香蕉视频

By David McFadden

Listed by the World Health Organization among the ten leading causes of medical disability worldwide, the severity of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is at a level on par with cancer. 聽This prevalent disorder is characterized by highly distressing intrusive thoughts and repeated compulsive behaviours such as washing or checking.

Classified as: Department of Psychiatry, OCD
Published on: 3 Jun 2021

A team of researchers at the RI-MUHC found two cellular pathways involved in TNBC tumour development and a promising targeted combination therapy

Source: RI-MUHC

Classified as: breast cancer, Research Institute of the 香蕉视频 Health Centre (RI-MUHC)
Published on: 3 Jun 2021

Getting enough sleep can be a real challenge for shift workers affecting their overall health. But what role does being an early bird or night owl play in getting good rest? Researchers from 香蕉视频 find a link between chronotype and amount of sleep shift workers can get with their irregular schedules.

Classified as: shift work, shift workers, chronotype, early bird, night owl, sleep, behaviour, police officers, Diane B. Boivin, Laura Kervezee
Published on: 1 Jun 2021

Scientists鈥 ability to estimate eruption risks is largely reliant on knowing where pools of magma are stored, deep in the Earth鈥檚 crust. But what happens if the magma can鈥檛 be spotted?

Classified as: McGill News, mcgill research, Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, magma, eruption, Volcanic eruptions, Shane Rooyakkers, John Stix
Category:
Published on: 31 May 2021

Using a Fitbit and a spy mic, scientists have discovered new insight into the behaviour of the elusive Canada lynx. A by researchers from 香蕉视频, University of Alberta, and Trent University provides a first look at how miniaturized technology can open the door to remote wildlife monitoring.

Classified as: Canada lynx, sounds, behaviour, ecology, Sustainability, Emily Studd, Allyson Menzies, Murray Humphries
Published on: 31 May 2021

Researchers at 香蕉视频 have demonstrated a technique that could enable the production of robust, high-performance membranes to harness an abundant source of renewable energy.

Blue energy, also known as osmotic energy, capitalizes on the energy naturally released when two solutions of different salinities mix 鈥 conditions that occur in countless locations around the world where fresh and salt water meet.

Classified as: Research News, Department of physics, Faculty of Science, McGill Sustainability Systems Initiative, Sustainability, Khadija Yazda, energy efficiency, renewable energy, office of sustainability
Published on: 26 May 2021

Researchers at 香蕉视频 have gained new insight into the workings of perovskites, a semiconductor material that shows great promise for making high-efficiency, low-cost solar cells and a range of other optical and electronic devices.

Published on: 26 May 2021

McGill researchers to team up with Belgian and UdeM colleagues to explore ethical and legal issues associated with data sharing via mobile apps

Modern life, it seems, is marked by an unprecedented propensity to dramatic and rapid change. This tendency is perhaps best symbolized by the ubiquitous smartphone. What seemed like just some cool technology a few years ago has quickly become an absolutely essential tool for everyday living. Worldwide, almost 4 billion people have at least one such device. In Canada, the rate of smartphone ownership is 88%, as of 2018.

Classified as: healthcare, Smartphone
Category:
Published on: 26 May 2021

Electrification of everything will dramatically increase demand for energy storage and conversion, from advanced batteries to green hydrogen and carbon-free fuels, highlighting need for accelerated innovation efforts

The climate crisis continues to attract global attention, and rightfully so, as dramatic incidents worldwide repeatedly underscore the growing severity of the situation. Governments are increasingly responsive to the issue, enacting legislations to eventually reduce the rate of global temperature rise.

Classified as: clean energy, McGill Sustainability Systems Initiative, Li-ion batteries
Published on: 25 May 2021

Plant diseases don鈥檛 stop at national borders and miles of oceans don鈥檛 prevent their spread, either. That鈥檚 why plant disease surveillance, improved detection systems, and global predictive disease modeling are necessary to mitigate future disease outbreaks and protect the global food supply, according to a team of researchers in a new commentary published in聽.

Classified as: Plants, crops, pandemics, plant diseases, disease, outbreaks, food security, food supply, Sustainability, Graham MacDonald
Published on: 21 May 2021

For decades scientists have been puzzled by the formation of rare hyper-enriched gold deposits in places like Ballarat in Australia, Serra Palada in Brazil, and Red Lake in Ontario. While such deposits typically form over tens to hundreds of thousands of years, these 鈥渦ltrahigh-grade鈥 deposits can form in years, month, or even days. So how do they form so quickly?

Classified as: gold, deposits, Brucejack Mine, Sustainability, Duncan McLeish, Anthony Williams-Jones
Published on: 21 May 2021

Tropical coral reefs are the most biodiverse underwater ecosystem, providing a home to more than a quarter of all marine species. No strangers to environmental stressors and the on-going impacts of climate change, the survival of corals has increasingly been under threat in recent years. A collective of researchers, including from 香蕉视频, have analyzed how environmental factors influence the growth and health of corals and found that more species of corals are living in the mangrove forests than in nearby shallow reefs.

Classified as: Research News, Department of Biology, Heather Stewart, Lauren Chapman, mangroves, coral reefs, marine ecosystem, climate change, Sustainability
Published on: 18 May 2021

Climate change is exacerbating problems like habitat loss and temperatures swings that have already pushed many animal species to the brink. But can scientists predict which animals will be able to adapt and survive? Using genome sequencing, show that some fish, like the threespine stickleback, can adapt very rapidly to extreme seasonal changes. Their findings could help scientists forecast the evolutionary future of these populations.

Classified as: climate change, Sustainability, threespine stickleback, genome sequencing, natural selection, Darwin, Rowan Barrett, Alan Garcia-Elfring
Published on: 13 May 2021

Visible minorities, health-care workers and young people in Quebec have been at higher risk of experiencing COVID-19-related discrimination and more likely to suffer from poor mental health in the past year, according to a collective of researchers from 香蕉视频, Concordia University and the University of Ottawa.

The researchers set out to study how factors such as people鈥檚 socioeconomic and minority status, discrimination, stigmatization and mental health impact their understanding and adoption of public health measures to combat the coronavirus.

Classified as: Research News, c茅cile rousseau, Department of Psychiatry, Transcultural Psychiatry, COVIVRE, mental health
Published on: 12 May 2021

Bacteria that move around live on the edge. All the time. Their success, be it in finding nutrients, fending off predators or multiplying depends on how efficiently they navigate through their confining microscopic habitats. Whether these habitats are in animal or plant tissues, in waste, or in other materials.

Classified as: Faculty of Engineering, Department of Bioengineering, Dan Nicolau, bacteria, biocomputing
Published on: 11 May 2021

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