Passings: Remembering the incomparable Joe Green

Joseph Green

Known for his booming voice, huge heart and eternal generosity, York Professor Emeritus and Dean Emeritus of the Faculty of Fine Arts, Joseph Green, has died of renal and bladder cancer on Feb. 3 at the Kensington Hospice in Toronto, Ontario.

Joe Green

Prof. Green (or “Joe” as he was known by all) had a long and illustrious career in theatre and was a proud and ardent supporter of the Arts in all of its forms. It could be said that his life’s work was a grand and passionate play, with his students as rising stars in Canadian theatre cast in central roles.

Born and raised in Philadelphia, Joe received his PhD in Dramatic Theory and Rhetoric from Indiana University in 1964 and his BA in Theatre from Temple University, Philadelphia, in 1956. Joe taught at The University of Louisville, Indiana University South Bend, and Hunter College, before coming to York University in 1968. Subsequently, he became a proud citizen of his new country. He served as Dean, Faculty of Fine Arts, from 1973 until 1980, working to establish the departments of Visual Art, Dance, Film, Music and Theatre, as well as The York Winds Ensemble and the York Theatre Review.

“Joe was a transformational figure at York and in the Toronto arts scene,” said Shawn Brixey, dean of the School of the Arts, Media, Performance & Design. “His radiant energy, artistic curiosity, sense of humour, razor-sharp wit, and intellectual depth helped lay the foundation for what has become a thriving culture of creativity and artistic innovation at York. He will be deeply missed and eternally remembered.”

Joe brought onto the Faculty such Canadian icons as Mavor Moore (“Mr. Theatre”), and established the York Performance Artists Series at Burton Auditorium, showcasing such artists as Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Alan Ginsberg, Tom Wolfe and Henry Moore, to name but a few. Many of Joe’s former students and faculty appointments have gone on to fill important positions in Toronto, across Canada and beyond.

“Joe had a booming voice, a huge heart, a wicked sense of humour and an inspiring passion,” said Ines Buchl, chair of the Department of Theatre at York University. “If you met Joe you could never forget him. His profound legacy will live on in the Joseph Green Theatre in the Centre for Film and Theatre.”

He helped found, and served as director of, York’s MBA Program in Arts Administration at the Schulich School of Business, and later served as chair of the Board of Directors of CulTech Collaborative Research Centre. Joe served as a consultant for the Gardiner Museum of Ceramic Art, Canada Council, the Ontario Arts Council, New York State Council on the Arts, the American Theatre Association and the National Association of Schools of Theatre.

He developed the initial proposals for the York Master of Fine Arts degrees. When he took early retirement in 1994, Joe held the rank of full Professor in the Faculties of Fine Arts (Theatre), Arts (Humanities) and Administrative Studies (Policy and Strategy).

In addition to his academic career, Joe was producer of many stage and TV productions. He developed, along with Gordon Hinch, the mini-series Glory Enough for All, which won a record-setting nine Gemini awards.

As chair of Democrats Abroad (Canada), and international voter registration chair, Joe worked to bring in the democratic vote to Americans across the globe. For his local community, he served on the boards of the Toronto Garden District Residents’ Association, and the Canadian Senior Artists’ Resource Network.

His last legacy was the CBC interview: Joe Green Speaks of Life, Death and Love. Joe inspired many people with the grace, acceptance and openness he displayed while facing life’s final stages.

His family is grateful for the extraordinary care and compassion of doctors, nurses, staff, and volunteers at Kensington Hospice that allowed Joe to live in comfort for many more months than expected. Funeral services took place on Sunday, Feb. 5, at Benjamin’s Memorial Chapel in Toronto. Shiva has begun and will continue at the residence of Rhoda Green, 130 Carlton Street, suite 509 (please check in with security) on Tuesday from 2 tp 4 and 7 to 9pm, and on Wednesday from 7 to 9pm. Details can be found here: http://bit.ly/2jL7dXB.

The family requests that donations in his memory go towards the Kensington Hospice. Information is available here: http://bit.ly/2lkmRWV.

