Doctoral Student Archives - Faculty of Graduate Studies (FGS) /gradstudies/tag/doctoral-student/ Fri, 10 Apr 2026 13:36:41 +0000 en-CA hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 快播视频 reveals new insights into limb loss /gradstudies/2026/04/07/insights-into-limb-loss/ Tue, 07 Apr 2026 13:29:06 +0000 /gradstudies/?p=69080 A new study led by 快播视频 researchers is shedding light on a little鈥憉nderstood experience reported by many people living with limb loss: phantom limb telescoping. New work by聽Andrea Aternali, a doctoral researcher in the聽Faculty of Health,聽Heather Lumsden-Ruegg,聽master鈥檚 researcher, and Department of Psychology Professor聽Joel Katz, is advancing understanding of this phenomenon. "Despite decades of research […]

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A new study led by 快播视频 researchers is shedding light on a little鈥憉nderstood experience reported by many people living with limb loss: phantom limb telescoping. New work by聽Andrea Aternali, a doctoral researcher in the聽Faculty of Health,聽Heather Lumsden-Ruegg,聽master鈥檚 researcher, and Department of Psychology Professor聽Joel Katz, is advancing understanding of this phenomenon. "Despite decades of research on phantom limb phenomena, telescoping has been largely overlooked," says Aternali. For people with limb loss, phantom pain and discomfort in the remaining part of the body 鈥 sensations that seem to originate from a missing or altered limb 鈥 have long captured clinical and research attention.


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From Stage to Nation: York PhD student explores the cultural power of Canadian hometown concerts /gradstudies/2026/03/19/hometown-concerts-cultural-power/ Thu, 19 Mar 2026 15:39:58 +0000 /gradstudies/?p=68889 As the lights dimmed over St. Catharines and the first chords filled the air, the crowd swayed in unison. Faces lifted, voices rose, and for a moment, music became something larger than entertainment. Christine Rose Cooling, a PhD student in the Joint Graduate Program in Communication & Culture at 快播视频, was there鈥攏ot as a […]

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As the lights dimmed over St. Catharines and the first chords filled the air, the crowd swayed in unison. Faces lifted, voices rose, and for a moment, music became something larger than entertainment. Christine Rose Cooling, a PhD student in the Joint Graduate Program in Communication & Culture at 快播视频, was there鈥攏ot as a fan, but as a scholar, watching, listening, and feeling the energy that rippled through the room.

鈥淲hen a Canadian artist returns home, something powerful takes place,鈥 she says. 鈥淎rtists and audiences experience a sense of national pride and recognition that feels bigger than commercial entertainment.鈥

For Cooling, the question isn鈥檛 just how these musicians perform鈥攊t鈥檚 how audiences respond, how the room seems to hum with a shared history, a collective memory, a connection to place and identity. She studies that 鈥渃harge鈥 in the air, the unspoken bond between performer and hometown, and what it reveals about Canada itself.

Her curiosity comes not from theory alone but from lived experience. At events like the 2023 Born & Raised festival, she felt the energy move through her as she stood in the crowd, noting how music, memory, and emotion intertwined.

A photo of PhD scholar Christine Rose Cooling

A photo of Christine Rose Cooling

An outdoor concert stage at the Born and Raised music festival, with bright stage lights

Born & Raised festival

鈥淚f we see cultural policy only as bureaucratic protectionism, we miss how real experiences of attachment and collective memory are shaped,鈥 she explains.

Indeed, Cooling鈥檚 research bridges the personal and the political. Hometown concerts are not just celebrations鈥攖hey are shaped by Canada鈥檚 cultural policies, by the pressures of a globalized music industry, and by the historical influence of American media. They are moments where audiences negotiate their own sense of 鈥淐anadian-ness,鈥 where national identity is performed as much as felt.

York鈥檚 interdisciplinary Communication & Culture program allows her to explore these moments from every angle: as economic events, as cultural rituals, and as mediated symbols. Under the guidance of Professor Anne MacLennan, Cooling connects the energy she observes in the crowd with a deeper understanding of media history and policy, showing how academic insight and human experience can inform one another.

鈥淭his project began from my own embodied experience in a crowd,鈥 Cooling says. 鈥淚 would very much like its insights to return, in some form, to those spaces.鈥

Her work reminds us that scholarship does not have to be distant or abstract. By following music into the towns that shaped it, by listening closely to audiences and performers, Cooling illuminates the cultural pulse of Canada. Through her research, the roar of a hometown crowd becomes more than applause鈥攊t becomes a story about memory, identity, and the enduring power of shared experience.

