York researchers test best materials for filtration and breathability in mask inserts

A group of people wearing face masks

As face masks are likely here for awhile longer, regardless of first vaccine doses, York University researchers have tested several materials to find which one is more efficient at filtering aerosols and more breathable for use as a middle layer or filter for cloth-based masks.

The researchers looked at the characteristics of various, readily available and inexpensive materials, and put them through aerosol filtering efficiency and breathability testing with the intent to find suitable materials for homemade mask inserts.

They found that adding an appropriate non-woven material as an insert filter can significantly improve the performance of cloth-based masks and that there are alternatives to non-woven polypropylene that work equally well if not better.

The materials tested included woven fabrics, such as prima cotton, woven cotton, flannel and microfiber sheets, and non-woven materials, including sew-in interfacing, polypropylene, baby wipes and Swiffer wipes using single and multi layers. They also tested various industrial wipes and rayon/polyester gauze, as well as two different surgical masks, which provided a benchmark for their results. In addition, they tested materials treated with a water-repellent coating and fabrics that contained seams.

“Overall, we found that polypropylenes, Swiffer and the rayon/polyester blends, such a non-woven gauze, provided the highest filtration efficiency and breathability,” says York University Postdoctoral Fellow Leigh Crilley of the Faculty of Science who led the study with Associate Professor Jennifer Chen.

High-powered microscopes allowed Crilley and his team to examine the weave of each material before exposing them to submicron-sized particles, or aerosols close to the size of the SARS-CoV-2 virus, using industry filtration testing standards. The researchers tested how many of the submicron aerosols were captured compared to those that went straight through the material.

For breathability the research team used a pressure drop test. The higher the pressure drop, the more difficult it would be to breathe through the material. The best materials exceeded the WHO’s metric benchmark for quality.

Jennifer Chen
Jennifer Chen

“Doing the breathability test was equally important because if a material was found to be very efficient at removing small aerosols, but was really not breathable, then no one would want to wear that in a face mask,” says Chen. “It’s important to find a balance between the filtering properties of the material and its breathability.”

Mask wearing can not only help reduce transmission of sub-micron respiratory aerosols, but can reduce exposure to atmospheric aerosol pollution. Researching which mask materials filter submicron aerosols best can allow for rapid policy adjustments and recommendations by health agencies for personal protection.

“We chose to do this research because we felt at the time there wasn’t a lot of guidance on what actually made a good face mask and there was a need to understand which materials are good and why – what materials would give you the best protection and also reduce your transmission if you were infected. That’s what motivated us,” says Crilley.

The research was published recently in the journal Environmental Science: Nano.

Join the conversation about nursing, racism and change on May 14

This year’s June Awrey Lecture, titled “Reimagining Resistance and Reconciliation in Nurse Education: Towards antiracist nursing praxis,” hosted by the School of Nursing in York University’s Faculty of Health, will take place on May 14 from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. via Zoom.

The June Awrey Lecture, established in 2018 to coincide with the School of Nursing’s 25th anniversary, is held in recognition of the school’s first and founding director. Known for her tenacity, innovation and collegial leadership, the intention of the June Awrey Annual Lecture is to pay tribute to the school’s founder and to attract presentations by leading critical thinkers in nursing, health and health care. The lecture aspires to engage students, faculty, academic and practice partners, alumni and others in groundbreaking ideas that will stimulate excellence in practice, policy, leadership, education and research. This year’s lecture will feature a panel of scholars, activists and students in conversation about racism, nursing and social change.

Panellists for this year’s event include:

Josephine Pui-Hing Wong, RN, PhD
Josephine Pui-Hing Wong
Josephine Pui-Hing Wong

Josephine Pui-Hing Wong has rich experience in critical public health. She currently holds the position of professor and Research Chair in Urban Health at the Daphne Cockwell School of Nursing at Ryerson University. She was instrumental to the development of the access and equity policies at Toronto Public Health. Her program of research is underpinned by the principles of social justice and equity. She is committed to doing research “with” and not “for” the affected communities. She works closely with racialized and marginalized communities to identify “what is possible” through research in the areas of identity construction, migration and integration, HIV, mental health and stigma reduction. She is currently leading a COVID-19 rapid research community-based action research project.

Keisha Jefferies, RN, MN, PhD(c)
Keisha Jefferies
Keisha Jefferies

Keisha Jefferies is a Toronto-based African Nova Scotian woman, born and raised in New Glasgow, N.S. She is a registered nurse and PhD candidate in the School of Nursing at Dalhousie University. Her research examines the leadership experiences of African Nova Scotian nurses and the implications for nursing practice and education. Her scholarly and advocacy work focus on addressing anti-Black racism in nursing, equitable admissions in post-secondary institutions and social justice at large.

Jefferies has clinical and policy experience in the areas of neonatal intensive care and breastfeeding. She is a Junior Fellow with the MacEachen Institute of Public Policy & Governance at Dalhousie. Her research is funded and supported by Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarships (Vanier-CGS), Killam Trust, Research Nova Scotia, Johnson Scholarship Foundation, BRIC NS, and the Faculty of Graduate Studies and School of Nursing at Dalhousie.