Schulich welcomes two new faculty members

York University’s Schulich School of Business has welcomed two new faculty members who started on Jan. 1, 2017: Charles Cho, professor of accounting and Erivan K. Haub chair in business & sustainability (on leave of absence until March 31); and Gregory Saxton (PhD ’16), assistant professor of accounting.

Charles Cho

Charles Cho – Cho was previously professor of social and environmental accounting and head of the Accounting and Management Control Department at ESSEC Business School. Cho is a Certified Public Accountant (CPA) and a Certified General Accountant (CGA) and has worked for KPMG LLP and several other accounting firms in auditing and taxation. His research interests are social and environmental accounting, CSR, and accounting and the public interest. He is a member of the Social and Environmental Accounting Research Council, and has published a number of articles on environmental disclosure and corporate sustainability reporting.

Gregory Saxton

Gregory Saxton – Saxton was previously an associate professor at University at Buffalo – SUNY and director of Graduate Studies in the Department of Communications. He holds two PhD degrees – the first in political science, and he recently completed a second PhD in accounting at Schulich. His research interests include the role and effects of technology, particularly big data and social media, on the flow of information to and from organizations.

Schulich entrepreneur launches 3D real estate showcase company

3D real estate
3D real estate

The Schulich School of Business at York University announced recently that Jimmy Chan and Sahil Jaggi, the winners of Schulich’s 2016 Start-Up Day, have launched their winning real estate services start-up, Odyssey3D.

Jimmy Chan

Chan, a fourth-year Schulich undergraduate student, and Jaggi, a Toronto real estate investor and builder, won the 2016 Start-Up Day competition for emerging entrepreneurs in late November, qualifying them for 12 months of business mentorship from Schulich Entrepreneur-in-Residence Chris Carder, co-founder of Kinetic Café.

Since May 2016, Chan and Jaggi have been working on the start-up in the BEST Lab, a technology startup incubator at the Bergeron Centre for Engineering Excellence at York University.

Chan said he conceived the idea of Odyssey3D during his time studying technology entrepreneurship in the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology in Haifa, Israel last summer. The Technion field study was made possible through a field study elective course he was taking with York University’s Lassonde School of Engineering.

“I realized how inefficient traditional real estate marketing was last year when I was purchasing my first apartment. Photo galleries, 360-degree panoramas, and fly-through videos lack the perspective and feel that millennial first-time home buyers crave,” said Chan. “At Odyssey3D, we use the most cutting-edge technology to create virtual reality, open house immersive experiences that make you feel like you’re actually there. You can virtually tour properties using any device, including your iPhone, iPad, android, or the web. This new technology has the potential to rapidly disrupt the commercial and residential real estate sector.”

“Our team has interviewed hundreds of agents in RE/MAX Canada, Century 21 Canadian Real Estate, and Homelife Real Estate Canada in order to find the best solution to solve their everyday pains. With an amassing 40,000 real estate agents in the GTA and growing, realtors are craving for a way to stand out,” added Chan.

To experience a demo of the Odyssey3D Showcase, click on this link: http://www.odyssey3d.ca/3d-model/demo-property-real-estate/skinned/.

Schulich Start-Up Day judges were Michael Donahue, vice-president, Toronto Business Development Centre;  Daniel Graham, Business Development manager, Futurepreneur; Derek Szeto, co-founder, Wirkin; and Ilan Kogan, a recent Schulich graduate, founder of Atom and Eat and the winner of Schulich’s 2015 Start-Up Day.

Schulich Start-Up Day sponsors were Kinetic Café, the Schulich Entrepreneurship and Venture Capital Club, TELUS, Aluvion Law, Futurpreneur, TBDC, and Lassonde School of Engineering at York University.

More information about Odyssey3Dis available on the company website at http://www.odyssey3d.ca/.

Schulich celebrates faculty at third annual Research Day

Research Day 2017
Research Day 2017

Schulich School of Business celebrated its third annual Research Day on Jan. 26, to showcase real-world business research on 38 issues. The research work conducted by Schulich’s faculty has been recognized externally through numerous awards, editorial review board appointments and research grants, and this year, the number of entries were up 40 per cent.

