Rock Awards and one of six changemakers for racial equity as the recipient of the 2022 Award for Racial Justice in Creative Arts presented by Urban Alliance on Race Relations.

Collette Murray, a graduate program assistant in the Faculty of Graduate Studies and Critical Disability Studies in the Faculty of Health, was recognized for her efforts in cultural education, and amplifying Black arts and diasporic styles of African dance vernacular.

Collette Murray
Collette Murray

Murray is an artist-scholar, dance educator and cultural arts programmer with a performance background range in Caribbean Folk, traditional West African, and other diasporic dance styles with past Toronto-based companies. She holds a master of education and a bachelor’s degree (specialized honours) in race, ethnicity and indigeneity from York University, and a bachelor’s degree in sociology from the University of Toronto.

The Women Who Rock Awards program selects six recipients from within the GTHA who have made significant contributions to the community in their field of endeavour. Recipients must demonstrate one of the following criteria: attained a high level of achievement; advanced a cause that has broad impact on the community; achieved recognition as an expert or leader in a specific field; or contributed in a significant manner to their community.  The award was presented in October.

The board of Urban Alliance of Race Relations Canada selected Murray as a recipient of the 2022 Award for Racial Justice in Creative Arts for her multifaceted approach to anti-racism in dance. She was presented the award in December. This honor was a celebration of those who work towards racial equity, dismantling systemic barriers and increasing inclusion.

“2022 has been a transformative year for me, where I am responding with intention, responsibility, and accountability,” says Murray. “I am humbled and with gratitude as I continue to stand for the dance communities, I am a part of.”

Murray’s past graduate research centered on the perspectives of Black arts educators’ experiences using culturally responsive teaching in Ontario, Canada. She is currently pursuing a PhD in dance studies at York University with focus on dance education pedagogies and mentorship that impact the training of Afrodiasporic dance educators in Canada.

Her artistry includes teaching, arts education, mentoring, panel talks, community arts engagement and a recent article about upholding student cultural identities and the use of African, Caribbean and Black arts in classrooms in a new Canadian publication on culturally relevant pedagogy for educators. She has previously been recognized as one of 100 Accomplished Black Canadian Women honorees in 2020, and in 2019 was the recipient of the Toronto Arts Foundation’s Community Arts Award. She also earned the Canadian Dance Assembly’s “I love Community” Award in 2013.

Murray is the artistic director of Coco Collective, which offers culturally responsive projects that connects organizations and schools to African and Caribbean arts. She runs her own mobile dance education business, Miss Coco Murray, and is also a contributing writer in dance media.

Her advocacy includes serving on the National Council for Canadian Dance Assembly, the Board of Directors for Arts Etobicoke, and as the newly appointed board Chair of Dance Umbrella of Ontario (DUO) to bring an equity, education, and inclusion lens to their organizations.

Her research has also been featured in Revue YOUR Review, an academic journal at York University that highlights the work on undergraduate students.

Brain ‘prototypes’ help us navigate new environments, study shows

To truly understand how the brain is working, Crawford says we have to know how the different areas of the brain, and different neurons in those areas, are connecting to each other

A new review paper that examines how the brain forms lasting memories of spatial environments, and how those representations change with our experience in those environments, brings forth a novel theory on how spatial schemas and cognitive maps are formed and used.

Published online in Nature Reviews Neuroscience, the article “From cognitive maps to spatial schemas” takes a closer look at how the different parts of the brain interact with one another to help extract commonalities from multiple environments that we have navigated to form a prototype of those environments. Schemas are structured bodies of prior knowledge that reflect common patterns of information from related experiences. Schemas of everyday events help us interpret new experiences and guide expectations, but little is known about if and how schemas apply to learning to navigate in new environments.

The new theory helps to make sense of accumulating research, including seminal work conducted at York University, by suggesting that these brain prototypes might help us navigate new environments that we have previously not experienced, but that resemble places we have visited in the past.

Shayna Rosenbaum
Shayna Rosenbaum

This work was led by Faculty of Health Professor Shayna Rosenbaum, York Research Chair in Cognitive Neuroscience of Memory and core member of York’s Vision: Science to Applications (VISTA) Program and Centre for Vision Research (CVR), with former VISTA and CVR MA student Dela Farzanfar as first author, along with collaborators at the Rotman Research Institute at Baycrest Health Sciences and at University College London. The paper presents a theory that fills in holes that had gone unaddressed by the highly influential “Cognitive Map Theory,” which was recognized by a Nobel Prize in Physiology in 2014.

