Science, Technology and Society Archives - Faculty of Science /science/tag/science-technology-society/ York Science is a hub of research and teaching excellence. Wed, 28 Jan 2026 15:18:57 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 New Faculty of Science members to further York鈥檚 scientific innovation, impact /science/2023/09/18/new-faculty-of-science-members-to-further-yorks-scientific-innovation-impact/ Mon, 18 Sep 2023 13:54:52 +0000 /science/?p=28564 This story is published in 驰贵颈濒别鈥檚 New Faces feature issue 2023. Every September, YFile introduces and welcomes those joining the 快播视频 community, and those with new appointments. The 快播视频 Faculty of Science welcomes 14 new faculty members this fall. 鈥淲e are thrilled to welcome our newest cohort of high-calibre researchers and instructors to […]

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This story is published in 驰贵颈濒别鈥檚 New Faces feature issue 2023. Every September, YFile introduces and welcomes those joining the 快播视频 community, and those with new appointments.

The 快播视频 Faculty of Science welcomes 14 new faculty members this fall.

鈥淲e are thrilled to welcome our newest cohort of high-calibre researchers and instructors to our five departments and one division,鈥 said Dean of Science Rui Wang. 鈥淏y recruiting talented people with diverse backgrounds, world views and expertise, we are not only ensuring the best learning experience for our students, but also cultivating integrity and principles of equity, diversity and inclusion in our community and in all that we do at the Faculty of Science.鈥

Eryn McFarlane
Eryn McFarlane

Eryn McFarlane

Eryn McFarlane joins the Department of Biology as an assistant professor. She researches anthropogenic hybridization, using both the genetics of wild animals and slightly less wild computer simulations for theoretical work. McFarlane did her undergraduate and master鈥檚 degrees at the University of Guelph. After Guelph, she was awarded a Natural Sciences & Engineering Research Council (NSERC) Postgraduate Scholarship for her PhD at Uppsala University in Sweden, followed by a Swedish Research Council International Postdoc Grant to do a postdoctoral fellowship at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland. Most recently, she has been part of a National Science Foundation-funded project studying predictive modelling at the University of Wyoming.

In the future, her research group will continue work to understand and predict anthropogenic hybridization, with a particular focus on understanding the context dependence of genetic incompatibilities in changing environments.

Bill Kim
Bill Kim

Bill Kim

Bill Kim joined the Faculty of Science as an assistant professor in the Department of Chemistry. He completed his honours bachelor of science degree under the supervision of Professor G. Andrew Woolley at the University of Toronto. Kim then pursued a direct PhD degree with Professor David R. Liu at Harvard University from 2012 to 2018, during which time Kim contributed to the burgeoning field of genome editing. Afterwards, he applied his genome editing expertise at Pairwise Plants, a startup company focused on agriculture.

Kim also worked as a senior scientist and the director of the Mammalian Cell Facility. There, he expanded the mutagenic capabilities of clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR) base editors and developed novel sequence replacement methods. Subsequently, he transitioned into academia, where he could engage in teaching and mentorship of young scientists alongside spearheading a research program with significant impact.

Kim is a world leader in genome editing technology development. Throughout his scientific career spanning 11 years, his work on genome editing technology development has been published in world-class journals including Nature, Nature Biotechnology, Nature Communications and Science Advances. His research group specializes in engineering biomolecules to accelerate biological discovery. He develops novel CRISPR mutagens capable of generating new forms of targeted genetic variations and studies how these tools can be applied to advance human health and agricultural biotechnology.

Lana Hebert
Lana H茅bert

Lana H茅bert

On July 1, H茅bert began a three-year term as a contractually-limited assistant professor (teaching stream) within the Department of Chemistry. She received her honours bachelors of science degree from Memorial University of Newfoundland in 2013 before obtaining a master of science degree from Wilfrid Laurier University (WLU) in 2018, and remained there to pursue a doctoral degree, to be conferred this fall.

Throughout graduate school, H茅bert has frequently published and presented on research topics such as the preparation and properties of new fluorescent materials for organic electronics; her discovery of a previously unknown chemiluminescent reaction; and topics relating to crystallography and crystal engineering.

