Media releases

  • Brock program ready to help develop ideas of young Niagara entrepreneurs

    MEDIA RELEASE: 7 September 2018 – R00162

    Bailey Cochrane had the business idea, but it was a boost from BioLinc that helped take it from concept to reality.

    The fourth-year Bachelor of Business Administration student in Brock University’s Goodman School of Business knew he wanted to design an online resource for people who were interested in Ontario wine.

    Through his participation in BioLinc’s Kick-Starting Entrepreneurship Program, he was able to transform the vision for Stocked Cellars into an operating online business. Although this wasn’t Cochrane’s first time starting a company, the program gave him resources that built on his previous knowledge and helped him step outside his comfort zone.

    “It allowed me to conceptualize exactly how I wanted to go about starting a technology company,” he said.

    Stocked Cellars was designed as a technology resource that aims to understand Ontario wine consumers, provides customers resources to help them make purchase decisions and acts as an alternative to traditional wine retail.

    Cochrane envisions next adding a virtual reality experience to the website where consumers can be transported to Niagara wine country from their computer screen.

    The Kick-Starting Entrepreneurship Program is in its fifth year after helping more than 150 young entrepreneurs in the past. Niagara residents between the ages of 18 and 29 with an early-stage business idea are encouraged to submit an application by the Friday, Sept. 21 deadline.

    “The program helps young entrepreneurs determine if this is a viable career path for them,” said Program Manager and BioLinc Co-ordinator Cassie Price. “If they find out entrepreneurship isn’t for them, we can teach them other ways they can be innovative in their career path.”

    Up to 35 young entrepreneurs will have access to monthly seminars and training, mentorship, networking events, advisory services and funding opportunities.

    “They don’t have to have more than an idea. We can work with them to help them grow that and expand,” Price said. “As they go through the program, they can determine if their idea is viable and if it’s something they want to pursue.”

    Cochrane encourages potential applicants not to hold back from applying if they think that their business idea isn’t polished enough.

    “Even when you think your business isn’t at a stage in which you could go through an entrepreneurial program like this, it is,” he said.

    “All you need is an idea and this program will help you formulate that idea into potentially a real business.”

    Both Brock student Bailey Cochrane and BioLinc Co-ordinator Cassie Price are available for interviews on the program and how it can benefit young Niagara entrepreneurs.

    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

  • ‘Rising star’ of research awarded national Vanier Scholarship

    MEDIA RELEASE: 7 September 2018 – R00161

    A Brock University PhD student doing cutting-edge research on how children learn to recognize faces has received a prestigious national scholarship.

    Psychology student Claire Matthews has been granted a Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarship that will see her use breakthrough methods to shed light on children’s perceptions of new faces and the processing of this information in their minds.

    “One of the studies in my PhD will examine whether motion facilitates children’s face learning,” says Matthews. “If motion helps children learn, we may actually be underestimating children’s abilities by asking them to recognize a new face by just looking at static images.”

    This is part of Matthews’ PhD program, which focusses on facial recognition across the lifespan to understand differences in the process of learning.

    “Our lab is really the only one in Canada examining these types of questions from a developmental perspective,” she says.

    This builds upon Matthews’ years-long facial recognition research, which has led to a partnership with the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) and can help police officers and border officials do their jobs more effectively.

    “Border Service agents need to analyze a photo of a person they have never seen before and quickly decide if that person is who they say they are,” she says. “I am working with the CBSA to use my research findings to help improve their training protocols.”

    Professor of Psychology Catherine Mondloch, Matthews’ PhD supervisor in Brock’s Centre for Lifespan Development, says the work Matthews is doing is cutting-edge and will impact Canadians.

    “Claire is addressing unexplored questions in facial recognition with studies that demonstrate her ingenuity and commitment to research,” she says. “She is a rising star.”

    The $50,000 Vanier scholarship is designed to attract and retain world-class doctoral students by supporting students who demonstrate both leadership skills and a high standard of scholarly achievement in graduate studies in the social sciences and humanities, natural sciences and engineering, and health-related fields.

    “We are so proud of Claire’s many achievements. In particular, the Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarship recognizes her as an outstanding researcher, contributing to not only the reputation of Brock University, but to Canada’s reputation for excellence in research,” says Diane Dupont, Interim Dean of Graduate Studies.

    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