Christina Chakanyuka, RN, MN, PhD (student)
Christina Chakanyuka
Christina Chakanyuka

Christina Chakanyuka is a Métis nurse, educator and (re)searcher who grew up Dene/Cree (Treaty 8) Territory in the community of Fort Smith, N.W.T. She has strong ties to community and is committed to honouring Indigenous strength, resilience and rights to self-determination in nursing practice, education and research. She is currently teaching and completing her PhD in nursing on unceded Coast Salish homelands at the University of Victoria. Working closely with the B.C. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) Indigenous Health Research in Nursing Chair program, she is advancing Indigenist nursing research and mentorship guided by the core tenants of anti-racism and love. ​

Moderator: Nadia Prendergast, RN, PhD
Nadia Prendergast
Nadia Prendergast

Nadia Prendergast is a full-time assistant professor in York University’s School of Nursing. She completed her nursing degree in England and her master’s and PhD at OISE/UT. Her dissertation focused on the lived experiences of internationally educated nurses of colour and how racism and gender inequalities are organized within Canadian nursing. She continues serving under-resourced communities where she conducts intergenerational work. By bringing conversations between the millennials and non-millennials, Prendergast uses her skills in drama and the arts to restore historical practices and provide information as a “rite of passage” for Black and racialized communities. Prendergast was awarded the Women’s College Research Award in 2007 for addressing racism within nursing.

The event is open to all, and can be accessed through the following Zoom link using Meeting ID 970 1974 8530 and Passcode 574976: yorku.zoom.us/j/97019748530?pwd=M2ZHM3FZNDBJdUZ6Nmx3OEpaTDIxUT09.

Asian Heritage Month at York University

Drone image shows Vari Hall and the Ross Building on Keele Campus

The following is a message from President and Vice-Chancellor Rhonda L. Lenton and Vice-President Equity, People and Culture Sheila Cote-Meek:

La version française suit la version anglaise.

Dear colleagues,

This week marks the beginning of Asian Heritage Month in Canada. Asian Heritage Month is an opportunity for us to learn more about the history and achievements of Asian communities in Canada and their contributions to Canadian society.

In particular, it is an opportunity to acknowledge the significant contributions that Asian students, faculty, staff, instructors, and alumni have made to York and to our local and global communities.

The theme for this year’s Asian Heritage Month is “Recognition, Resilience, and Resolve.” In light of the concerning rise in anti-Asian racism that we have witnessed over the course of the pandemic, the theme is not only a fitting reminder of the determination and perseverance displayed by Asian Canadians throughout our country’s history, but a rallying cry to all Canadians to stand up against anti-Asian racism in all its forms, now and in the future.

York University is committed to combatting anti-Asian racism — and all forms of racism — on and off its campuses. We condemn discrimination and hate in the strongest possible terms, and remain dedicated to fostering a diverse, equitable, and inclusive teaching, learning, and working environment for all of our community members.

We want to thank the many individuals and groups at York who have already been working to challenge anti-Asian racism on our campuses and in our communities through teaching, research, scholarship, and activism, as well as those who have provided support for our Asian community members throughout these challenging times. We also want to remind all of our community members about the supports available to them through the University.

We remain both immensely proud and greatly appreciative of the University’s large and diverse Asian communities, and we encourage everyone at York to learn more about the history and contributions of Asian Canadians, and to continue to stand in solidarity with Asian community members in the weeks, months, and years ahead.

Sincerely,

Rhonda L. Lenton
President and Vice-Chancellor

Sheila Cote-Meek
Vice-President Equity, People & Culture


Mois du patrimoine asiatique à l’Université York

Chers collègues,

Le Mois du patrimoine asiatique commence cette semaine au Canada. C’est l’occasion pour nous tous d’en apprendre davantage sur l’histoire et les réalisations des communautés asiatiques au Canada et sur leurs contributions à la société canadienne.

Nous en profitons pour souligner les contributions importantes que la population étudiante, le corps professoral, le personnel, le corps enseignant et les diplômés d’ascendance asiatique ont faites à York et à nos communautés locales et mondiales.

Le thème du Mois du patrimoine asiatique 2021 est « Reconnaissance, résilience et audace ». Compte tenu de la montée inquiétante du racisme anti-Asiatiques dont nous avons été témoins au cours de la pandémie, ce thème est non seulement un rappel approprié de la détermination et de la persévérance dont ont fait preuve les Canadiens d’ascendance asiatique au fil de l’histoire de notre pays, mais aussi un appel à l’action lancé à tous les Canadiens pour qu’ils se mobilisent contre le racisme anti-asiatique sous toutes ses formes, aujourd’hui et à l’avenir.

L’Université York s’engage à combattre le racisme anti-Asiatiques — et toutes les formes de racisme — sur ses campus et au-delà. Nous condamnons fermement la discrimination et la haine et nous nous engageons à favoriser un environnement d’enseignement, d’apprentissage et de travail diversifié, équitable et inclusif pour tous les membres de notre communauté.

Nous remercions les nombreuses personnes et organisations de York qui œuvrent pour combattre le racisme anti-Asiatiques sur nos campus et dans nos communautés par le biais de l’enseignement, de la recherche, de l’érudition et de l’activisme, ainsi que ceux et celles qui apportent leur soutien aux membres de notre communauté asiatique durant cette période difficile. Nous souhaitons également rappeler les ressources de soutien que l’Université met à leur disposition.