Research teams were on hand to explain and discuss 38 posters showcasing leading-edge management thinking to almost 150 visitors from the university and business communities.

Visitors to Schulich’s research event had an opportunity to speak with researchers and view poster presentations

Presentations included research projects across all management disciplines and many industries, including organization studies, finance, marketing, operations management and information systems, strategic management/policy, corporate social responsibility, sustainability, social sector management, entrepreneurial studies, business ethics, financial engineering, real estate and infrastructure, and mining. Many of the studies were cross-disciplinary and involved collaboration with researchers in other York University faculties, as well as other universities.

“There is an enormous wealth of knowledge created behind the office doors of Schulich faculty,” said Dirk Matten, associate dean of research. “Research Day is the unique occasion, where we open these doors and show to the Schulich community what exciting and groundbreaking work is going on. It strengthens our research because Schulich scholars get the unique opportunity to exchange their work with our stakeholders. This, in turns, helps us to look for great research topics, communicate them to our community, and make sure that what we work on, ultimately matters to our stakeholders out there in the real world.”

Attendees voted for the Best Poster Award 2017, which went to “Spoils from the Spoiled: Strategies for Entering Stigmatized Markets” presented by Angelique Slade Shantz, Eileen Fischer, Aurora Liu and Moren Lévesque. Liu is a PhD candidate in Strategic Management and Shantz is a PhD candidate in Organization Studies. Fischer is a professor of marketing and Anne & Max Tanenbaum Chair in Entrepreneurship and Family Enterprise. Lévesque is a professor of Operations Management and Information Systems and CPA Ontario Chair in International Entrepreneurship.

A panel discussion titled “The Impact of Research in the Schulich School of Business: Making an Impact in the Real World? ” was led by Matthias Kipping, professor of policy and Richard E. Waugh, chair in Business History, and included Marcia Annisette, associate professor of accounting and executive director of Student Services and International Relations; Moren Lévesque, professor of operations management and information systems and CPA Ontario Chair in International Entrepreneurship; Mary Waller, professor of organization studies and director of the Schulich Centre for Teaching Excellence; and Detlev Zwick, associate professor of marketing and director of the BBA/iBBA program.

Dean’s Research Impact Lifetime Achievement Award goes to Christine Oliver; Emerging Leader Award to Charlene Zietsma

Schulich Dean Dezsö J. Horváth, CM, presented the Dean’s Impact Research Awards to recognize and reward Schulich faculty members who have demonstrated excellence in research and whose work has had a major impact on management education.

Dean Dezsö J. Horváth presented the Lifetime Achievement Award to Christine Oliver
Dean Dezsö J. Horváth presented the Emerging Leader Award to Charlene Zietsma

The Lifetime Achievement Award went to Christine Oliver, professor and Henry J. Knowles Chair in Organizational Strategy, and the Emerging Leader Award went to Charlene Zietsma, associate professor and Ann Brown Chair of Organization Studies and director of the Entrepreneurial Studies program.

Schulich scholars are among the most innovative in the world, receiving $3 million in research funding in 2015 alone, said Horváth.

“At Schulich, we pride ourselves on being Global, Innovative and Diverse. And I think you see all those qualities captured in the research on display today,” said Horváth. “The research is innovative and groundbreaking. It is unafraid to tackle controversial issues, or to challenge conventional wisdom. The research is global in scope, covering everything from co-operatives in Ghana and transportation in China to fund managers in the U.S. and angel investors around the world. It focuses on real-world problems and provides a great deal of practical insight for business managers and practitioners.

“I am proud to report that research productivity is at its highest level ever based on the number of articles by Schulich faculty that have been published in top-tier academic journals,” he said.

Schulich expertise is also featured in many chapters in the recently published Re-Imagining Capitalism, a joint collaboration between Schulich and McKinsey & Company published by Oxford University Press, said Horváth. The book, which had its global launch during the World Economic Forum in Davos in January, features thought leaders from Schulich as well as a number of renowned academics from around the world, together with business leaders such as Ratan Tata, Paul Polman of Unilever, and Canada’s Galen Weston.