Spatial schemas form after navigation of similarly structured environments, for instance, how one might expect the layout of a modern industrialized city to appear. These spatial schemas share properties with cognitive maps (such as a memory of a specific modern city) and event schemas (such as expected events in a modern city) but are distinct at both the cognitive and neural level.

The review concludes that in order to better understand how spatial schemas form and how they relate to event schemas, it is important to incorporate findings from multiple disciplines ranging from rodent models and human neuropsychology to architecture and urban analytics, including the scale of an environment and how it is segmented.

“These findings have significant implications for predicting what will be spared and what will be impaired in individuals who are at risk of developing a wide range of neurological disorders, including Alzheimer’s disease,” says Rosenbaum.

The review was supported by York’s VISTA (Vision: Science to Application) program and the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC).

The article will appear in print in early 2023.

Chemists at York University create more sensitive rapid antigen test

YFile Featured image shows rapid antigen tests by renato-marques-iUc8U9otEbs-unsplash

New research by a team at York University addresses limitations of current rapid antigen tests, reducing the potential for false-negative results.

Sergey Krylov
Sergey Krylov

Rapid antigen tests, like the COVID-19 home test, use a technology called lateral flow immunoassay (LFIA), where a biological sample is placed on a strip of paper-like membrane and flows along this membrane to display a positive or negative result, generally within a few minutes. This kind of test has many advantages, namely simplicity and low cost, and it’s used for a variety of other infectious diseases; but a major limitation of LFIA is its low sensitivity, giving too many false-negative results.

New research by a team of chemists at York University comprised of Banting Fellow Vasily Panferov and postdoctoral Fellow Nikita Ivanov and led by Distinguished Research Professor Sergey Krylov in the Department of Chemistry, has now addressed that limitation by inventing an enhancement step for LFIA, whereby the sensitivity is increased by 25 to near 100 per cent. This step could be performed by an untrained person, in a matter of two minutes.

“Increasing diagnostic sensitivity of LFIA is an urgent and very important task in containing the spread of infections,” said Krylov. “If we think about COVID-19 for instance, about 40 per cent of those who are infected with the virus and have symptoms would test negative the first time. In a day or two, when the virus has multiplied to a very high level, they will get positive results, but it may be too late for preventing disease spread as the person may have not self-isolated.”

Krylov’s team developed their enhanced test and proof of concept for the hepatitis B virus; they were able to increase the diagnostic sensitivity of LFIA from 73 to 98 per cent while not affecting its 95 per cent specificity. The test requires a tiny drop of finger-prick capillary blood, making it practical for use on babies born from infectious mothers, for example.

The team’s enhancement step involves a simple procedure with low-cost accessory equipment that could be done in a primary care setting or lab to generate quick and reliable results. It involves adding a standard nanoparticle mixture and applying voltage to the strip ends (a process called electrophoresis). The electric field moves the immunocomplexes through the test strip so that they pile up on each other, enhancing the signal on the test (a darker positive line if the person is infected).

“The test would be done in two stages: the patient does the test as they normally would, and then if it’s negative or faintly positive, the enhancement step is performed,” said Krylov. “This could significantly reduce the workload of hospital testing facilities and facilitate more affordable diagnostics in resource-limited settings.”

Krylov noted that the same concept could be applied for sensitive testing in the food and beverage industry for contamination by toxins produced by bacteria.

Year in Review 2022: Top headlines at York University, January to April

image of blocks that spell 2022

As a new year emerges, YFile takes a look back on 2022 to share with readers a snapshot of the year’s highlights. “Year in Review” will run as a three-part series and will feature a selection of top news stories published in YFile. Here are the stories and highlights for January to April, as chosen by YFile editors.

January

SEEC helps develop Business Recovery Project for York Region, Aurora Chamber
York Region entrepreneurs were offered free access to the Schulich Executive Education Centre’s (SEEC) Certificate in Business Essentials course thanks to the leadership of the Aurora Chamber of Commerce and the support of the provincial government, York Region, Town of Aurora, and the York Region Chambers of Commerce.

THE Banner for Sustainable YU

York University launches report on progress toward the UN Sustainable Development Goals
The UN Sustainable Development Goal Report is York University’s first annual progress report on the SDGs. Both the report and its accompanying website share stories of progress and facts about York University’s leadership, commitment and progress toward the 17 goals through inspirational stories, facts and figures, and forward-looking action.