Nous sommes immensément fières des communautés asiatiques de l’Université York et nous leur exprimons notre profonde gratitude. Nous vous encourageons tous à mieux connaître l’histoire et les contributions des Canadiens d’ascendance asiatique et à renouer votre solidarité avec les membres de la communauté asiatique dans les semaines, les mois et les années à venir.

Sincères salutations,

Rhonda L. Lenton
Présidente et vice-chancelière 

Sheila Cote-Meek
Vice-présidente de l’équité, des personnes et de la culture 

Reminder: Join the York community for a virtual town hall, May 12

Vari Hall

The following is a message to the University community from President and Vice-Chancellor Rhonda L. Lenton:

La version française suit la version anglaise.

Dear colleagues,

We would like to remind you that all students, staff, instructors and faculty are invited to join us for a virtual town hall on Wednesday, May 12, where we will discuss our plans for a return to on-campus activities in the Fall and address questions from our community members.

We invite all students, staff, course instructors, and faculty to attend, and encourage you to submit questions in advance of the event using this form.

Date: May 12
Time: 3 to 4:30 p.m.
Zoom Webinar: https://yorku.zoom.us/j/93321495395?pwd=dnF4SEFxanQwOGx6SUZSNlA3NEpqZz09
Webinar ID: 933 2149 5395
Telephone Dial-In: (647) 374-4685
Password: 312990
Link to Livestream: https://conversations.info.yorku.ca/

 

To help answer your questions, I will be joined by:

  • Lisa Philipps, vice-president academic and provost,
  • Carol McAulay, vice-president finance and administration,
  • Amir Asif, vice-president research and innovation,
  • Sheila Cote-Meek, vice-president equity, people & culture,
  • Lucy Fromowitz, vice-provost students,
  • Parissa Safai, special advisor to the president for academic continuity planning and COVID-19 response and associate professor, School of Kinesiology and Health Science.

If you have any accessibility needs, notes or comments, please let us know.

We will be hosting this town hall via the video conferencing platform Zoom Webinar. You can learn about downloading and using Zoom here. The webinar will also be livestreamed on the town hall website.

You can add the town hall to your Outlook calendar using the attached .ics file.

If you have attended a past town hall, we would like your feedback through this short survey. If you were unable to attend previous town halls, you can access all of them here.

The latest community updates, resources and answers to frequently asked questions can always be found on our YU Better Together website.

I look forward to your questions.

Sincerely,

Rhonda L. Lenton 
President & Vice-Chancellor


Rappel : joignez-vous à la conversation communautaire virtuelle du 12 mai

Chers collègues,

Nous tenons à vous rappeler la conversation communautaire virtuelle du mercredi 12 mai à laquelle la population étudiante et tous les membres du corps professoral, du personnel et du corps enseignant sont invités. Nous discuterons des plans de l’Université pour le retour des activités sur le campus à l’automne et nous répondrons aux questions des membres de notre communauté.

Nous vous prions de vous joindre à nous et nous vous encourageons à soumettre vos questions à l’avance à l’aide de ce formulaire.

Date : Mercredi 12 mai 2021
Heure : de 15 h à 16 h 30
Zoom Webinar : https://yorku.zoom.us/j/93321495395?pwd=dnF4SEFxanQwOGx6SUZSNlA3NEpqZz09
Code du webinaire : 933 2149 5395
Numéro de téléphone : (647) 374-4685
Mot de passe : 312990
Lien pour la diffusion en direct : https://conversations.info.yorku.ca/

Pour m’aider à répondre à vos questions, je serai accompagnée de :

  • Lisa Philipps, vice-présidente aux affaires académiques et rectrice,
  • Carol McAulay, vice-présidente des finances et de l’administration,
  • Amir Asif, vice-président de la recherche et de l’innovation,
  • Sheila Cote-Meek, vice-présidente de l’équité, des personnes et de la culture,
  • Lucy Fromowitz, vice-rectrice aux affaires étudiantes,
  • Parissa Safai, conseillère spéciale de la présidente pour la planification de la continuité académique et la réponse à la COVID-19 et professeure agrégée de l’École de kinésiologie et des sciences de la santé.

Si vous avez des besoins, des remarques ou des commentaires en matière d’accessibilité, veuillez nous le faire savoir.

Cette conversation communautaire aura lieu grâce à la plateforme de visioconférence Zoom Webinar. Vous pouvez télécharger Zoom et apprendre à vous en servir ici. Le webinaire sera également diffusé en direct sur le site Web des conversations communautaires.

Vous pouvez ajouter la conversation communautaire à votre calendrier Outlook à l’aide du fichier .ics en pièce jointe.

Si vous avez déjà assisté à une conversation communautaire, nous aimerions connaître votre opinion avec ce bref sondage. Si vous n’avez pas pu assister aux conversations précédentes, elles sont affichées ici.

Vous trouverez les dernières mises à jour, ressources et réponses aux questions fréquemment posées sur notre site Web YU Better Together.

J’attends vos questions avec impatience.

Sincères salutations,

Rhonda L. Lenton
Présidente et vice-chancelière 

President’s statement on the death of Alain Baudot, a founding member of Glendon

Glendon

La version française suit la version anglaise.

It is with great sadness that the York University community learned of the passing of Professor Emeritus Alain Baudot, a founding member not only of the French Studies Department at York, but of Glendon College.