Faculty of Science launches workshop series to prepare students for industry careers

featured speaker Dr. Truong Ta, senior director of Immunization Policy at Sanofi Pasteur
featured speaker Dr. Truong Ta, senior director of Immunization Policy at Sanofi Pasteur

The Faculty of Science held its first Science & Business Workshop on Jan. 19. The event was the first in a four-part series that aims to support and resource graduate students considering careers in industry.

featured speaker Dr. Truong Ta, senior director of Immunization Policy at Sanofi Pasteur
Featured speaker Truong Ta, senior director of immunization policy at Sanofi Pasteur

The workshop featured speaker Truong Ta, senior director of immunization policy at Sanofi Pasteur, and about 90 graduate students attended from biology, chemistry and other science, engineering and business disciplines.

“We aim to expose and prepare our graduate students to as wide a range of career options as possible,” said Ray Jayawardhana, dean of the Faculty of Science. “By launching this workshop series and inviting speakers from industry, we hope to share insights into the transition from an academic to an industry environment.”

Ta spoke about his own career trajectory and background, highlighting the ways he was able to succeed in business from a platform of a PhD in the biological sciences. He offered advice on what students need to think about if they hope to make a transition to industry. Ta completed a PhD in chemistry at the University of Alberta and an MBA at York University’s Schulich School of Business. He has more than 15 years of experience in the life sciences sector, including more than 12 years of vaccine R&D, marketing, finance and policy experience. In his current role at Sanofi Pasteur, he oversees public affairs, government affairs and market access activities for vaccines in Canada.

About 90 graduate students attended the workshop, they came from biology, chemistry and other science, engineering and business disciplines
About 90 graduate students attended the workshop, they came from biology, chemistry and other science, engineering and business disciplines

Following his presentation, there was a lively Q&A that allowed students to ask their own questions.

The workshop series has been generously supported by Charles Hantho, a member of the Schulich School of Business Dean’s Advisory Council, director at ZOOM Media and retired CEO of a large Canadian chemical company.

“Planning for a career outside the academic world can be a challenge,” said Hantho, who is interested in seeing students from scientific, engineering and other technical backgrounds become more connected and exposed to business thinking. “I was pleased to support this pilot initiative to contribute understanding and useful information to help science students reach this goal.”

Schulich hosts ‘Re-Imagining Capitalism’ panel at World Economic Forum

Schulich - Re-imagining Capitalism
Schulich – Re-imagining Capitalism

The Schulich School of Business hosted a high-level panel discussion recently at the 2017 World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

The discussion focused on the book Re-Imagining Capitalism, a collaboration between Schulich and McKinsey & Company that brings together renowned academics, global executives and NGO leaders to tackle some of the major issues confronting capitalism today.

Panel
Panel discussion

The panel featured: Schulich Dean Dezsö J. Horváth; Dominic Barton (Hon. LLD ’12), global managing partner of McKinsey; John Stackhouse, senior vice-president, Office of the CEO at RBC, former editor of the Globe and Mail and author of one of the chapters in Re-Imagining Capitalism; and the Honourable John Manley (Hon. LLD ’16), former deputy prime minister of Canada, president and CEO of the Business Council of Canada, and chair of CIBC.

The discussion was moderated by Matthias Kipping, the Richard E. Waugh Chair in Business History at Schulich, and co-editor of the book Re-Imagining Capitalism, together with co-editors Barton and Horváth.

More than 60 high-profile corporate leaders and media attended the event, including the chairman of Nestlé and the president and CEO of Levi Strauss & Co., as well media representatives from the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, TIME Magazine and Reuters.

schulic in davos1The book, published last fall by Oxford University Press, features contributions from business leaders and academics, including: Unilever CEO Paul Polman; Indian business legend Ratan N. Tata (Hon. LLD ’14), former chairman of Tata & Sons; Chairman of George Weston Limited, Galen G. Weston; former Desjardins CEO Monique Leroux; Doug McMillon, president and CEO of Walmart; and Kathleen McLaughlin, president of the Walmart Foundation. It also features the following world-renowned academics: John Kay, visiting professor at the London School of Economics and one of Britain’s leading economists; Lynn Stout, Distinguished Professor of Corporate and Business Law at Cornell Law School and a well-known critic of an exclusive shareholder value focus; and R. Edward Freeman, University Professor and Olsson Professor of Business Administration at the University of Virginia’s Darden School of Business, who is considered the father of the stakeholder model theory of capitalism.