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Osgoode PhD student named Trudeau Scholar /gradstudies/2024/07/26/2024-trudeau-scholar/ Fri, 26 Jul 2024 14:01:09 +0000 /gradstudies/?p=59446 Zoe M. Savitsky, a doctoral candidate at 快播视频鈥檚 Osgoode Hall Law School, was named a Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation Scholar for work that promises to examine the ways corporations gained the power of expression and how they have expanded and defended that power. The recognition marks not just a professional accomplishment for Savitsky but […]

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Zoe M. Savitsky, a doctoral candidate at 快播视频鈥檚 Osgoode Hall Law School, was named a Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation Scholar for work that promises to examine the ways corporations gained the power of expression and how they have expanded and defended that power. The recognition marks not just a professional accomplishment for Savitsky but one reflective of a new chapter in her journey.

Before becoming a PhD student at 快播视频 in 2023, Savitsky approached her legal work in an altogether different manner. For over a decade, she had a successful legal career in the United States working in high-impact government and non-profit organization litigation and leadership roles, including at the Oakland City Attorney鈥檚 Office, the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Department of Justice and the Southern Poverty Law Center.

As a Trudeau Scholar, Savitsky will pursue work rooted in experiences from her legal career, notably her time with the Oakland City Attorney鈥檚 Office. There, Savitsky collaborated with in-house teams, other local and state governments, non-profits, civil society groups, and the private bar on litigation involving local, national and multinational corporations鈥攕uch as opioid companies, fossil fuel companies and real estate companies鈥攚hose actions harmed Oaklanders. Many of those cases centred on allegations that the corporations in question had engaged in false, deceptive or misleading speech that caused real-world harm.

Zoe M. Savitsky

A photo of Zoe M. Savitsky

Savitsky found herself considering larger questions around how modern systems of litigation sometimes allow corporations to 鈥済et away鈥 with harmful deception. As she noted, it has often taken decades for litigants to win cases about corporate deception, if they ever do, citing as examples cases about how tobacco companies misled the public about the health risks of tobacco; how paint companies continued advertising lead paint despite their knowledge that it was a dangerous neurotoxin; and how the opioid industry understated the risks and harms and oversold the benefits of its products.

鈥淢y current project is very much an extension of all of that work,鈥 says Savitsky of the work she will now pursue through her scholarship, which examines how corporations became legal persons with speech or expression rights, and how corporations have expanded and defended those rights in the litigation ecosystems of the United States and Canada.

鈥淚 hope to understand how things came to be as they are today in the world of transnational corporate accountability and, in particular, to understand the history and context for how it is often challenging to hold corporations meaningfully accountable for their contributions to some of the most existential problems facing the world today.鈥

The decision to pursue academic work led Savitsky to Canada, eager to grow as a scholar and learn from people outside the United States who were working on corporate accountability, but it wasn鈥檛 easy to move away from a professional and personal support system built over decades. 鈥淟eaving that network 鈥 which includes people who have become not just colleagues but close friends 鈥 for a new country and context was hard,鈥 says Savitsky. 鈥淏ut as my scholarship draws on the issues and themes I had the opportunity to work on in my litigation career, I will continue to get to engage with many of the people I collaborated with and learned from in the past.鈥

Nonetheless, she saw the move as worthwhile. 鈥淥pportunities like the Trudeau Scholarship will allow me to build anew in this new context, in addition to how I鈥檝e already had the chance to start building meaningful new relationships at Osgoode and at York more broadly,鈥 Savitsky says.

The recent recognition from the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation should prove a significant stepping stone in accomplishing that.

The Trudeau Foundation Scholarship is a prestigious, three-year leadership program that provides doctoral candidates with skills to translate their ideas into action, for the betterment of their communities, Canada and the world.

It also provides a strong communal element through fellows and mentors who are leaders in respective disciplines and offer scholars important guidance as they move forward in their careers.

鈥淔rom the beginning, my interest in the Trudeau program has been because of its people,鈥 says Savitsky. 鈥淚 appreciate the resources the scholarship provides to PhD candidates, but the people are the fundamental heart, and draw, of the foundation. Of course, I am also thrilled that the Trudeau Foundation鈥檚 scientific cycle centres the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, which is at the core of my doctoral work.鈥

Savitsky hopes that through her work, now supported by the Trudeau Scholarship, she can make a positive impact in the field of corporate accountability鈥 and beyond. 鈥淚 also hope the story I plan to tell through my doctorate is informative to people outside of the legal academy, including to those in other academic disciplines, such as political science, and to those actively working鈥 whether for governments, for non-profits and NGOs, in civil society, as community leaders and so on鈥攖o make the world a better, safer, healthier place overall,鈥 she says.

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