Alain Baudot
Alain Baudot

Alain was one of the very first professors at Glendon. Among his many contributions to the University were the creation of the Department of Multidisciplinary Studies and the groundwork for the development of a PhD program in Francophone Studies. He also demonstrated outstanding leadership as Graduate Program Director for the Master in French Studies and the Master in Translation programs.

In his role as Founding Director of Éditions du GREF (Groupe de recherche en études francophones), the French-language publisher of scholarly and creative works at Glendon, he supported generations of authors. With his passing, Franco-Ontarian publishing circles also lose one of their longstanding pillars.

Alain himself wrote more than 200 articles and several books on subjects ranging from early music, to Belgian literature, to Quebec song and opera, for which he received numerous awards. Notably, he was made a member of the Royal Society of Canada, an Officer of the Order of the Crown (Belgium), Officer of the Order of Academic Palms (France), winner of the Alliance Française Toronto prize (sponsored by the Del Duca Foundation, Paris), and winner of the Association of Canadian University and French Professors prize.

He was also a talented musician and musical director who was named to the Advisory Board of the North York Symphony Orchestra, and performed as a guest pianist for a long and varied list of concerts organized by the Toronto Home Music Club and the Canadian Association of Amateur Musicians.

On behalf of the York University community, I extend my heartfelt condolences to Alain’s family and loved ones, and to the generations of students, colleagues, and authors he supported and inspired over his long and illustrious career.

Sincerely,

Rhonda L. Lenton
President & Vice-Chancellor


Déclaration de la présidente et vice-chancelière de l’Université York Rhonda Lenton à l’occasion du décès d’Alain Baudot

 

Alain Baudot
Alain Baudot

C’est avec une grande tristesse que la communauté de l’Université York a appris le décès du professeur émérite Alain Baudot, non seulement membre fondateur du Département d’études françaises de York, mais également du Collège universitaire Glendon.

Alain a été l’un des tout premiers professeurs à Glendon. Ses multiples contributions comprennent la création du Département d’études pluridisciplinaires et la préparation d’un environnement propice à la création du doctorat en Études francophones. Il a également fait preuve d’un leadership exceptionnel en tant que directeur des programmes d’études supérieures pour la maîtrise en études françaises et la maitrise en traduction.

Dans son rôle de directeur fondateur des Éditions du GREF (Groupe de recherche en études francophones), l’éditeur d’œuvres savantes et artistiques, il a soutenu des générations d’auteurs. À ce titre, les milieux de l’édition franco-ontariens perdent un de leurs piliers.

Alain lui-même a écrit plus de 200 articles et plusieurs livres sur des sujets allant de la musique ancienne à la littérature belge en passant par la chanson et l’opéra québécois, pour lesquels il a reçu de nombreux prix. Il a notamment été nommé membre de la Société royale du Canada, Officier de l’Ordre de la Couronne (Belgique), Officier de l’Ordre des Palmes Académiques (France), lauréat du prix Alliance Française de Toronto (parrainé par le Del Duca Fondation, Paris) et lauréat du prix de l’Association des professeurs universitaires et français du Canada.

Il était également un excellent musicien et directeur musical, nommé au conseil consultatif de l’Orchestre symphonique de North York, et pianiste invité pour de nombreux concerts organisés par Toronto Home Music Club et l’Association canadienne des musiciens amateurs.

Au nom de la communauté de l’Université York, j’offre mes plus sincères condoléances à sa famille et à ses proches, ainsi qu’aux générations d’étudiants, de collègues et d’auteurs qu’il a soutenus et inspirés durant toute sa carrière.

Sincèrement,

Rhonda Lenton
Présidente et vice-chancelière

Social media posts with higher fat foods lead to higher engagement new research shows

French fries and a double cheeseburger

New research published recently in the Journal of Consumer Psychology indicates that visual displays of calorie-dense food is a key factor in boosting viewer engagement on social media.

Theodore J. Noseworthy
Theodore Noseworthy

According to the study, co-authored by Theodore Noseworthy, an associate professor of marketing and the Canada Research Chair in Entrepreneurial Innovation and the Public Good at York University’s Schulich School of Business, the caloric density of food dishes depicted on food sites positively influences social media engagement. Researchers examined visual depictions of food on popular food sites such as Buzzfeed’s Tasty, the world’s largest digital food network, which has more than 100 million followers on Facebook and over a billion monthly views.

The findings were published in a research paper titled, “Content Hungry: How the Nutrition of Food Media Influences Social Media Engagement.” The paper was co-authored by Noseworthy as well as Ethan Pancer, an associate professor of marketing at the Sobey School of Business, Saint Mary’s University; Matthew Philp, an assistant professor of marketing at the Ted Rogers School of Management, Ryerson University; and Maxwell Poole, a graduate student at the Sobey School of Business.

The researchers examined the recipes and ingredients of hundreds of videos from Buzzfeed’s Tasty on Facebook using a text-processing algorithm. They discovered that some nutrients are more effective than others when it comes to driving social engagement. In particular, researchers determined that nutrients people can readily see, like saturated fats, are more likely to draw positive comments, likes and shares. Saturated fats are prevalent in butter, cheese, meats, and oils, and are known to give foods their juicy, chewy, and creamy sensory experiences.