Schulich and McKinsey & Company will host a similar panel discussion about the book in London, U.K., on March 24.

Team Schulich earns silver at MBA Games

Team Schulich
Team Schulich

Team Schulich continued their legacy of success at the MBA Games 2017 hosted at Vancouver Island University in Nanaimo, B.C., when they finished second overall in the three-day national competition including over 20 schools.

Team Schulich 2017
Team Schulich 2017

The MBA Games pits business school MBA students against each other in academic (case competitions), athletic (basketball, volleyball, soccer, and dodgeball) and spirit competitions (opening ceremony dance, video, social media engagement, and sportsmanship). The team had big shoes to fill, as last year’s squad hosted and finished third and in 2015 they were crowned the Queens Cup champions. And once again, they did not disappoint.

“It is absolutely amazing to earn another podium finish at the MBA Games. It’s such an intense competition, with so many great schools and talented students,” said Team Schulich Case Coach Joe Fayt.

“This year’s journey to the podium was a roller coaster. It could have been anyone’s game with not one school consistently winning multiple categories,” Team Captain Ashelyn Fung added. “But we rallied together proving that every effort counts and it’s the little things that make all the difference.”

Schulich sent the largest team to the games this year with 42 participants, an accomplishment that could not have been possible without RBC’s sponsorship. “We’re grateful to RBC for their very generous sponsorship. Their partnership makes all of this possible,” Fayt said.

Team Schulich finished first in the HR Case Competition, second in dodgeball, second in soccer and second in multiple spirit competitions, as well as raising $5,375 for The Moose Hide Campaign. All donations from participating schools were matched by the J.W. McConnell Foundation with over $150,000 raised in total – a new games record.

“You feel connected with the other 600 MBAs at the games,” Fung said, adding that the event provides a larger sense of community. “The MBA Games helps you make connections that can last well beyond your MBA.”

YFile’s Year in Review: Top headlines at York University, October to December 2016

Glendon Citizenship

As a new year emerges, YFile looks back on 2016 to share with readers a snapshot of the year’s highlights. Here is the final instalment featuring stories and highlights for October to December 2016, as chosen by YFile editors.

October

Four York U students receive Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarships
Alison Humphrey, Zachary Lomo, Jesse Thistle and Syrus Marcus Ware were named recipients of the Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarship, one of the most prestigious graduate scholarships in Canada.

Members of Project Connect greet the first York U sponsored Syrian family
Members of Project Connect greet the first York U-sponsored Syrian family

York U welcomes its first sponsored Syrian refugee family
York’s Project Connect refugee sponsorship team welcomed the University’s first sponsored family through its Syria Response & Refugee Initiative.

The Economist Ranks Schulich School of Business No. 1 in Canada
The Economist magazine gave the MBA program at York University’s Schulich School of Business the top ranking in Canada in the its annual survey of the world’s top 100 MBA programs for the 14th straight year.

Inaugural York World Scholars program attracts top students from around the globe
The program recruited four outstanding students who chose specific double-major programs. The newly arrived World Scholars join a Faculty that is already home to students from 127 countries.

Landmark US$1M gift from Jim and Marilyn Simons establishes leading science fellowship program
The York Science Fellows program will fund at least 12 three-year postdoctoral fellowships, valued at $72,000 per annum each, including contributions from the Faculty and supervisory faculty members.

November

glendon-citizenship3Bilingual citizenship ceremony at Glendon unique lesson for students
Students taking a course on Canadian citizenship at Glendon College were given a unique experiential education opportunity on Nov. 3 when they met with about 50 new Canadians ahead of a Canadian citizenship ceremony.

York U researchers are the first to sequence genome of killer honeybees
The successful mapping of the genome by biology Professor Amro Zayed and his PhD student Brock Harpur offers a huge boost to international efforts to protect agriculture and the honeybee industry from the highly aggressive and invasive Africanized bee.

