平特五不中

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Over $100M in research infrastructure support to 平特五不中

The Government of Canada announced today a national investment of $333 million for research infrastructure through the Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI)

Published: 29 May 2015

Ten projects submitted by 平特五不中 and its hospital-affiliated research institutes have received a total of $30 million in funding, which will be matched by the Government of Quebec.

Partner-led proposals, which will see 平特五不中 researchers participating in pan-Canadian large-scale platforms including Genomics Enterprise (CGEn) and TRIUMF, boost 平特五不中鈥檚 total funding allocation to $45 million. With the provincial contribution this investment leverages a total renewal of research infrastructure across the 平特五不中 campus of more than $100 million.

The federal announcement was made in Ottawa by the Honourable Ed Holder, Minister of State (Science and Technology.)

鈥淥n behalf of 平特五不中, I thank the Government of Canada, Canada Foundation for Innovation, and the Government of Qu茅bec, for their continued support for research and innovation. This important investment in state-of-the-art research infrastructure enables Canadian researchers and their partners to continue to be among the world鈥檚 leaders in areas of great importance both to Canada and globally,鈥 said Principal and Vice Chancellor, Prof. Suzanne Fortier.

The Government of Canada investments through the CFI equip universities, colleges and research hospitals across the country with state-of-the-art tools and laboratories where researchers can discover and innovate. Their ideas and inventions help create jobs, improve the health and quality of life of Canadians and further Canada鈥檚 reputation for research excellence.

Sensing and repairing the injured brain

The 平特五不中- and MUHC-led projects include a first-of-its-kind research facility focused on measuring the effects of mild Trauma Brain Injury (mTBI), such as concussions, and developing real treatments for mTBI. This new facility, led by researchers with expertise in neurology, psychology, ophthalmology, physics and engineering, and enabled by the almost $3 million in funds for the requested infrastructure, will become a leading-edge research centre.

鈥淲ith the support of the CFI, our team will have an Ultra High Performance MRI system that will be able to carry out more applications than any existing MRI system and will help us observe the brain鈥檚 response to trauma with exceptional precision. This knowledge will allow us to develop new diagnostic tools and treatments to help thousands of Canadians who suffer head injuries every year, said Alain Ptito, CFI-funded researcher and Director of the Department of Psychology at the 平特五不中 Health Centre (MUHC), and a medical scientist at the Research Institute of the MUHC.

Innovations in music media and technology

Researchers from the Centre for Interdisciplinary Research in Music Media and Technology (CIRMMT), housed at the Schulich School of Music at 平特五不中, received over $4 million in funding from the CFI, which will be used to create a unique interconnected research hub linking two exceptional spaces: 平特五不中鈥檚 Multimedia Room (a large sound-isolated performance lab) and Universit茅 de Montr茅al鈥檚 Salle Claude Champagne (a superb concert hall). This hub will become the world's leading research facility for the scientific study of live performance, movement of recorded sound in space, and remote, synchronous performance.

"With this support from the CFI and from the Government of Qu茅bec, researchers at CIRMMT will have a unique integrated facility allowing us to study sound production by large ensembles, the ways in which performers coordinate with each other and reach the audience, as well as develop new technologies for live music performance and sound recording," said CFI-funded researcher, William Dawson Scholar and Associate Professor of Music Technology Marcelo Wanderley.

A Complete list of 平特五不中-led CFI-funded projects (CFI $ Total - 平特五不中 & Partners):

Don Baker, Faculty of Science, Exploration and Application of Critical Metals; $2,420,000
Richard Chromik, Faculty of Engineering, Surface Engineering Solutions for Aerospace: Terrestrial and Space Applications; $3,624,371
Kathleen Cullen, Faculty of Medicine, Targeted Manipulation of Neural Microcircuits for Understanding and Correcting Brain Dysfunction; $2,407,815
Vicky Kaspi, Faculty of Science, Detecting Fast Radio Transients with the CHIME Telescope; $2,242,799
Michael Meaney, Faculty of Medicine, Treatment Outcomes in Mood Disorders; $1,157,277
Morag Park, Faculty of Medicine, Targeting the Tumour Microenvironment: Bridging Basic Science and Therapy; $2,389,840
Alain Ptito, Faculty of Medicine, Sensing and repairing the injured brain: tools and methods for the characterization of brain injury and repair; $2,995,246
Amir Shmuel, Faculty of Medicine, Qu茅bec Centre for High-Field Brain Imaging; $7,516,327
Jackie Vogel, Faculty of Science, An integrated quantitative biology initiative (IQBI); $5,019,840
Marcelo Wanderley, Schulich School of Music, Live Expression "in situ": Musical and Audiovisual Performance and Reception; $4,366,723

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