鶹ýվ

Researchers at 鶹ýվ have improved the efficiency of a method for converting human urine into clean energy.

The method employs microbial fuel cells (MFCs), which use bacteria to turn organic waste into electricity, providing a sustainable and low-cost means of treating wastewater while generating energy from an abundant source. The 鶹ýվ research provides insights into which urine concentrations are optimal for this process.

Classified as: Vijaya Raghavan, microbial fuel cells, development of sustainable technology, wastewater treatment, renewable energy
Published on: 16 Feb 2026

鶹ýվ and Queen’s University researchers have built an improved version of a computer that uses light to solve extremely hard problems more quickly and at larger scale than existing systems, without the need for cryogenic cooling.

Published on: 13 Feb 2026

Scientists have identified a pattern of gene activity present in some female survivors of childhood abuse that is associated with an elevated risk of depression.

Classified as: Patricia Silveira, Department of Psychiatry, Douglas Mental Health University Institute
Published on: 13 Feb 2026

Researchers at 鶹ýվ and the have found that plants living in areas where human activity has caused population crashes carry long-lasting genetic traces of that history, such as reduced genetic diversity. Because genetic diversity helps species adapt to climate change, disease and other stresses, the study suggests it is vital to consider a population’s history-influenced genetics alongside its size and habitat in conservation planning.

Classified as: daniel schoen, botany, jewelweed, genetic diversity, Plants, conservation biology
Published on: 12 Feb 2026

A new 鶹ýվ study suggests that problematic social media use among teens is in part related to broader social inequalities.

Zékai Lu, a PhD student in 鶹ýվ’s Department of Sociology and author of the study, had set out to determine whether problematic social media use is driven mainly by individual traits or whether the social environment of the country a teen lives in also plays a significant role.

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Published on: 11 Feb 2026

A new co-authored by 鶹ýվ researchers suggests people can be taught to reject unfair advantages.

“We often benefit personally from an unequal distribution of resources, a phenomenon known as advantageous inequity – for example, receiving a higher salary than a colleague with the identical role,” said senior author Ross Otto, a psychology professor. “Here we ask whether people can learn to punish advantageous inequity merely by observing the inequity-averse preferences of another person.”

Published on: 11 Feb 2026

A 鶹ýվ-led study on the role played by shame in the continuing trauma suffered by survivors of childhood sexual abuse indicates that addressing shame should be a focal point of treatment. Clinicians should use strategies that normalize disclosure, validate survivors’ feelings and integrate shame-resolution techniques into their therapy plans, the researchers suggested.

Classified as: Rusan Lateef, Delphine Collin-Vézina, child sexual abuse
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Published on: 10 Feb 2026

For over 50 years, 鶹ýվ has been collaborating with Indonesia’s education sector. Now a planned donation of US$12.8 million from the UAE via the Khalifa Bin Zayed Al Nahyan Foundation to 鶹ýվ will establish the UAE-Indonesia Future Leaders Program to support Indonesia’s national and global development objectives. The program will mobilize expertise and scholarship to lead societal change and respond to future needs and challenges in areas such as sustainability, engineering, health, and teacher education that are crucial to Indonesia’s future.

Classified as: university advancement
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Published on: 5 Feb 2026

The Pan-Canadian Genome Library (PCGL), hosted at 鶹ýվ, today announced a major milestone in the implementation of Canada’s national genomics infrastructure with the planned integration of data from CGEn’s HostSeq Initiative and the Biobanque Québécoise de la COVID-19 (BQC19). This achievement marks a significant step in transforming Canada’s world-class genomic data assets into a coordinated, accessible, and impactful national resource. 

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Published on: 5 Feb 2026

New research suggests the liver plays a previously unrecognized role in bone health, but only in males.

A 鶹ýվ-led study published in Matrix Biology found that a protein made in the liver helps regulate bone growth in male mice, but not in females. The findings may help explain why men with liver disease are more likely to experience bone loss.

Classified as: Mari Tuulia Kaartinen, faculty of dental medicine and oral health sciences, osteoporosis
Published on: 5 Feb 2026

鶹ýվ researchers have developed a diagnostic system capable of identifying bacteria –and determining which antibiotics can stop them – in just 36 minutes, a major advance in the global effort to curb antimicrobial resistance (AMR). Current clinical testing methods typically take 48 to 72 hours, leaving physicians without timely guidance.

The researchers say this innovation arrives at a critical moment due to the urgency of the AMR crisis, which arises from bacteria developing resistance to antibiotics.

Classified as: Sara Mahshid, antimicrobial resistance
Published on: 4 Feb 2026

Teenagers who are pathological liars also tend to struggle with executive function deficits, such as poor memory or impulse control, researchers have found.

Classified as: Victoria Talwar, Faculty of Education, Department of Educational and Counselling Psychology
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Published on: 3 Feb 2026

The familiar labels “night owl” and “early bird,” long used in sleep research, don’t fully capture the diversity of human internal clocks, a new study has found.

The 鶹ýվ-led study published in found the two sleep-wake patterns, called chronotypes, contain a total of five distinct biological subtypes, each associated with different patterns of behaviour and health.

Classified as: Le Zhou, Danilo Bzdok, sleep, Department of Biomedical Engineering
Published on: 2 Feb 2026

A preclinical study published in Nature has found evidence that the hippocampus, the brain region that stores memory, also reorganizes memories to anticipate future outcomes.

Classified as: Mark Brandon, Department of Psychiatry, Douglas Research Centre
Published on: 29 Jan 2026

Research by an interdisciplinary team from 鶹ýվ and Université Laval provides new insights into the links between social factors and cognitive health among aging adults.

While previous research had found positive correlations between specific measures of social connectedness and a variety of health outcomes, this study appears to have been the first to create profiles aggregating multiple social factors and to see how those correlated with cognitive health in older adults, the researchers said.

Classified as: Faculty of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, Desautels Faculty of Management
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Published on: 27 Jan 2026

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