Paper strips laced with sugar could be the sweetest solution so far, literally, to kill E. coli in contaminated water.
Paper strips laced with sugar could be the sweetest solution so far, literally, to kill E. coli in contaminated water

York U researchers find ‘sweet’ solution to kill E. coli in drinking water
The discovery known as “DipTreat” will be instrumental in developing a new generation of inexpensive and portable water treatment devices. The sweet solution holds promise for efforts underway to ensure global water safety.

Glendon launches ‘Truth and Reconciliation Declaration on Indigenous Language Policy’ Nov. 18
A document responding to three of the 94 Calls to Action issued last December by the Truth & Reconciliation Commission of Canada on Residential Schools got special attention with a public launch on Nov. 18 at Glendon.

York U announces game-changing $2M gift for music education partnership
The gift from York Professor Emeritus Allan Carswell and the Carswell Family Foundation will facilitate a partnership between York University and the Regent Park School of Music to enhance arts education for children.

December

York engages in #ActionsMatter campaign to end violence against women
York University students, staff and faculty were invited to engage in the #ActionsMatter campaign to end violence against women. On Monday, Dec. 5, the University hosted a memorial event to remember the 14 women killed at l’Ecole Polytechnique de Montreal in 1989.

Ottawa renews $1.4M Canada Research Chair at York
The federal government renewed a Canada Research Chair (CRC) in Health Psychology at York enabling Faculty of Health Professor Joel Katz to advance his research in the psychological, emotional and biomedical factors involved in acute and chronic pain.

Visitors to the AGYU examine the Stairry steps exhibit
Visitors to the AGYU examine the Starry Stairs exhibit

AGYU wins major awards for exhibitions, publication design and writing
The Art Gallery of York University (AGYU) did it again. York University’s innovative gallery won four awards of excellence from the Ontario Association of Art Galleries.

York researcher Shayna Rosenbaum receives INS Early Career Award
The International Neuropsychological Society (INS) will award York psychology Professor Shayna Rosenbaum with the INS Award for Early Career Research for her “substantive independent contribution to research in the area of brain-behaviour relationships.”

This concludes YFile’s Year in Review: Top headlines at York University, 2016

YFile’s Year in Review: Top headlines at York University, July to September 2016

As a new year emerges, YFile looks back on 2016 and offers a snapshot of the year’s highlights. “Year in Review” will run as a four-part series, and will feature a random selection of top news stories published in YFile. Here are the stories and highlights for July to September 2016, as chosen by YFile editors.

July

The Member of the Order of Canada medalThree York University faculty appointed to the Order of Canada
Faculty of Health Distinguished Research Professor Ellen Bialystok, Faculty of Education Professor Stephen Gaetz and Osgoode Hall Law School Professor David Vaver were among the 113 new appointments to the Order of Canada. In total, some 13 individuals with connections to York were named to the Order of Canada.

AGYU bioplan forest offers a living testament to the power of art and nature
A variety of saplings that were part of a Bioplan forest developed for the Art Gallery of York University’s exhibit “What We Lose in Metrics” were transplanted to a site near the Stong Pond on the Keele campus. The forest is now a permanent part of the University’s landscape and future ecology.

Professor Roberto Perin earns Glendon Principal’s Research Excellence Award
Glendon Professor Roberto Perin was the recipient of the 2016 Principal’s Research Excellence Award, an honour given annually by Glendon to recognize full-time faculty members who have made an outstanding contribution to research in the past three years.

DonaldIpperciel19
Donald Ipperciel

Dual degree will offer York University’s Glendon College students the best of Canada and France
A new partnership between Glendon College and the emlyon business school in France will offer students the opportunity to combine liberal arts with business education, earn two university degrees and benefit from internships in France, Canada or other countries where French is an official language.

York U, partners receive $15M in federal funds to build health technologies
York University, along with partners Southlake Regional Health Centre and the University Health Network, received $15 million in federal funds to develop new patient-centred health technologies. The announcement was made July 21 by Navdeep Bains, minister of Innovation, Science and Economic Development, and the minister responsible for the Federal Economic Development Agency for southern Ontario (FedDev Ontario).

