Articles by author: Brock University

  • Three Brock profs capture Ontario Early Researcher Awards

    MEDIA RELEASE: 12 April 2018 – R00074

    Creating a device to detect prostate cancer. Determining how and why perfectionism impacts adolescent health. Understanding the process that leads to children forgetting to carry out a future intention.

    These areas of interest will be pursued by three Brock University researchers thanks to a provincial grant announced last month by Ontario Minister of Research, Innovation and Science Reza Moridi.

    Assistant Professor of Chemistry Feng Li, Assistant Professor of Child and Youth Studies Danielle Sirianni Molnar and Assistant Professor of Psychology Caitlin Mahy have all received funding this year under the Ministry’s Early Researcher Awards program.

    “These rare and prestigious awards are reserved for early-career researchers whose innovative work is recognized as crucial to the social, cultural, economic and intellectual future of Ontario,” says Brock Vice-President, Research Tim Kenyon.

    “For a university of Brock’s size to receive three awards in one year is amazing and will definitely turn some heads. But it is not surprising to anyone who knows the incredible research talent that Brock has been recruiting for years.”

    Li and his team of four graduate students will develop a single device that will examine blood and urine samples for the presence of certain proteins and nucleic acids that are present in the early stages of prostate cancer. The device will give results in about an hour. Li previously created a three-dimensional, nano-sized robot that detects disease, which the new device, made out of paper, will read and interpret.

    At the moment, testing for these proteins and nucleic acids is done separately and requires highly complicated, time consuming and expensive equipment and processes.

    “You would use this device like you would a pregnancy test,” he says. “You mix your samples with the 3D robot and load it onto the paper device. You would see coloured strips, just like in a pregnancy test,” says Li.

    Another major health concern is an upsurge in depression and anxiety among adolescents, with the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health reporting that the prevalence of moderate to severe psychological distress among Ontario students rose 10 per cent from 2013 to 2015.

    “There’s a lot of research showing strong links between perfectionism and depression and anxiety in adults, but very little work examining these associations in adolescents,” says Molnar. “Given that one in four adolescents is highly perfectionistic and that perfectionism is on the rise among young people it is important to understand the role of perfectionism in depression and anxiety in adolescents.”

    Perfectionists set and strive for unrealistically high standards; if they fall short, they are harshly self-critical and anxious. This can occur even if they achieve these high standards, says Molnar.

    She and her team of graduate and undergraduate students will develop and test a new model of how perfectionism affects adolescents’ physical and mental health.

    Mahy’s prospective memory research focuses on an even younger set of subjects. Her work looks at whether a child forgets to do something because they can’t remember what they had to do or because they do not remember to do it at an appropriate moment.

    Mahy, along with a post-doctoral fellow, two master’s and one PhD student and five undergraduate students, will explore this question and the development of prospective memory in children over time, from the age of four to six.

    “Prospective memory is such an important skill in adulthood,” says Mahy. “We have to remember to go to meetings, do things at certain times, remember our spouse’s birthday; being forgetful does have a cost. I see prospective memory as critical in children developing into adults who can function in society.”

    The Early Researcher Awards program enables new researchers working at publicly funded Ontario research institutions to build research teams.

    “This is a real game-changer for my lab,” says Mahy. “I don’t need fancy equipment to study what I study; I really need help in the lab. Being able to fund a post-doctoral fellow especially will have huge benefit to us.”

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Dan Dakin, Media Relations Officer, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca, 905-688-5550 x5353 or 905-347-1970

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    Categories: Media releases

  • Ontario cannabis plan provides clues to coming retail experience: Brock prof

    MEDIA RELEASE: 12 April 2017 – R00073

    The Ontario Cannabis Retail Corp. made several key announcements Wednesday as it rolls out its plans for the sale of legalized marijuana.

    But while the plans reveal some clues as to what customers can expect from the retail cannabis experience in Ontario, Brock University Associate Professor Michael Armstrong says it also shows that this province is falling behind Quebec in the planning process.

    Armstrong, who teaches courses in quality improvement in Brock’s Goodman School of Business and has written opinion columns on this subject, is available for interviews about Ontario’s retail plans.

    The Goodman professor says one particular point of interest from Wednesday’s announcement was the province’s decision to locate its first four Ontario Cannabis Stores (OCS) well away from tourist areas.

    “The Kingston OCS is in a suburban shopping plaza. It would be like putting a St. Catharines store in the plaza at Vansickle Road and Fourth Avenue,” Armstrong says.

    Ontario Cannabis Retail Corp. (OCRC) also issued a call for product suppliers to submit offers by May 2.

    “By contrast, Quebec announced it has already signed offers with five cannabis suppliers,” Armstrong says. “This shows Ontario is lagging behind Quebec.”

    The OCRC call asks suppliers to specify the concentration ranges for the active ingredients (such as THC) found in their products, and later submit a certificate of analysis from a chemistry lab along with each batch.

    “This is a first step toward improving product quality and consistency, and a big departure from traditional grow-ops,” says Armstrong.

    The call also hints at OCRC’s retailing plans. It asks suppliers to submit short product descriptions (“an earthy product with citrus note”), quality levels and suggested retail prices.

    “That suggests the kind of information customers will see on computer screens in stores,” Armstrong says. “It also suggests that OCRC will set different retail prices for different products and brands, similar to the LCBO, rather than just a single flat price per gram of cannabis.”

    Associate Professor Michael Armstrong is available for interviews on the issue.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Dan Dakin, Media Relations Officer, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca, 905-688-5550 x5353 or 905-347-1970

    Brock University Marketing and Communications has a full-service studio where we can provide high definition video and broadcast-quality audio.

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    Categories: Media releases