According to Noseworthy, the depiction of saturated fats is a major reason why food photographers spray foods with WD-40, which gives them an artificial sheen to make them look more plump, moist and juicy. “Is it possible to make other healthy foods like vegetables more appealing by applying visual characteristics associated with fattier foods?” asks Noseworthy. “Future research should consider identifying these visual characteristics of nutrients to better inform strategies for garnering engagement with more health-conscious food media content.”

The findings have implications for advertisers, consumers and health advocates. “Understanding the specific characteristics that shape engagement on social media is of critical importance to content producers looking to tailor media towards viewer preferences, to advertisers seeking to increase impact, and to health advocates interested in helping consumers make better food choice,” says Noseworthy.

A video summarizing the research paper can be found here.

Welcome to the May 2021 issue of ‘Brainstorm’

Brainstorm graphic

‘Brainstorm,’ a special edition of YFile publishing on the first Friday of every month, showcases research and innovation at York University. It offers compelling and accessible feature-length stories about the world-leading and policy-relevant work of York’s academics and researchers across all disciplines and Faculties and encompasses both pure and applied research.

Special announcement: York University Research Awards Celebration May 11, from 1:30 to 3 p.m.
Please join the President & Vice-Chancellor Rhonda L. Lenton and the Vice-President Research & Innovation Amir Asif in celebrating the York University Research Awards, for 2019 and 2020 on May 11, from 1:30 to 3 p.m. Help us to congratulate the award winners on their remarkable achievements.

Join the live stream at: http://go.yorku.ca/watchresearchleaderscelebration.

In the May 2021 issue

Exploring a universe of mysteries: Four scientists consider how we fit into the ‘vast cosmic dance’
What are the mysteries of the ‘final frontier?’ Four exceptional researchers identify the most pressing questions in space exploration, planetary science and cosmology, once again demonstrating York University’s leadership on an international (and perhaps cosmic) scale. Read full story.

Study on Anishinaabe ways of knowing could transform universities’ knowledge creation
After winning a major grant from SSHRC, History Professor Carolyn Podruchny leads a study on Indigenous ways of knowing. This has tremendous potential to inform knowledge creation and transfer, and aid in decolonizing the university. Read full story.

Trailblazing research examines virtual characters and walking style – Bonus video
A post-doctoral fellow joined the BioMotionLab two years ago and continued some compelling work on the perception of realistic virtual characters. She recently wrote a conference paper on attractiveness and confidence in walking style of these virtual characters – an original contribution in a cutting-edge field. Read full story.

Research on Syrian refugees and depression tells powerful story of letdowns, could spur change
A health services expert led an examination of a year-long study with Syrian refugees and discovered that rates of depression actually rose over the year. This brought to light perceived sinking social support and control, language barriers and more disappointments – predictors of depression, which could point the way to policy change. Read full story.

Intrepid educators launch new resource for educational development
Seeking to demystify educational development as a career path, a pair of educators created a novel, online resource. They’re hoping to spur an interactive and dynamic discussion where those new to the field, or those considering this career, can gain vital insights. Read full story.

Coming this summer: New resource for those wanting to conduct Indigenous research
The Indigenous Council will soon offer an indispensable guide for non-Indigenous researchers hoping to undertake Indigenous research. ‘Brainstorm’ speaks with the curators of this information to learn more. Read full story.

Launched in January 2017, ‘Brainstorm’ is produced out of the Office of the Vice-President Research & Innovation in partnership with Communications & Public Affairs; overseen by Megan Mueller, senior manager, research communications; and edited by Jenny Pitt-Clark, YFile editor and Ashley Goodfellow Craig, YFile deputy editor.

Exploring a universe of mysteries: Four scientists consider how we fit into the ‘vast cosmic dance’

York researchers are leading the way in space science and engineering
York researchers are leading the way in space science and engineering

Sometime in autumn 2023, a parachute will deposit a canister that will land in a Utah desert. Inside it will be rock samples from an asteroid called Bennu, with an orbit mostly situated between Earth and Mars. This operation has a lot to do with York University’s expertise and leadership in space science and engineering.

Bennu, roughly the height of a skyscraper at 500 metres in diameter, is interesting in many ways. For one thing, it poses a disarmingly real threat to us. It orbits close to Earth every six years and many space scientists believe there’s a small chance it could strike our planet in the next century.

Abstract space cloudscape scenic. Black Background.
York researchers are leading the way in space science and engineering

This aside, Bennu has a deeper value. It could contain clues about the origin of the solar system – including our planet and every living being on it. (As Joni Mitchell put it so aptly in her song Woodstock, “We are stardust…”)

Michael Daly

The rock samples are being brought to us courtesy of NASA’s OSIRIS-REx spacecraft and by the technical expertise of York’s Michael Daly, a professor of Earth and Space Sciences in the Lassonde School of Engineering.

Daly, director of York’s Centre for Earth and Space Science, has been working with the Canadian Space Agency since 2008 on developing the OSIRIS REx Laser Altimeter, an instrument to map the surface of Bennu.

“I developed the concept for the instrument, a very early part of the design. I put the plan together for analyzing the data and how we were going to observe the asteroid to capture the scientific information we required,” he explains.

Daly, York Research Chair in Planetary Science, and his colleagues had to consider a multitude of challenges. Can you get there easily? Does the asteroid spin slowly enough that you could touch down and collect a sample? Can you get the sample back?

Thanks to Daly’s mapping, the team discovered that Bennu has a very rocky surface and the researchers were able to locate a smooth area, the size of a few parking spaces, where the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft could sample.

