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Ï㽶ÊÓƵ is committing to achieve carbon neutrality by 2040, under its new Climate & Sustainability Action Plan (2017-2020), released today.

Classified as: climate, Sustainability, Action Plan, carbon, carbon neutrality, stars, Francois Miller, food and sustainability
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Published on: 28 Nov 2017

By Amanda Testani

Professor Palmer is one of the few researchers to receive two CREATE training grants to date. From 2009-2015, Professor Palmer led an NSERC funded CREATE program in auditory cognitive neuroscience, training over 180 students and postdoctoral fellows. Her significant findings from that program informed her training program application in Complex Dynamics.Ìý

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Published on: 27 Nov 2017

New research by Ï㽶ÊÓƵ biologists shows that milder winters have led to physical alterations in two species of mice in southern Quebec in the past 50 years – providing a textbook example of the consequences of climate change for small mammals.

The findings also reveal a stark reversal in the proportions of the two mice populations present in the area, adding to evidence that warming temperatures are driving wildlife north. Ìý

Classified as: climate change, mice, mild winters, mouse, Quebec, Biology, Virginie Millien, Department of Biology, science, faculty, staff, External, biodiversity, Gault Nature Reserve
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Published on: 27 Nov 2017

Can mindfulness training help overweight people shed pounds and keep them off?Ìý Ï㽶ÊÓƵ researchers surveyed the growing body of studies investigating that question, and came away encouraged.

Kimberly Carrière, Bärbel Knäuper and Bassam Khoury examined 19 studies conducted over the past decade. Mindfulness interventions in these studies involved either formal meditation, informal mindfulness strategies that focused on eating activity, or some combination of these two approaches.

The researchers found that:

Classified as: Mindfulness, Weight loss, diet, meditation, health, science, faculty, staff, students, External, health and lifestyle
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Published on: 23 Nov 2017

Do songbirds and humans have common biological hardwiring that shapes how they produce and perceive sounds?

Scientists who study birdsong have been intrigued for some time by the possibility that human speech and music may be rooted in biological processes shared across a variety of animals. Now, research by Ï㽶ÊÓƵ biologists provides new evidence to support this idea.

Classified as: songbirds, birdsong, speech, sounds, finches, Universal, grammar, learning, jon sakata, Logan James, Biology, neurobiological, society and culture
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Published on: 22 Nov 2017

BMO Financial Group and McConnell Foundation announce $3.25 million in new support for research centre that puts Montreal and its citizens front and centre.

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Published on: 20 Nov 2017

Montreal, with its multilingual, multiethnic population, is an ideal living laboratory for researchers and students from the city’s four universities and many specialized research centres. How can Montreal be designed to better accommodate the needs of its children? What measures need to be put in place to accommodate people of different cultures and religions living in close proximity? How is the city’s nighttime economy different from that of the daytime and what are the implications?

Classified as: urban planning, bmo, McConnell Foundation, Montreal, CIRM, External, faculty, staff, students, food and sustainability
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Published on: 17 Nov 2017

The international Cundill History Prize today announced the British historian Daniel Beer as the 2017 winner of the US$75,000 prize – the richest in non-fiction for a single work in English. The London-based historian was awarded for his ground-breaking study of Siberian penal colonies, The House of the Dead: Siberian Exile Under the Tsars (Allen Lane)

Classified as: Cundill Prize, daniel beer, house of the dead, books, book prize
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Published on: 16 Nov 2017

Today, theÌý,Ìýpart of Johns Hopkins University, and GeoThink, a part ofÌýÏ㽶ÊÓƵ, launched a newÌýÌýthat will identifyÌýstandards for open data regularly shared by governments. The directory will ensure reliability and coordinated information for many city government data sets on services ranging from public safety, to building permits, to public transit, and budgets.

Classified as: science and technology
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Published on: 15 Nov 2017

Research has already shown that women who develop either diabetes or high blood pressure during pregnancy are at risk of getting type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure or heart disease years later.ÌýNow, a new study from a team at the Research Institute of the Ï㽶ÊÓƵ Health Centre (RI-MUHC) and Ï㽶ÊÓƵ shows that the risk of developing those conditions post pregnancy is drastically higher if the women hadÌýbothÌýdiabetes and high blood pressure during pregnancy. The study, published today in theÌýAmerican Journal of Epidemiology, doesn’t end with the mother’s risks.

Classified as: diabetes, pregnancy, mothers, fathers, Diabetes 2, high blood pressure, Ï㽶ÊÓƵ Health Centre, RI-MUHC, Diabetes Canada, health, faculty, staff, students, External
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Published on: 14 Nov 2017

A new study, which is published today in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) Pediatrics, and was led by researchers from King’s College London, Harvard University, University of Bristol and Ï㽶ÊÓƵ,Ìýexamined more than 13,000 Belarussian teenagers enrolled in the PROmotion of Breastfeeding Intervention Trial (PROBIT) and found a 54% reduction in cases of eczema amongst teenagers whose mothers had received support to breastfeed exclusively.

Classified as: faculty of medicine, MUHC RI, babies, adolescent health, breastfeeding, eczema
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Published on: 13 Nov 2017

In a world of political polarization, environmental threats, a changing labour market and growing gaps between rich and poor, there has never been a greater need to engage in a thoughtful examination of public policy and train a new generation of policy leaders.

Against this backdrop, Ï㽶ÊÓƵ is pleased to announce that it has received a $10-million donation from Max Bell Foundation to establish a new school of public policy at McGill. The School will reside in McGill’s Faculty of Arts.

Classified as: max bell school of public policy, public policy, Christopher Ragan, antonia maioni, Faculty of Arts
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Published on: 7 Nov 2017

Early flowering, early fruiting: Anecdotal evidence of climate change is popping up as quickly as spring crocuses, but is it coincidence or confirmation that plants’ timing is shifting in response to warming temperatures?

Classified as: climate change, Plants, statistics, Jonathan Davies, Department of Biology, science, faculty, External, staff, students
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Published on: 6 Nov 2017

A unique collaboration among Shriners Hospital for Children – Canada, CHU Sainte-Justine and Ï㽶ÊÓƵ has enabled researchers to identify genetic mutations involved in a rare disease that causes scoliosis and bone malformations.

The findings, published in The American Journal of Human Genetics, are likely to help doctors recognize the genetic disease, and could someday lead to therapies for the condition.

Classified as: Shriner's Hospital for Children, genetic diseases, genetic mutations, medicine, children, CHU Sainte-Justine Research Center
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Published on: 2 Nov 2017

Expectant and new parents often turn to the internet for parenting prep, but it turns out that dads often don’t seem to find the information they say they need about pregnancy, parenthood and routes to their own mental health and well-being. Now, a new study from a Canadian team led by the Research Institute of the Ï㽶ÊÓƵ Health Centre (RI-MUHC) with funding from global men’s health charity the Movember Foundation highlights just what soon-to-be and new fathers want to see in a dad-focused website and how best to meet those needs.

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Published on: 31 Oct 2017

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