August

Lions to represent Canada at Rio 2016
Current and former Lions headed to Rio to compete in the 2016 Olympic Games. Named to Team Canada were Lions thrower Brittany Crew, Lions boxer Arthur Biyarslanov, former Lions sprinter Khamica Bingham, former Lions taekwondo competitor Melissa Pagnotta and honorary degree recipient and tennis player Daniel Nestor.

Former Glendon Principal Kenneth McRoberts named to France’s National Order of Merit
Professor Kenneth McRoberts, former Principal of York University’s Glendon College, was named to France’s National Order of Merit and appointed to the rank of Knight during a ceremony on April 25 at the French Consul General’s residence in Toronto.

 Modified schematic of the hypothesized functional connections mediating the trans-saccadic integration of visual information from Dunkley et al. (2016)
Modified schematic of the hypothesized functional connections mediating the trans-saccadic integration of visual information from Dunkley et al. (2016)

York research finds new brain mechanism for perception during eye movements
York University researchers have shown, for the first time, areas of the brain that are sensitive to whether an object looks the same, or different, after making an eye movement. The study was conducted out of Professor Doug Crawford’s Visuomotor Neuroscience Lab.

CIHR grants $2.16M to fund two York research projects
Two research projects led by York University received a combined $2.16 million in funding from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR). Michaela Hynie and Jonathan Weiss, both from the Department of Psychology in the Faculty of Health, were selected to receive grants in the latest round of CIHR funding decisions.

York University ranked #1 in the world in quality of business ethics research
In a study published in the Journal of Business Ethics in July 2016 titled  “A Citation Analysis of Business Ethics Research: A Global Perspective,” York University ranked as the No. 1 academic institution in the world in terms of quality of business ethics journal publications.

September

The OSIRIS REx Laser Altimeter (OLA) undergoing testing
The OSIRIS REx Laser Altimeter (OLA) undergoing testing

York U celebrates successful launch of OSIRIS-REx
OSIRIS-REx – the first-ever sampling mission by NASA to the distant asteroid Bennu – was successfully launched into space on Sept. 8 from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida.

World-leading vision research program receives Canada’s premier grant
York University’s world-class expertise in vision research received a $33.3 million Canada First Research Excellence Fund grant that will support the Vision: Science to Applications (VISTA) program.

York University researchers receive total boost of $7M in SSHRC awards
Minister of Science Kirsty Duncan paid a visit to York University’s Keele campus in September to announce $163 million in Social Sciences & Humanities Research Council of Canada funding. More than 25 research projects at York University received a total boost of $7 million of the federal funding.

Image shows Professors Puri and Sandilands who are Trudeau scholars
Poonam Puri (top) and Catriona Sandilands

Two York U professors among five Canadian scholars honoured as 2016 Trudeau Fellows
Professors Poonam Puri and Catriona Sandilands were named as two of only five scholars across Canada to be awarded prestigious research fellowships by the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation this year.

Bee expert recognized for outstanding contributions to entomology in Canada
At the International Congress of Entomology on Sept. 25, York University Professor Amro Zayed in the Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, received the 2016 C. Gordon Hewitt Award from the Entomological Society of Canada.

Check back in the next edition of YFile for Year in Review: Top headlines at York University, October to December 2016.

YFile’s Year in Review: Top headlines at York University, April to June 2016

Bergeron Centre

As a new year emerges, YFile looks back on 2016 to share with readers a snapshot of the year’s highlights. “Year in Review” will run as a four-part series and will feature a random selection of top news stories published in YFile. Here are the stories and highlights for April to June 2016, as chosen by YFile editors.

April

Bergeron Centre
Bergeron Centre

York U celebrates the official opening of the Bergeron Centre for Engineering Excellence
The traditional image of an engineering school filled with bespectacled students toting calculators in pocket protectors was officially vanquished on Friday, April 8, with the opening of the Bergeron Centre for Engineering Excellence at York University.

Glendon team competes in Translation Games and brings home first place
The Glendon team began preparing for the games in the fall of 2015 with the help of several faculty members, and this training paid off. Glendon took first prize for their team translation of a song into French. Individual team members also placed third and fourth in the annual competition.