The plan worked. The spacecraft extracted samples and is soon to make its way back to Earth. Daly is thrilled. Even though the bumpy surface threw a temporary wrench into their plans, “these surprises are valuable because you’ve learned something unexpected,” he says.

Daly is one of a growing community of scholars at York that focuses on every aspect of space and how it all came to be. This work has contributed to an increasing buzz among space experts around the world.

Isaac Smith
Isaac Smith

“York is very strong in space. I don’t think there’s any rival in Canada,” says Canada Research Chair in Planetary Science and Lassonde Professor Isaac Smith, who joined York in 2018, having come from the renowned Planetary Science Institute in Tucson, Arizona.

Smith was surprised by the reaction from friends when he first arrived in Toronto. “My neighbours asked what I did for a living. I told them I’m a planetary scientist at York… they didn’t even know the University had a space program.”

After earning his master’s in physics, Smith toured the American west where he became fascinated by geology, rock formations and deserts. He then applied that interest to the planet closest to us: Mars.

“Mars has always been part of humankind’s fascination. We grew more interested when the first telescopes made people wonder if there might be water and even life, in some form.”

While life has not been found, the idea of it continues to tantalize scientists.

“Mars’ geology is remarkably similar to our planet. I could take a picture of the Utah desert, and find another picture from a rover on Mars, and you wouldn’t be able to tell the difference.”

But Smith isn’t focused on the ages-old question of life on Mars. Instead, he wants to understand how the planet was born, how it has evolved. He believes this has a lot to do with ice.

“The story of Mars is incomplete if you don’t talk about ice. There’s ice all over the planet. In the past, it was water, and this shaped many of the landforms – giant canyons and glaciers, created 100 million years ago. The ice and water are important in the formation of Mars. I want to understand more,” he explains.

John Edward Moores
John Moores

York Research Chair in Space Exploration Professor John Moores is also fascinated with planets. A professor in Earth and Space Science Engineering at Lassonde, he says the focus of his research group is to use what they learn in planetary science to support space missions.

Moores has a special interest in the red planet – especially the mysterious presence of methane. The gas was detected by Curiosity, the NASA rover that has been on Mars since 2012. Methane is produced by numerous natural, biological processes on Earth – from fossil fuels to cow flatulence. “We understand why it’s present on Earth, but we don’t expect it on Mars. To understand why it’s there, we need more data,” says Moores.

As much as Mars, Bennu, Earth and the ever-expanding universe is a mystery, there’s one force that unifies it all: dark matter. Professor Sean Tulin believes it’s at the root of, well, everything.

Sean Tulin
Sean Tulin

“Dark matter is the biggest missing piece of the puzzle we have in astrophysics,” says Tulin, assistant professor of physics and astronomy and Canada Research Chair in Particle Physics and Cosmology. “It’s easy to think, ‘There’s this mysterious substance in space that doesn’t impact what we do.’ But it provides the cosmic foundation for the entire structure in the universe, all the galaxies, and how they’re organized and how they form.

“Think of a birthday cake,” he suggests. “The regular matter – the planets and the stars – are the frosting but the dark matter’s the cake.”

Tulin uses mathematical calculations to investigate the properties of dark matter, then shares his ideas and predictions with astronomers to test them.

“The universe is about 14 billion years old. For about 10 billion of those years, it was dominated by dark matter. If we want to understand what the universe looks like, we have to understand the properties of dark matter. We still don’t. We can’t see it with telescopes. It’s a huge challenge to try to figure this out.”

And why is all this research so valuable?

Tulin says “We can use space as a laboratory for understanding the fundamental properties of nature.”

Smith explains “I’m motivated to share what I learn with students and the public. Helping them feel that wonder and amazement energizes me to learn and share more, do more research.”

Daly elaborates “Space exploration helps us to put ourselves in context in the universe. We’re part of something much bigger than Earth. And if we don’t explore space, I think we lose some of our basic humanity.”

Moores agrees. “By studying ancient environments on other planets we are able to get a better idea of how life originated on our own world, and how our own planetary systems, such as the climate, will change over time. This new knowledge about these wonders will expand our conception of what’s possible and how we fit into this vast cosmic dance.”

To learn more about Daly, visit his profile page. For more on Tulin, see his profile. To learn about Smith’s work, visit his profile. For more on Moores, visit his faculty profile page.

To learn more about Research & Innovation at York, follow us at @YUResearch; watch our new animated video, which profiles current research strengths and areas of opportunity, such as Artificial Intelligence and Indigenous futurities; and see the snapshot infographic, a glimpse of the year’s successes.

Paul Fraumeni is an award-winning freelance writer, who has specialized in covering university research for more than 20 years. To learn more, visit his website.

Study on Anishinaabe ways of knowing could transform universities’ knowledge creation

York University has an enduring commitment to the pursuit of knowledge that comes from many differing perspectives and ways of knowing. Indigenous leadership is vital in this. In the coming years, Indigenous leadership in York’s research will create a unique space to support contributions to Indigenous knowledges within and beyond the academy.

Carolyn Podruchny
Carolyn Podruchny

Enter Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies Professor Carolyn Podruchny, an academic in the Robarts Centre for Canadian Studies and an expert in Indigenous and French relations and Métis history.

