PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

York University leads $318.4M first-of-kind inclusive next-gen technology research initiative

Together with Queen’s University, the cross-disciplinary work is backed by $105.7M in federal funding through the Canada First Research Excellence Fund

2023-04-28
(Press-News.org) TORONTO, April 28, 2023 — Is an equitable world that includes humans and machines possible? York University researchers believe it must be and have set out to make it so through a first of its kind interdisciplinary research initiative called Connected Minds: Neural and Machine Systems for a Healthy, Just Society.

From universities to industries, hospitals and policymakers, artists and Indigenous communities, York’s Connected Minds will engage 50+ community partners and research collaborators over seven years supported by a historic $318.4 million in funding. Connected Minds has received a combined $105.7 million from the Canada First Research Excellence Fund (CFREF), announced earlier today by the Government of Canada. Of that, York received $82.8 million and institutional partner Queen’s University received $22.8 million.

Led by York, Connected Minds brings together experts in multiple fields, including humanities, engineering, law, and life sciences, located across eight York Faculties and three Queen’s Faculties. Researchers will examine the ways in which emerging technology, like Artificial Intelligence, is transforming and entangling society – dubbed the ‘techno-social collective.’ Researchers will work to discover how to balance both the potential risks and benefits for humanity.  

Some of the program’s proposed projects include explorations into a more inclusive metaverse, virtual reality and community organizing, neurotechnologies for healthy aging, Indigenous data sovereignty, and how human brain function changes when people interact with AI versus each other.  

In addition to supporting interdisciplinary teams of researchers conducting research on promoting a healthy, resilient, and just techno-social collective, Connected Minds will fund 35 strategic faculty hires, partner-focused seed, team, and prototyping grants, knowledge mobilization and commercialization activities, and an ambitious multi-institutional micro-credential training program with 385 trainees and cross-sector stakeholders. All activities will require interdisciplinary participation, and projects that benefit Indigenous and other equity-deserving groups will be prioritized.

A key structural component of the program is an Indigenous-led focus and will feature a dedicated Indigenous research space on York’s Keele Campus, as well as employing an overarching decolonization, equity, diversity and inclusion (DEDI) strategy.

The program’s operations will involve a directorate led by internationally renowned neuroscientist Prof. Doug Crawford, as Scientific Director, along with intellectual property and technology law expert Prof.  Pina D’Agostino, as Vice-Director and Indigenous health scholar Prof. Sean Hillier as Associate Director. Engineer and neuroscientist Prof. Gunnar Blohm joins as the Vice-Director from Queen’s University.  

The governance structure of Connected Minds includes a Board of Directors to supervise the program ramp up, oversee its progress towards achieving strategic goals and maintain fiduciary responsibility, an External Advisory Board to advise on the overall strategic direction, knowledge mobilization and commercialization activities, and an Indigenous Advisory Circle to counsel all aspects of Indigenous engagement, including issues of privacy and data sovereignty.

The total value of the Connected Minds projects is $318.4 million with the remaining funds, including in-kind contributions, being contributed largely by multi-sector partners, municipal governments, and collaborating institutions.

QUOTES

“Receiving this second CFREF award in the last two competitions reflects York’s leadership as a research-intensive university that from its inception has understood the importance of an interdisciplinary approach in tackling complex, global problems. Connected Minds is particularly timely as we consider the implications of AI for creating a more equitable and inclusive world.” – Rhonda Lenton, York University president and vice-chancellor

“York is an international leader in interdisciplinary research involving artificial intelligence and other disruptive technologies, social justice, and human science like neuroscience, philosophy, and psychology. The government’s substantial investment will unite York’s incredible strengths with Queen’s health specialties to chart new territory in socially responsible, community-engaged research for a rapidly changing digital world.” – Amir Asif, York University vice-president, Research and Innovation

“The current technological revolution will have transformative positive impacts, and likely unintended negative impacts, on humanity for generations to come. To predict these impacts and steer toward positive outcomes, one requires transdisciplinary expertise, multisector community engagement, and research and training at levels that can only occur in a large-scale program. We thank CFREF for providing Connected Minds with the resources to lead Canada and the world in this timely and critical enterprise.” – Doug Crawford, York Distinguished Research Professor in Neuroscience and inaugural Scientific Director of Connected Minds 

“New technologies are developing exponentially and systems like the law are simply not keeping up. York University’s motto, tentanda via, the way must be tried, guides us, in everything we will do.  We believe our inclusive, interdisciplinary approach that aligns with the UN sustainable development goals makes York University the perfect place for anticipating the way humans and machines will, and should, connect in an equitable society.  This way must be tried.” – Pina D’Agostino, director and founder of York’s IP Innovation Clinic at Osgoode Hall Law School and Vice Director of Connected Minds. 