Regarding avenues of future research, her interests predominantly lie in the area of chemical education research, namely: the construction of novel, effective pedagogical approaches for organic chemistry instruction; the investigation of any bio-psycho-socio-economic factors that correlate with interest and aptitude towards chemistry curricula, pedagogies and teaching styles; and unique methods of incorporating X-ray crystallography content within undergraduate chemistry curricula.

H茅bert is an active member within the Canadian chemistry and North American crystallography communities. As a vocal proponent of furthering decolonisation, equity, diversity and inclusion work in science and academia, and also as one of the few transgender chemistry professors in Canada, she has served on several committees furthering diversity and inclusion ideals in both national (Canadian Society for Chemistry, CSC-WIDE) and institutional (WLU) settings. Serving her community in this way has strongly informed the teaching philosophy, and overall commitment to a pedagogy of care, that she employs in her courses.

Eager and excited to share her love of the chemical sciences, H茅bert hopes to instil a similar passion for chemistry within her future students.

Dongchen Li
Dongchen Li

Dongchen Li

Dongchen Li joins the Department of Mathematics & Statistics as an assistant professor. He received his PhD in actuarial science from the University of Waterloo in 2017. Before joining 快播视频, he was an assistant professor at the University of St. Thomas (2017 to 2021) and Brock University (2021 to 2023). His research focuses on principal-agent problems in (re)insurance design, risk management in finance and insurance, designing and improving modern insurance products such as variable annuities, and optimal financial and insurance decisions made by individuals.

His expertise is growing in cutting-edge areas, including machine learning in insurance and the digital transformation of the insurance industry. His work has been published in prestigious actuarial science journals like Insurance: Mathematics and Economics, ASTIN Bulletin, Scandinavian Actuarial Journal, and Journal of Risk and Insurance. His research program is currently funded by the Natural Sciences & Engineering Research Council. He is also an associate of the Society of Actuaries.

Kaiqiong Zhao
Kaiqiong Zhao

Kaiqiong Zhao

Kaiqiong Zhao recently joined the Faculty of Science as an assistant professor in the Department of Mathematics & Statistics in July 2023. She obtained her PhD in biostatistics at McGill University in October 2021. Upon completing her doctoral studies, she was awarded the Canadian Statistical Sciences Institute distinguished postdoctoral fellowship, which led her to a postdoctoral position co-hosted by the University of Alberta and the University of Toronto.

Zhao鈥檚 research program is dedicated to developing innovative and robust statistical methods tailored to the complexities of modern massive and complex data. She has authored multiple publications and developed R packages aimed at optimizing the analysis and interpretation of sequencing-derived DNA methylation data.

Her research pursuits extend to the integration of heterogeneous multi-source data and the enhancement of causal estimates derived from summary-level genetic association data. Furthermore, Zhao actively participates in collaborative scientific research endeavours, contributing to the advancement of statistical methods in various domains such as the analysis of sequencing-derived chromatin immunoprecipitation data, electroencephalogram data and clinical data.

Miles Couchman
Miles Couchman

Miles Couchman

Miles Couchman joins the Faculty of Science at 快播视频 as an assistant professor in the Department of Mathematics & Statistics. Prior to joining York, he received his undergraduate degree in physics from McMaster University and his PhD in applied mathematics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, followed by postdoctoral work in the Department of Applied Mathematics & Theoretical Physics at the University of Cambridge.

His research is currently focused in the realm of fluid mechanics, where he has considered a variety of topics from pilot-wave hydrodynamics to geophysical turbulence, using a combination of experimental, computational and theoretical approaches.

Recently, he has been exploring how machine learning and high-performance computing techniques may be used to gain insight into turbulent mixing processes within the ocean, a key area of uncertainty in climate modelling. His work has been supported by funding from NSERC, MathWorks and the U.S. Department of Energy through INCITE Supercomputing Grants.

In collaboration with the Massive Open Online Course provider MITx, Couchman has also helped develop a series of undergraduate mathematics courses that are available to a global audience. By incorporating mathematical case studies of complex real-world phenomena into the curriculum, he hopes to inspire broader interest in using mathematics to gain a deeper understanding of our natural world.

