Media releases

  • Brock experts explore World Cup from various angles

    EXPERT ADVISORY: 18 November 2022 – R0126

    As viewers around the world prepare to tune in to the upcoming FIFA World Cup in Qatar, experts from Brock University are discussing the tournament from a variety of angles.

    With Canada taking part in only its second-ever men’s World Cup, Assistant Professor of Sport Management Olan Scott has considered the role the tournament can play in uniting the country.

    “The nation may become a homogenous group of fans cheering for the same athletes united under one flag, regardless of their other differences,” he says. “By including more nationalistic elements, sport media are able to create a collective sense of identity for consumers whereby they have more in common with ‘home’ nation athletes than those from other nations. These common characteristics help bring people together in cheering for the same athletes united under their flag.”

    Along with potentially developing a collective identity, the tournament can also serve as a form of inspiration for a generation of young people to participate in the sport themselves, Professor of Kinesiology Nota Klentrou says.

    “Soccer participation is increasing in Canada due to the popularity of events like the World Cup,” she says. “A larger talent pool leads to success. A good example is Canada’s female soccer team and their Olympic medals. For me, as a pediatric sports scientist, higher soccer participation is exciting because this is a relatively inexpensive team sport characterized by high-impact loads that benefit bone growth while encompassing both intermittent eccentric high-intensity and continuous aerobic components.”

    While Canadians have expressed enthusiasm over the World Cup, Assistant Professor of Sport Management Taylor McKee says the residents of Qatar may have different feelings about the event.

    “Sporting mega events like the World Cup are not simply athletic competitions,” he says. “The games are received and observed by residents of the host cities, many of whom may have been opposed to an event’s imposition on their homes. Sporting mega-events like the World Cup can overwhelm their hosts, a marauding, cumbersome, all-consuming experience, forever altering the fabric of the community in which they arrive.”

    Much conversation has also taken place around allegations of human rights abuses in Qatar.

    Associate Professor Simon Black in the Department of Labour Studies says investigations into the deaths of more than 6,500 Asian and African migrant workers in Qatar’s preparation to host the World Cup have drawn international attention.

    “Reports have detailed both the discrimination and exploitation migrant workers have experienced and the failures of Qatar’s efforts at ‘reform’ of labour laws,” says Black. “In the past weeks, we have seen fan protests in stadiums across Europe, urging fellow fans to boycott the World Cup, as well as various national teams making statements about workers’ rights and pledging to meet with migrant workers in Qatar. Whether this leads to serious reforms is yet to be seen.”

    Black hopes that increased media scrutiny on World Cup labour issues could lead to more awareness of the conditions for migrant workers everywhere.

    “While it is easy to point fingers at Qatar, the increased attention on the conditions facing migrant workers who built World Cup stadiums opens space to discuss migrant workers’ rights globally, including here at home in Canada with programs like the Seasonal Agricultural Workers’ Program,” he says.

    With these protests in mind, Associate Professor Sport Management Michael Naraine says brands are looking cautiously at the Men’s World Cup with a similar strategy to that of the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympic Games.

    “The focus is less on the place and more on the teams, their athletes and their exceptional effort to make it to the tournament, including Canada,” he says. “This event will be highly viewed in North America during the morning and afternoon TV windows, and you’re going to hear very little about the atrocities in Qatar, and more about the athletic feats of Alphonso Davies and Jonathan David.”

    The FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 takes place from Sunday, Nov. 20 until Sunday, Dec. 18.

    Brock University Assistant Professor of Sport Management Olan Scott, Professor of Kinesiology Nota Klentrou, Assistant Professor of Sport Management Taylor McKee, Associate Professor of Labour Studies Simon Black and Associate Professor Sport Management Michael Naraine are available for media interviews on the topic.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Doug Hunt, Communications and Media Relations Specialist, Brock University dhunt2@brocku.ca or 905-941-6209 

    – 30 –

    Categories: Media releases

  • Brock’s new Canada Research Chair improving health with technology

    MEDIA RELEASE: 17 November 2022 – R0125

    When computer science meets biology, unknown details about human health come to light.