“Connected Minds is informed by Indigenous perspectives and priorities to achieve outcomes that are culturally relevant and responsive to Indigenous ways of being and doing that impact how we think about and engage in life, health, and education. Our work will seek to address the unexpected consequences of technological innovation, like the growing digital divide for Indigenous communities to access remote health care, and issues of data sovereignty, ownership and digital colonialism.” – Sean Hillier, director of York University’s Centre for Indigenous Knowledges & Languages and Associate Director of Connected Minds

“The Connected Minds project builds on a history of partnership and collaboration between Queen’s and York. Each institution brings unique but complementary research strengths to bear on the important challenges and opportunities that come with disruptive technologies and their impact on Canadian and global citizens.”— Nancy Ross, vice principal research at Queen’s University

“I look forward to working with Indigenous, community and industrial partners to develop more equitable and socially responsible research outputs for the benefit of all. I am also excited about the many educational and outreach opportunities that Connected Minds will produce – from school programs to graduate training and professional skills development. We want to democratize education and access to knowledge, with the aim of spreading a new culture of innovation for a more equitable, inclusive, and healthy society.” – Gunnar Blohm, Professor in Computational Neuroscience and Vice Director of Connected Minds

-30-

For more information:

York U media contact:

Emina Gamulin

egamulin@yorku.ca

437-217-6362

Queen’s media contact:

Julie Brown

brown.julie@queensu.ca

343-363-2763

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Shocking implications of electric fishes’ tailless sperm

Shocking implications of electric fishes’ tailless sperm
2023-04-28
Betting on tailless sperm that evolved from brave swimmers to hapless floaters seems like a crazy evolutionary gamble, but a group of fish seems to have done just that. Understanding that tradeoff holds promise to shed light on human disease and shake up biology lessons on traditional gender roles. Michigan State University associate professor of integrative biology Jason Gallant and colleagues are using nearly $1 million from the National Science Foundation to understand the implications from a small African fish which ...

Insilico Medicine founder and CEO Alex Zhavoronkov, Ph.D., presents at LSX World Congress

Insilico Medicine founder and CEO Alex Zhavoronkov, Ph.D., presents at LSX World Congress
2023-04-28
Alex Zhavoronkov, PhD, founder and CEO of Insilico Medicine (“Insilico”) will present at the 9th LSX World Congress happening in London May 3 and May 4. Zhavoronkov, an expert in generative artificial intelligence (AI) for drug discovery, will present on May 3, 2:45pm (London time) on “‘Death By Pilot’” to Asset Licensing – the Evolution of Pharma-AIDD Partnerships” as part of the Biotech Growth CEO Forum and on May 4, 9:30am (London time) on “Building a Galvanizing ...

Texas Neurologist and Professor elected New American Academy of Neurology President

2023-04-28
MINNEAPOLIS – The American Academy of Neurology (AAN), the world’s largest professional association of neurologists and neuroscience professionals, has elected as its 38th president Carlayne E. Jackson, MD, FAAN, a neurologist, researcher and professor of neurology and otolaryngology at the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio. Jackson succeeds Orly Avitzur, MD, MBA, FAAN, who completed her two-year term as president during the recent AAN Annual Meeting. “It’s humbling to have been chosen by my colleagues to follow such talented and dedicated individuals ...

First comprehensive care plan to prevent preeclampsia published in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology

2023-04-28
Recommendations for high-risk expecting parents and health care providers to promote the prevention of preeclampsia, a leading cause of pregnancy-related death in the United States SAN FRANCISCO - April 28, 2023 – A new special report published in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology (AJOG) provides a groundbreaking approach to preeclampsia, one of the most pressing issues in maternal health today, and will translate the prediction of risk into prevention of disease.  The report, ...

Max-difference maximization criterion: A feature selection method for text categorization

2023-04-28
For text categorization, it is necessary to select a set of features(terms) with high discrimination by using feature selection. In text feature selection, Accuracy2(ACC2)treats terms with same absolute document rate difference but different discrimination equally, which is unreasonable. Existing improved methods (normalized difference measure(NDM), max-min ratio(MMR)and trigonometric comparison measure(TCM)) based on ACC2 may confuse the importance of rare and sparse terms on account of challenge for parameter selection. To solve the problems, a research team led by Li Zhang published their new research on 15 February 2023 in Frontiers of Computer Science co-published ...

U of T receives $200-million grant to support Acceleration Consortium's ‘self-driving labs’ research

U of T receives $200-million grant to support Acceleration Consortiums ‘self-driving labs’ research
2023-04-28
The University of Toronto has been awarded a $200-million grant from the Canada First Research Excellence Fund (CFREF) to revolutionize the speed and impact of scientific discovery through its Acceleration Consortium. The funding – the largest federal research grant ever awarded to a Canadian university – will support the consortium’s work on “self-driving labs” that combine artificial intelligence, robotics and advanced computing to discover new materials and molecules in a fraction of the usual time and cost. Applications include everything from life-saving medications ...