Mohamed Omar
Mohamed Omar

Mohamed Omar

Mohamed Omar joins the Faculty of Science as a full professor in the Department of Mathematics & Statistics. His research focuses on algebraic techniques in enumerative and geometric combinatorics and discrete mathematics.

Omar has received national awards for his research, including being the inaugural recipient of the American Mathematical Society鈥檚 Claytor-Gilmer Fellowship and an inaugural recipient of the Karen EDGE Fellowship, both celebrating mid-career research. He has also earned the Henry L. Alder Award, the preeminent junior faculty national prize given by the Mathematical Association of America.

Paul Scholz
Paul Scholz

Paul Scholz

Paul Scholz joins the Department of Physics & Astronomy at 快播视频 as an assistant professor. Scholz is an astrophysicist whose research centres on observational studies of transient and variable phenomena.

He studies rapidly rotating neutron stars, called pulsars, their highly-magnetized cousins, called magnetars, and the mysterious phenomenon of fast radio bursts (FRBs). Scholz primarily uses the Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment (CHIME) to uncover the nature of FRBs and use them as probes of the universe.

Prior to his appointment at York, Scholz was a Dunlap and NSERC Postdoctoral Fellow at the Dunlap Institute for Astronomy & Astrophysics at the University of Toronto. He received his PhD in physics from McGill University in 2017. While a PhD candidate at McGill, he discovered the first repetition from an FRB source. This landmark discovery showed that the FRB phenomenon could not be caused solely by a cataclysmic phenomenon.

Scholz held a Covington Postdoctoral Fellowship at the Dominion Radio Astrophysical Observatory from 2016 to 2019, where he worked on the construction and commissioning of the CHIME Fast Radio Burst instrument. CHIME has revolutionized the field of fast radio bursts, by discovering several of them per day. Scholz and CHIME鈥檚 pioneering work on fast radio bursts has been recognized by an American Astronomical Society Lancelot M. Berkeley Prize, which Scholz accepted on behalf of the CHIME team, and an NSERC Brockhouse Prize.

Nikita Blinov
Nikita Blinov

Nikita Blinov

Nikita Blinov joins the Department of Physics & Astronomy as an assistant professor.

Blinov is interested in understanding how interactions between fundamental particles shortly after the Big Bang shape the observed universe. He uses theoretical models that include new particles and interactions to explore problems such as the identity of dark matter (a major constituent of our universe), origins of neutrino masses and others. Blinov examines the consistency of these models against existing observations and develops new ways of testing them using accelerator and precision experiments, or with astrophysical observations.

Blinov completed his graduate studies in the theory group at TRIUMF, Canada鈥檚 particle accelerator centre. Before joining York, he worked as a postdoctoral Fellow at the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory and at the University of Victoria.

Charles Edouard Boukare
Charles-脡douard Boukar茅

Charles-脡douard Boukar茅

Charles-脡douard Boukar茅 joins the Department of Physics & Astronomy as an assistant professor. Boukar茅 is an Earth and planetary scientist interested in the interior structure and evolution of rocky planets. He completed an engineering degree in geology and a master鈥檚 in science in Earth and Planetary Sciences at the ENSG Nancy / Universit茅 Lorraine in France. He received his PhD in geophysics from Universit茅 de Lyon in France in 2016.

Boukar茅 worked as a postdoctoral researcher at Brown University in Rhode Island from 2016 to 2018, where he initiated his work on the early evolution of the Earth鈥檚 moon. Before joining York, he had a postdoctoral position at the Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris in France. In 2022, Boukar茅 was awarded the Doornbos Memorial Prize, which is presented to a young scientist by the Committee on Studies of the Earth鈥檚 Deep Interior for outstanding work.

Boukar茅鈥檚 research focuses on the early evolution of rocky planets and planetary scale solidification processes. He aims to better constrain how initial conditions govern the long-term evolution of planetary interiors. During his PhD and postdoctoral appointments, he proposed innovative thermodynamics and multi-phase fluid dynamics models of magma ocean crystallization. He applied his approaches to the early evolution of the Earth, the moon, mercury and lava exoplanets. His main research includes high-pressure phase equilibria modelling and developing computational fluid dynamics models. