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Scholarly Impact of the Week

We are celebrating and raising the profile of scholarly milestones and research impacts from across the 間眅埶AV research community.

Examples of Scholarly Impacts can include:

  • Publishing a paper in a high-impact journal;
  • Patenting an invention;
  • Debuting a new performance piece;
  • Publishing a monograph or book and/or;
  • Changing a government policy

We expect most of the publications that are featured to be recent impactshowever, we will also publish a transformative impact from the past, from time-to-time.泭

As part of 間眅埶AV's Scholarly Impact of the Week, selected researchers will work with a member of the VP Research and Innovation Office's communications and marketing teamfor support. We will also work with researchers to discuss how we can mobilize knowledge on their work by submitting to The Conversation Canadaone of the world's most trusted independent sources of news and views from the academic and research community, delivered directly to the public.泭

Be sure to keep up-to-date on the latest published Scholarly Impact and other research news by following 間眅埶AV Research on 泭(喘).

If you have any questions, please reach out directly by emailing vpri-communications@sfu.ca.泭

間眅埶AV's Scholarly Impact of the Week series does not reflect the opinions or viewpoints of the university, but those of the scholars. The timing of articles in the series is chosen weeks or months in advance, based on a published set of criteria. Any correspondence with university or world events at the time of publication is purely coincidental.

For more information, please see 間眅埶AV's Code of Faculty Ethics and Responsibilities and the statement on academic freedom.

December 5, 2023

How does age affect immunity?

Headshot of Ben Ashby

Ben Ashby

Faculty of Science

Older people are more at risk of severe illness from COVID-19, but for other diseases children may be more vulnerable. Why do immune responses vary depending on age? We spoke to 間眅埶AV mathematics professor Ben Ashby on the evolution of infectious diseases and how their hosts evolve to combat them.泭

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November 28, 2023

Testing FATE: Is AI fair in higher education?

Julia Smith sfu

Tenzin Doleck

Faculty of Education
bahar memarian

Bahar Memarian

Faculty of Education

Education professor Tenzin Doleck and postdoctoral fellow Bahar Memarian studied the application of Fairness, Accountability, Transparency, and Ethics (FATE) in the use of artificial intelligence in higher education. They encourage users to carefully consider why and how it is used in order to protect academic integrity.

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October 31, 2023

Conscripted to care: Womens experiences during COVID-19

Julia Smith sfu

Julia Smith

Faculty of Health Sciences

間眅埶AV Health Sciences professor Julia Smiths new book analyses Canadas COVID-19 response from the perspective of those who staffed it. Conscripted to Care:Women on the Frontlines of the COVID-19 Response presents crucial lessons in public health and how it relates to gender and economic equality, as well as public policy.泭

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October 25, 2023

Photograph-based storytelling connects the Holocaust and the Nakba

nawal musleh-motut

Nawal Musleh-Motut

Faculty of Communication, Art and Technology

Will it ever be possible to end the longstanding, transgenerational conflict between Palestinians and Israelis? 間眅埶AV scholar Nawal Musleh-Motut is exploring how problematic master narratives and collective memories of the Holocaust and the Nakbawhich continue to sustain the conflictcan be challenged, complicated and disrupted.

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October 11, 2023

When living cells malfunction, can science help?

Matthew Leighton 間眅埶AV

Matthew Leighton

Faculty of Science
David Sivak 間眅埶AV

David Sivak

Faculty of Science

Within every living cell on earth, countless microscopic molecular machines are at work carrying out cellular functions. They convert energy, transport materials and assemble complex structures.泭When these complex machines malfunction it can lead to disease, so 間眅埶AV physicist Matthew Leighton and physics professor David Sivakare working to better understand molecular machines.

They recently published a paper outlining a new theoretical microscope for peering into the complex world of molecular machines.

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September 21, 2023

Celebrating a milestone: 100th Scholarly Impact of the Week

300 x 300 icon

Celebrating a milestone

Today is a special day marking the 100th installment of 間眅埶AVs Scholarly Impact of the Week!

Launched in March 2021 to celebrate 間眅埶AV researchers inspiring ideas and discoveries, the series has travelled to the far reaches of the universe, deep into the microscopic worldand many points in between.

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September 12, 2023

Help wanted: the complexities of crowdfunding

Jeremy Snyder 間眅埶AV

Jeremy Snyder

Faculty of Health Sciences

Crowdfunding can be a lifesaver, says 間眅埶AV health sciences professor Jeremy Snyder, but it can also raise privacy concerns and reflect existing inequities in society. His new book,Appealing to the Crowd: The Ethical, Political, and Practical Dimensions of Donation-Based Crowdfunding, explores the wider historical and ethical context of giving practices.

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August 16, 2023

Cree coding decolonizes computer programming

jon corbett sfu

Jon Corbett

Faculty of Communication, Art and Technology

Imagine telling a story in an Indigenous language and having a computer interpret and produce digital images for the story. 間眅埶AV School of Interactive Art and Technologyprofessor Jon Corbett aims to make this happen by developing computer coding using nehiyawewin, the Plains Cree language.

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August 1, 2023

TL;DR: the worlds shortest writing textbook

joel heng hartse sfu

Joel Heng Hartse

Faculty of Education

How should new university students approach their first essay? Do professors really expect students to do all the readings? What exactly is APA Style? 間眅埶AV Education lecturer Joel Heng Hartse has answers to these questions. His short survival guide to university reading and writing can help new academic writers overcome their fear of long papers.泭

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July 12, 2023

Illuminating viral protein offers clues to more effective COVID treatments

Mark Paetzel

Mark Paetzel

Faculty of Science

間眅埶AV microbiologist Mark Paetzel and his research team used the brightest light in Canada to study the atomic details of viral protein, work that sheds new light on potential treatments for COVID19.

The paper, X-ray crystallographic characterization of the SARS-CoV-2 main protease polyprotein cleavage sites essential for viral processing and maturation was recently published in Nature Communications.

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