Scientists identify antivirals that could combat emerging infectious diseases

2023-04-28
A new study has identified potential broad-spectrum antiviral agents that can target multiple families of RNA viruses that continue to pose a significant threat for future pandemics. The study, led by Gustavo Garcia Jr. in the UCLA Department of Molecular and Medical Pharmacology, tested a library of innate immune agonists that work by targeting pathogen recognition receptors, and found several agents that showed promise, including one that exhibited potent antiviral activity against members of RNA viral families. The ongoing SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, which ...

Study finds ChatGTP outperforms physicians in providing high-quality, empathetic advice to patient questions

2023-04-28
La Jolla, Calif. (April 28, 2023) — There has been widespread speculation about how advances in artificial intelligence (AI) assistants like ChatGPT could be used in medicine.  A new study published in JAMA Internal Medicine led by Dr. John W. Ayers from the Qualcomm Institute within the University of California San Diego provides an early glimpse into the role that AI assistants could play in medicine. The study compared written responses from physicians and those from ChatGPT to real-world health questions. A panel of licensed healthcare professionals preferred ChatGPT’s responses 79% of the time and rated ChatGPT’s responses as higher quality ...

Structured exploration allows biological brains to learn faster than AI

Structured exploration allows biological brains to learn faster than AI
2023-04-28
Neuroscientists have uncovered how exploratory actions enable animals to learn their spatial environment more efficiently. Their findings could help build better AI agents that can learn faster and require less experience. Researchers at the Sainsbury Wellcome Centre and Gatsby Computational Neuroscience Unit at UCL found the instinctual exploratory runs that animals carry out are not random. These purposeful actions allow mice to learn a map of the world efficiently. The study, published today in Neuron, describes how ...

Health care utilization during the pandemic among individuals born preterm

2023-04-28
About The Study: The findings of this study suggest that during the COVID-19 pandemic, children and young adults born preterm were more likely to have used health care related to COVID-19 concerns compared with their term-born peers, independent of a history of bronchopulmonary dysplasia or asthma. Further exploration of factors associated with COVID-19–related health care use may facilitate refinement of care models.  Authors: Elisabeth C. McGowan, M.D., of Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, is the corresponding author.  To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New drug shows promise in restoring vision for people with nerve damage

Scientists discover unique microbes in Amazonian peatlands that could influence climate change

University Hospitals now offering ultra-minimally invasive endoscopic spine surgery for patients experiencing back pain

JNM publishes procedure standard/practice guideline for fibroblast activation protein PET

What to do with aging solar panels?

Scientists design peptides to enhance drug efficacy

Collaboration to develop sorghum hybrids to reduce synthetic fertilizer use and farmer costs

Light-activated ink developed to remotely control cardiac tissue to repair the heart

EMBARGOED: Dana-Farber investigators pinpoint keys to cell therapy response for leukemia

Surgeon preference factors into survival outcomes analyses for multi- and single-arterial bypass grafting

Study points to South America – not Mexico – as birthplace of Irish potato famine pathogen

VR subway experiment highlights role of sound in disrupting balance for people with inner ear disorder

Evolution without sex: How mites have survived for millions of years

U. of I. team develops weight loss app that tracks fiber, protein content in meals

Progress and challenges in brain implants

City-level sugar-sweetened beverage taxes and changes in adult BMI

Duration in immigration detention and health harms

COVID-19 pandemic and racial and ethnic disparities in long-term nursing home stay or death following hospital discharge

Specific types of liver immune cells are required to deal with injury

How human activity has shaped Brazil Nut forests’ past and future

Doctors test a new way to help people quit fentanyl 

Long read sequencing reveals more genetic information while cutting time and cost of rare disease diagnoses

AAAS and ASU launch mission-driven collaborative to strengthen scientific enterprise

Medicaid-insured heart transplant patients face higher risk of post-transplant complications

Revolutionizing ammonia synthesis: New iron-based catalyst surpasses century-old benchmark

A groundbreaking approach: Researchers at The University of Texas at San Antonio chart the future of neuromorphic computing

Long COVID, Italian scientists discovered the molecular ‘fingerprint’ of the condition in children's blood

Battery-powered electric vehicles now match petrol and diesel counterparts for longevity

MIT method enables protein labeling of tens of millions of densely packed cells in organ-scale tissues

Calculating error-free more easily with two codes

[Press-News.org] York University leads $318.4M first-of-kind inclusive next-gen technology research initiative
Together with Queen’s University, the cross-disciplinary work is backed by $105.7M in federal funding through the Canada First Research Excellence Fund