How Canada Can Lead the World in Innovating Innovation
A new system must build cross-sector collaboration, lower barriers to working together, and create excitement and tangible know-how to attract investment.
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A new system must build cross-sector collaboration, lower barriers to working together, and create excitement and tangible know-how to attract investment.
Investigating the implementation of data management and sharing requirements within development research projects.
Cardiology researcher Mona Nemer, is vice president for research at the University of Ottawa.
All research findings at the Montreal Neurological Institute are being shared publicly to accelerate scientific discovery.
Justin Trudeau, 23rd Prime Minister of Canada, answers the question "What is your stance on AI research given Canada's privileged position in the field?" in an online forum.
Last year’s Federal budget contained a number of significant dollar boosts for Canadian research but, more importantly, the language behind…
Universities across the country are struggling with rising journal prices
As United States and British legislators tighten the screws on travel and visa rules, they might be squeezing out international researchers and students. Canadian universities, meanwhile, are seeing surging interest from both groups.
Scientists ponder functionality of open science approach in the wake of Tanenbaum Open Science Institute announcement
The Canadian government is again in the midst of its annual consultations on innovation. It seems our efforts to find the magic key to an “innovative economy” just never go away. By Aled Edwards, CEO of the Structural Genomics Consortium and professor at the University of Toronto.
A judge has ordered Marie-Ève Maille to provide names and transcripts from her study on a wind farm
If we continue on the current path of adding ever tighter controls and conformities to research without understanding their effects on the impact and quality of that research, then we will likely be wasting money.
Researchers had rebelled against shift to online-only reviews.
The publicly funded agency responsible for policing scientific fraud is keeping secret the details surrounding these researchers. Their names, where they worked, and what they did wrong is protected under privacy laws.
Staff at Canadian university given little guidance on how to mitigate future problems.