Three years ago (2018), she won a Partnership Development Grant from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC). Her project, “Aandse: Anishinaabe Ways of Knowing and the Transformation of University-based Knowledge Creation and Transfer,” has come to fruition.

Podruchny sits down with ‘Brainstorm’ to discuss.

Q: This project was highly collaborative and interdisciplinary. Who were your partners and how did co-creation work?

A: This was the brainchild of the late Lewis Debassige, an Elder from M’Chigeeng First Nations. I had been visiting the Ojibwe Cultural Foundation (OCF), and he was an Elder there. When I first visited, he said, “Why don’t you bring some students?” So, that started an annual visit with students.

Lewis Debassige teaching in a York University classroom, November 2018
Lewis Debassige teaching in a York University classroom, November 2018

Then Lewis suggested, “Why don’t you make this more formal, bring more students, come and stay for a while, and we will set up a program.” He also emphasized that Anishinaabe knowledge needs to start entering the university.

My initial partner was the OCF. Then we expanded to include the Wikwemikong Heritage Organization, and another group, co-founded by one of my former PhD students, called Active History.

The program was an expansion of the History of Indigenous Peoples Network, which is a research cluster at the Robarts Centre for Canadian Studies. The Robarts Centre has been incredibly supportive. They were the first believers in our project. They provided us with valuable administrative support and space; they created the loveliest welcoming environment.

More broadly, York has been nothing but supportive as well – the Provost, VPRI, LA&PS, the Libraries, etc.

Q: What were the project’s objectives?

A: The objectives were to create the context for sharing and learning, both in Anishinaabe spaces and in university spaces, and to bring university people to Anishinaabe spaces and Anishinaabe people to university spaces.

Q: Please describe the project, its themes and audiences.

A: Our big feature event is an annual summer institute called Manitoulin Island Summer Historical Institute (MISHI). In 2017, we focused on the theme of land. In 2018, the theme was clans or Doodemag. The focus of the third was women’s leadership.

We’ve had students, faculty members, librarians, university administrators, as well as Anishinaabe people from different parts of Canada and the United States. And people from Manitoulin Island wanted to participate as well. For example, the former Chief of Wiikwemkoong, Peggy Pitawanakwat, who is coordinator, First Peoples, at Seneca College.

Q: Who were the instructors, speakers and supporters?

Deborah McGregor
Deborah McGregor

A: The main instructors at the institute have been Lewis Debassige and Alan Corbiere (History Department at York). Deborah McGregor (Canada Research Chair in Indigenous Environmental Justice, in both the Faculty of Environmental and Urban Change and Osgoode Hall Law School at York) has also been an essential contributor.

We’ve had Elders some in to speak, including Rita Corbiere from Wikwemikong and Marion McGregor from White Fish River.

Q: What are some activities?

A: Our summer schools are a blend of lectures and tours – learning in place but also different learning activities. We focused on learning by doing and storytelling.

In terms of activities, we’ve done bannock-making, medicine gathering, clay-making and ceramic work, birch bark and willow work to create baskets, and porcupine quill and beading workshops.

We’ve also done language learning, developing vocabulary lists and creating spaces where students can speak Anishinaabe and learn useful, everyday phrases. We brought in specialists in Anishinaabe history from different places.

Anong Beam and Deborah McGregor speaking at OCF ethics talk
Anong Beam and Deborah McGregor speaking at OCF ethics talk

Q: Art has always been a key part of this.

A: Yes. We have attracted artists in this project. One of our co-applicants, artist Anong Beam, former director of the OCF and daughter of well-known artist Carl Beam, insisted from the beginning that we should always have artists at our summer institute. So, we invited Michael Belmore, Nico Williams, Alan Corbiere, Steven George, Deborah McGregor and others. Art has always been the big focus.

York alumna Larissa Crawford, when she was a student, with teacher, Elder Mina Toulouse, 2018
York alumna Larissa Crawford, when she was a student, with teacher, Elder Mina Toulouse, 2018

Q: Part of this project involved a literature review. What did you glean from this? How have universities, York in particular, been handling decolonializing?

A: Universities have been colonizing institutions. They objectified Indigenous people and shut Indigenous people out of the process through structural inequalities.

The way to decolonize the university is to bring Indigenous people to the university and have them change the structures to suit Indigenous epistemologies and pedagogies.

<Caption> Alan Corbiere, giving a tour, 2018
Alan Corbiere, giving a tour, 2018

York has been doing fairly well, but it needs to keep hiring Indigenous people. I have one great success story: my former PhD student Alan Corbiere, mentioned earlier. He was hired by the History Department a year ago in a tenure-track position.

Also, York has supported the Center for Aboriginal Students Services for recruiting and supporting Indigenous students.

Furthermore, I believe this project has allowed York in its journey to decolonize by bringing in curricular activities and creating new forms of classes. Some students in Indigenous studies earned their experiential education course by attending MISHI, for example.

To learn more about Podruchny, visit her Faculty profile page. It is noteworthy that she plans to publish a scholarly article describing the kinds of Anishinaabe pedagogies gathered through this process.

To learn more about Research & Innovation at York, follow us at @YUResearch; watch our new animated video, which profiles current research strengths and areas of opportunity, such as Artificial Intelligence and Indigenous futurities; and see the snapshot infographic, a glimpse of the year’s successes.

