The Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) will provide a total of $2.8 million over 5 years to 17 UQAM researchers through its Discovery Research Program. This program supports researchers who venture into uncharted territory to find solutions to problems. The announcement of this grant was made last June.
Here is the list of professors who receive funding:
Borhane Annabi (chemistry)
Probing into cerebral cell surface macromolecular receptors endocytosis/transcytosis processes
Mohamed Bouguessa (computer science)
Mining large-scale high-dimensional time-evolving multiplex graphs with heterophily
Steven Boyer (mathematics)
Studies in low-dimensional topology
Francesca Capozzi (psychology)
The effects of attention on cognition
Samuel Giraudo (computer science)
Exploring combinatory logic via clone theory: an algebraic and combinatorial approach
Christophe Hohlweg (mathematics)
Combinatorics of infinite Coxeter groups
Ryan Kavanagh (computer science)
Logical foundations for secure concurrent computation
Jean-Philippe Labbé (Combinatorics and Mathematical Computing Laboratory)
Geometric combinatorics of symmetric and infinite structures
Michael Lalancette (mathematics)
Nonparametric learning for extremal graphical models
Philippe Lucas-Picher (Earth and atmospheric sciences)
Future intensification of the water cycle and its projected impacts over Eastern Canada
Isabelle Marcotte (chemistry)
In situ nuclear magnetic resonance approaches for cell interaction studies
Alejandro Morales (mathematics)
Asymptotic algebraic and geometric combinatorics
Francois Perreault (chemistry)
Investigating micro/nanoplastics generation and their environmental interactions to better understand their impact and inform a safer use of plastic materials
Daniela Quaglia (chemistry)
Accelerating the discovery and implementation of sustainable bioprocesses by harnessing enzyme technology
Rodolphe Soret (biological sciences)
Deciphering the spatiotemporal evolution and functions of enteric glial cells
Morgane Urli (biological sciences)
Adaptive strategies of trees to drought in boreal and northern temperate forests in a context of climate change
Grégoire Winterstein (linguistic)
The modern sophists: the argumentative side of artificial large language models
Among them, nine received the $12,500 “Springboard to Discovery” supplement awarded to early-career researchers. They are Francesca Capozzi, Ryan Cavanagh, Jean-Philippe Labbé, Michaël Lalancette, Philippe Lucas-Picher,