NSERC awards $1.65M to York-led research partnership
An academic-industry partnership led by York University has received a total of $1,650,000 through the Natural Sciences & Engineering Research Council of Canada’s Collaborative Research & Training Experience Grants Program.

Lillian Meighen Wright Centre

York U celebrates opening of Lillian Meighen Wright Centre in Costa Rica
A shining example of York University’s leadership in partnering with international communities to build a better world and advance its global impact was celebrated April 25 with the official opening of the Lillian Meighen Wright Centre, the landmark building of York’s EcoCampus in Costa Rica.

Schulich launches one-year Master of Management degree program
Schulich School of Business announced a new 12-month Master of Management degree program, the first of its kind in Canada. It will officially launch this fall with the start of classes.

York scientists partner with industry on $1.7M grant for drug development
Faculty of Science researchers, Professors Derek Wilson, Sergey Krylov and Chun Peng, have received a Collaborative Research & Development Grant from the Natural Sciences & Engineering Research Council of Canada to advance the R&D of biopharmaceuticals. The funding is valued at more than $1.7M, including industrial and in-kind contributions.

May

Project led by York prof receives Minister’s Award for Environmental Excellence
A provincial project spearheaded by Faculty of Environmental Studies Professor Lewis Molot was recognized with a prestigious award. The Ontario EcoSchools project is a recipient of the 2015 Minister’s Award for Environmental Excellence.

Two York faculty earn Pioneer of Change Award
A prestigious distinction that honours immigrants as nation builders will highlight the work of two York faculty members during the 2016 Pioneers for Change Award Gala: Ananya Mukherjee-Reed, dean of the Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies, and Marat Ressin, founder of the York Entrepreneurship Development Institute.

Mobile Water Kit
Mobile Water Kit

York U invention a breakthrough in rapid detection of E. coli
An invention by York U researchers was a breakthrough in rapid detection of the deadly E. coli bacteria in water. The hydrogel-based rapid detection system reduces the time it takes to detect E. coli from a few days to just a couple of hours.

Cinespace family donation gives York U students unparalleled studio experience
The AMPD Motion Media Studio @ Cinespace will give students the opportunity to explore cinematography, 3D gaming, motion-performance capture, virtual reality, interactive image mapping and digital post-production.

Six emerging and established researchers newly appointed York Research Chairs
Professors Nantel Bergeron, Ellen Bialystok, Chun Peng and Stepan Wood were appointed Tier 1 York Research Chairs. Professors Jimmy Huang and Amro Zayed were appointed Tier 2 York Research Chairs. The York Research Chairs program serves as an internal twin for the Canada Research Chairs program.

June

Professor Emeritus Allan Carswell

York University receives $1M gift from Carswell Family Foundation for graduate student scholarships
On Tuesday, May 31, York University announced and celebrated a $1-million gift from Professor Emeritus Allan Carswell and the Carswell Family Foundation. The gift will establish Carswell Scholarships for graduate students in the Faculty of Science and the Lassonde School of Engineering.

York-led research team developing ‘Active Data’ technology for new ways to use greener electricity
The team led by School of Information Technology Professor Stephen Chen will develop Active Data-based technologies, which will give utility companies the opportunity to balance the grid with flexible user demand. The technology is based on a simple premise of using green energy to do things that need to be done at a time when green energy is abundant.

An artist's view of a newborn giant planet. Image by Mark A. Garlick
An artist’s view of a newborn giant planet. Image by Mark A. Garlick

Newborn giant planet found orbiting an infant sun
The discovery of a giant planet known as a hot Jupiter orbiting an infant sun represents a major step forward in understanding how planetary systems form and evolve, says an international team of astronomers including some from York University.

York University researchers awarded more than $5.6M by NSERC
The Natural Sciences & Engineering Research Council of Canada announced Thursday, June 23, that 32 researchers at York University have been awarded more than $4.9 million in NSERC grants, while 10 graduate students and postdoctoral fellows have received a total of $700,000 in funding for scholarships and fellowships.

Check back in the next edition of YFile for Year in Review: Top headlines at York University, July to September 2016.