    Yifeng Li is an expert in bioinformatics, an emerging area of study in which software tools and methods are used to reveal patterns embedded in complex, large biological data sets.

    “These patterns help us discover the hidden information we need to create solutions that will address diseases and other challenges in human biology,” says the Brock University Assistant Professor of Computer Science and Biological Sciences.

    Li’s research focuses largely on harnessing artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning to develop, or refine, drugs to treat cancer, diabetes and Alzheimer’s, among other conditions, and reduce the drugs’ negative side effects.

    He was one of 176 researchers across the country announced as new and renewed Canada Research Chairs (CRC) on Wednesday, Nov. 16 by federal Minister of Innovation, Science and Industry François-Philippe Champagne. Li is now CRC in Machine Learning for Biomedical Data Science. Also included in the announcement was the renewal of Brock Associate Professor Julia Baird’s CRC in Human Dimensions of Water Resources and Water Resilience.

    Supporting Li’s research is a $139,302 grant from the Canada Foundation for Innovation’s John R. Evans Leaders Fund (JELF), which Li plans to use to set up Brock’s Biomedical Data Science Laboratory.

    The lab’s equipment will include a high-performance multi-GPU server and a data storage server for large-scale biomedical data processing and analytics.

    “The lab is expected to build research leadership and become a data science innovation hub to connect and collaborate with regional innovators from the University, community, industry and government,” says Li.

    With computer technology, Li and his team create algorithms that separate out and group together objects such as microscopic cells, DNA strands and proteins from raw medical images and other samples.

    The computer technology can then do a deep dive into how these groups of objects interact with one another, producing insights in an efficient, timely manner beyond the scope of human efforts, says Li.

    “With biomedical images, for example, it would take too much time for humans to segment out cells from a big image,” says Li. “If you’re the person in the lab and are given 10,000 microscopic images, can you segment them all by hand?”

    He says the algorithms he and his team are developing “literally ‘teach’ software to better understand the biological information within a data set and then fulfil all required objectives, with the goal of improving and streamlining drug design.”

    In the case of drug development, the algorithms will help ensure the drug reaches the area of the body affected by disease and will have the desired effect.

    Li and his team will also design new algorithms to fill in gaps in cases where there are too few images and other data for meaningful analysis.

    The team, which includes 14 students, has a research partnership with the B.C. Cancer Research Centre, the University of Ottawa and the National Research Council to design new anti-cancer drugs.

    Other projects include developing drugs to combat COVID and hair loss.

    “As a CRC, I hope, through research, to change our health, to make our community better and to equip students not only with knowledge and skills but also with guidance on how they pursue their own research path,” says Li.

    “The federal government’s Canada Research Chairs program recognizes world-class researchers whose innovative work contribute to the betterment of Canadian society and beyond,” says Brock University Vice-President, Research Tim Kenyon.

    “Dr. Li’s breakthrough work will advance the capacity of AI to support the health and well-being of all Canadians as well as contributing significantly to the development of the bioinformatics field.”

    In addition to Li’s new position, Baird’s CRC has been renewed for another five years.

    The Associate Professor is using her chair to enhance the understanding of how to effectively govern water resources and support long-term water sustainability, using resilience as her lens for this work.

    Baird and Li are among 10 CRCs at Brock University. The University has a total of 14 CRC allocations.

    The Canada Research Chairs Program invests up to $311 million per year to attract and retain some of the world’s most accomplished and promising minds. Chairholders aim to achieve research excellence in engineering and the natural sciences, health sciences, humanities and social sciences.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Doug Hunt, Communications and Media Relations Specialist, Brock University dhunt2@brocku.ca or 905-941-6209

    – 30 –

    Categories: Media releases