Undergraduate science students:
the Fall 2018 edition of Soup and Science will take place:
- September 17-21, 2018,
- at 11:30聽AM each day,
- in the
Soup and Science is held for one week at the start of each fall and winter term. Each day at lunch, undergraduate science students are invited to see and hear some of our coolest professors give short presentations about their research. Then as you mingle over lunch, you will be able to find out more about their research and how you can participate. Come and discover some of the opportunities that exist both within and outside your own departments.
Participating professors
The preliminary list of presenters is as follows plus others may be added. Follow the links below to visit participating researchers' websites.
Monday, September 17, 2018
The dynamics of excitable cell networks found in the heart and brain
Geometric group theory: triangulations, cubulations, arcs and curves on surfaces
Extracellular Matrix, Connective Tissue Disorders, Biochemistry, Cell Biology, Protein Chemistry
Earthquakes and Ore Deposits
Ecology and Biogeography of Environmental Change
Tuesday, September 18, 2018
- Prof. Shirin Abbasi Nejad Enger (Medical Physics)
Medical radiation physics, brachytherapy, Monte Carlo simulations, patient specific dosimetry
Creating novel nanostructured devices and materials through self assembly
Neuromodulation, neural coding, computational modeling, electrophysiology, behavior.- Prof. Catherine Ferland (Anesthesia)
The pain processing and underlying mechanisms leading to chronic postsurgical pain (CPSP)
Using Artificial Intelligence (AI) techniques to solve Software Engineering problems
Spatiotemporal models of human activity behavior
Wednesday, September 19, 2018
The study of cell division in situ- Prof. Yi Huang (Atmospheric & Oceanic Sciences)
Atmospheric Radiation and Physical Climatology
The relationship between neural activity and mental activity- Prof. Martin Richer (Microbiology & Immunology)
CD8 T cells, cytokines, chronic infection, autoimmunity
Observational high energy astrophysics; behavior of neutron stars and black holes
Thursday, September 20, 2018
Observational cosmology
Land use and food systems
How the brain regulates basic functions of the body, such as hunger, thirst, and hormonal levels- Prof. Mike Strauss (Anatomy and Cell Biology)
Structural biology, structural virology, cell biology, electron microscopy - Prof. Jason Young (Biochemistry)
Molecular chaperones: the cellular system for protein quality control
Friday, September 21, 2018
- Prof. Melanie Dirks (Psychology)
Youth social competence, youth psychopathology
Collective cell migration
Land, environment & development- Prof. William Pastor (Biochemistry)
Transcriptional regulation in early human development
Unconventional superconductors, topological insulators and topological superconductors
Classroom announcements to download
PPT announcement slide, Soup and Science, Sep 2018
PDF announcement slide, Soup and Science, Sep 2018
Contact
victor.chisholm [at] mcgill.ca (Victor Chisholm), Student Affairs Administrator, 514-398-5964