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Future skills and innovation

Future skills and innovation

[photo of student research from University Archives]
October 1, 2016

Today, with more than 120 programs, graduate and undergraduate education and research at Queen’s has spread to all corners of campus in all disciplines.

[Dr. Parvin Mousavi and Layan Nahlawi in lab]
June 1, 2016

Queen's researcher Parvin Mousavi, professor in the School of Computing, discusses the ways of turning vast amounts of data available from medical imaging and analysis in the form of temporal ultrasound data into clinical progress with procedures such as needle insertion.

[illustration by Carl Wiens]
April 1, 2016

Science journalist Ivan Semeniuk retraces the history of Canada’s Nobel Prize-winning physics experiment led by Queen's researcher Arthur McDonald.

[ Dr. Michael Brundage ]
November 1, 2015

Queen's researcher Michael Brundage discusses his research on quality of life which he undertakes as part of the Canadian Cancer Trials Group and the Queen's Cancer Research Institute.

[ Annette Hay smiling at computer ]
November 1, 2015

Queen's researcher with the Queen's Cancer Research Institute, Annette Hay discusses her research on clinical trials and Ontario’s Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences (ICES).

[ Dr. Jim Biagi ]
November 1, 2015

Queen's cancer research Jim Biagi will lead a promising international trial that could introduce a new chemotherapy regimen to improve the survival rate of patients undergoing surgery for gastrointestinal and gynaecological cancers.

[ Dr. David Berman ]
November 1, 2015

Queen's researcher David Berman is dedicated to unravelling the challenges of dealing with prostate cancer through his work with Queen's Cancer Research Institute and the Canadian Cancer Trials Group.

[ Kathryn Brohman in front of whiteboard ]
April 1, 2015

Queen's researcher Kathryn Brohman, professor at the Smith School of Business, is a co-principal investigator of a new research initiative called Healthcare Systems Leadership, a nonprofit research team of health-care providers and academics from across Canada that hope to streamline collaboration and information exchange in Canadian health care.

[Queen’s astrophysicist Stéphane Courteau and his students]
April 1, 2015

Together with the SNOLAB group, Queen’s astrophysicists like Stéphane Courteau, and their students, form one of the most active centres for research on dark matter in the world.

[ David Maslove with equipment ]
April 1, 2015

Queen's researcher and critical care physician at the KGH Research Institute David Maslove's research involves capturing and analyzing massive volumes of detailed electronic data derived from patients in a hospital ICU to understand more about the nature and progression of acute illnesses.

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