News articles tagged with Research
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Dr. Ryan lends expertise to research series
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Mathematics public lecture series
My NipissingResearchSeminar Series -
Psych talk examines hormones and status
Psychology DepartmentResearchSeminar SeriesNipissing University’s Psychology department Speaker Series welcomes Dr. Pranjal Mehta to campus for a special lecture, The Social Neuroendocrinology of Status. -
Research talk on slowing down free radicals
ResearchSeminar SeriesNipissing University welcomes Dr. Derek Pratt, professor of Chemistry at the University of Ottawa, to campus for a special lecture, titled Free Radical Oxidation and its Inhibition: Taking the Battle from Fossil Fuel-Derived Products to Living Matter onFriday, October 21 at 3:30 p.m. in room A226. -
Lecture on chronic THC use and the developing brain
ResearchSeminar SeriesWith marijuana legalization seemingly on the near horizon in Canada, the physical, long-term effects of cannabis on adolescents is of increasing concern to many Canadians. Dr. Andrew Weeks, associate professor of psychology at Nipissing University, will be giving a special lecture on how chronic cannabis use in adolescence could affect the developing brain. -
Important work on understanding our watershed
ResearchMath and Computer Science -
Research shows testosterone makes some men aggressive
ResearchNew research out of Nipissing University shows that testosterone can quickly increase aggressive behaviour when administered to men with dominant and/or impulsive personality traits. -
NU researchers earn SSHRC grants
ResearchThree researchers at Nipissing University have earned close to half-a-million dollars in grants from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) for work battling sex trafficking, determining why so many individuals don’t act to combat climate change, and to help kids be better people and teammates. -
NU’s Integrative Watershed Analysis Centre studying Lake Nipissing
ResearchMy NipissingAlumniThe work of Nipissing University’s Integrative Watershed Analysis Centre was featured recently in the journal Environmental Monitor. The article discusses the Bays Project the Centre is currently working on to build a better understanding of systems at work in and around Lake Nipissing, and how these systems might be manifesting in the lake, sometimes as the toxic blue green algae. -
New research shows selfless people have more sex
ResearchMy Nipissing