By Megan Mueller, senior manager, Research Communications, Office of the Vice-President Research & Innovation, York University, muellerm@yorku.ca

Trailblazing research examines virtual characters and walking style

FEATURED people walking Photo by Ingo Joseph from Pexels
FEATURED people walking Photo by Ingo Joseph from Pexels

In 2019, then PhD candidate Anne Thaler secured a VISTA postdoctoral fellowship and joined Professor and Canada Research Chair Nikolaus Troje’s BioMotionLab at York University and the Centre for Vision Research. She has a compelling research focus: She studies realistic virtual characters in virtual reality (VR) and related perception around these animated characters.

With collaborators, including Troje and researchers from the Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems Tübingen (Germany), she recently wrote a short fascinating paper, “Attractiveness and Confidence in Walking Style of Male and Female Virtual Characters,” for the 2020 IEEE Virtual Reality Conference. Here, she investigated how perceived attractiveness and confidence relate to body shape and walking motion of these virtual characters.

“Our results indicate that attractiveness and confidence relate both to the shape and walking motion of animated characters,” she says. “This finding has important implications for virtual character animation.”

Anne Thaler
Anne Thaler
Nikolaus Troje
Nikolaus Troje

This is an exciting new area of research. Animated virtual characters are, or course, key components in many VR environments, from interactive computer games to training modules, and much progress has been made in developing 3D, life-like faces and body shapes over the last two decades.

But there’s not much research on biological and personality inferences made from the shape and motion of these virtual characters’ bodies. This work fills an important void.

“Human motion is rich in socially relevant information, such as a person’s identity, health and biological sex. Humans are extremely sensitive to animate motion patterns and highly efficient in extracting information encoded in these patterns,” Thaler explains. 

Study participants looked at 100 walkers, and rated their attractiveness and confidence

To undertake this research, Thaler and team generated virtual characters by reconstructing body shape and walking motion from optical motion capture data. Interestingly, they used the walking motions of 50 men and 50 women from the bmlRUB database – a database collected by the BioMotionLab. Each walker’s body shape and walking motion was reconstructed using the MoSh algorithm developed by the collaborators at the Max Planck Institute in Tübingen.

The researchers generated virtual characters by reconstructing body shape and walking motion from optical motion capture data using the MoSh algorithm
The researchers generated virtual characters by reconstructing body shape and walking motion from optical motion capture data using the MoSh algorithm

These 100 characters (stimuli) were presented to the study participants in three different ways:

  1. As a 3D virtual character with each actor’s shape and walking motion (Walking Meshes);
  2. As a walking stick figure with lines connecting 15 skeletal landmarks (Walking Stick Figures); and
  3. As a 3D virtual character in a static pose (Static Meshes).
<Caption> Screenshots of the virtual scene showing the static and walking virtual characters generated using an algorithm, and the walking stick-figures for one woman and one man from the database
Screenshots of the virtual scene showing the static and walking virtual characters generated using an algorithm, and the walking stick figures for one woman and one man from the database

The ‘walkers’ were presented such that they walked directly towards the study participant from four meters away in the virtual environment. The static virtual characters were placed 3.5 metres in front of the participant and were displayed for the same duration as the walking motion of each actor.

Next, the study participants rated how they perceived these characters on a six-point Likert scale. This is a kind of questionnaire that provides a series of answers that go from one extreme to another – from “strongly agree” at one end to “strongly disagree” at another end and less extreme choices in the middle. A Likert scale is particularly useful to researchers because it allows them to collect data that provides nuance and insight into participants’ perception. This data is quantitative and can easily be analyzed statistically.

In the first experiment, 40 study participants (20 female, 20 male) rated the attractiveness of the 100 characters from ‘1’ – not attractive, to ’6’ – very attractive. In the second experiment, another 36 participants (18 female, 18 male) rated the characters’ confidence from ‘1’ – not confident, to ‘6’ – very confident.

Findings consider differences in walking style of males and females

In addition to determining that attractiveness and confidence relate both to the shape and walking motion of animated characters, as noted, the researchers also discovered something about sexual dimorphism in walking style – that is, the difference in walking style between males and females.

They found that sexual dimorphism in walking style seems to play a different role in attributing biological and personality traits to male and female virtual characters.

More specifically, they determined that sexual dimorphism in walking was more important for female attractiveness, whereas increased vertical motion was important for male attractiveness. Interestingly, the opposite was true for perceived confidence.

“These results are important to consider in applications using animated virtual characters because inferences made from the character’s appearance and motion could influence the user’s behaviour,” Thaler says.

Thaler earned her PhD from the University of Tübingen in 2019. Her dissertation examined self-body perception in ecologically valid scenarios using VR and novel computer graphics methods for generating realistic biometric body models. In the BioMotionLab at York, she works on projects investigating body and space perception in VR.

To read the article, visit the conference website. For more on the BioMotionLab, visit the website. To learn more about Troje, visit his profile page. To read more about Thaler, read her bio on the BioMotionLab website or visit her website.

To learn more about Research & Innovation at York, follow us at @YUResearch; watch our new animated video, which profiles current research strengths and areas of opportunity, such as Artificial Intelligence and Indigenous futurities; and see the snapshot infographic, a glimpse of the year’s successes.

By Megan Mueller, senior manager, Research Communications, Office of the Vice-President Research & Innovation, York University, muellerm@yorku.ca