York researchers publish novel findings on role of tumor suppressor protein in muscle health
In a study published in the Journal of Biological Chemistry, Jonathan Memme, lead author, PhD student in Kinesiology and Health Science (KAHS), Ashley Oliveira, contributing author, PhD student in KAHS, and David A. Hood, senior author, professor and Tier I Canada Research Chair, and director of the Muscle Health Research Centre (MHRC), show that the importance of p53 is most evident under stress conditions where the maintenance of mitochondrial function is essential.

Melissa Grelo and Emmanuella Owusu
Melissa Grelo and Emmanuella Owusu

Emmanuella Owusu is the inaugural recipient of Melissa Grelo Entrance Award for Black and Indigenous Excellence
First-year Bachelor of Commerce in Information Technology student Emmanuella Owusu was awarded the Melissa Grelo Entrance Award for Black and Indigenous Excellence. The award is granted to a woman entering the first year at the School of Information Technology or the Department of Economics, in York University’s Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies (LA&PS).

February

York Capstone Network partnership with BHER expands opportunities for students
The partnership with the Business + Higher Education Roundtable (BHER) provides more experiential learning (EE) opportunities that give students hands-on experience and help develop skills that enable them to create impact and drive positive change.

The project, titled “Teaching Against Anti-Black Racism and Toward Black Inclusion,” was conducted as part of the Dean’s Award for Research Excellence (DARE) program for undergraduate students enrolled in the Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies (LA&PS)

DARE project leads to first-of-its-kind Black Canadian readings and film database
A research project aimed to redress ideologies and systems of anti-Black racism in the University has culminated in a first-of-its-kind database for Black Canadian readings and films.

York University establishes research fund to support Black scholars
The York Black Research Seed Fund provides $150,000 in funding and mentorship to support the research activities of Black academics. The fund aims to promote equitable and inclusive funding to set roots for research projects and support future growth.

All aboard! Next stop is the autonomous train
Autonomous cars conjure images of beetle-like vehicles zipping around the streets, but what about the potential of autonomous rail transport? One researcher at the Lassonde School of Engineering is bringing this vision to life and it has the potential to significantly improve a nation’s ability to transport both passengers and freight.

March

Provostial Fellows deliver on academic priorities and SDGs
York University’s Provostial Fellows made steady progress on the University Academic Plan priorities and fulfilling the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

York University releases inaugural Annual Report on Black Inclusion
The annual report comes one year after York released the guiding documents Addressing Anti-Black Racism: A Framework on Black Inclusion and the accompanying Action Plan on Black Inclusion: A Living Document for Action (2021) to the University community for consultation and review.

Octopus

Do octopuses, squid and crabs have emotions?
Octopuses can solve complex puzzles and show a preference for different individuals, but whether they, and other animals and invertebrates, have emotions is being hotly debated and could shake up humans’ moral decision-making, says York philosophy Professor Kristin Andrews, an expert in animal minds.

York leads team to establish $5.45M national mental health research and training platform
Faculty of Health Professor Rebecca Pillai Riddell will lead a revolutionary, multi-million dollar research training initiative that will support a more diverse, inclusive, accessible and transdisciplinary approach to mental health research and training.

April

photo of camera
The new MCL offers equitable access to space, equipment and resources for students and faculty who are creating multimedia as part of learning, research and teaching

York University’s Scott Library opens Media Creation Lab for research and teaching 
A new Media Creation Lab in the Scott Library provides students and faculty with access to new teaching and hands-on learning opportunities that span across disciplines.

Federal budget earmarks $1.5M for Jean Augustine Chair in Education, Community and Diaspora
Funds laid out in the federal government’s spring budget guaranteed long-term support for research and other initiatives at York University that create pathways to education for Black youth and future Black scholars.

Global Digital
The coalition is open to students, alumni, staff, faculty members and community partners, who will work together to advance the school’s efforts to promote an academic environment that is equitable, diverse and inclusive and is shaped by decolonizing principles

School of Global Health launches coalition to support equity, diversity, inclusion and decolonization
A new Coalition of Support launched by York University’s School of Global Health (YSGH) will take steps to ensure that principles and practices of equity, diversity, inclusion and decolonization (EDID) are built into the core of the school’s vision and living culture.

York professors receive awards from Government of Canada’s New Frontiers in Research Fund
Two York University researchers have received research awards from the Government of Canada’s New Frontiers in Research Fund (NFRF) special call for innovative approaches to research in the pandemic context.

Check back in the next edition of YFile for Year in Review 2022: Top headlines at York University, May to August.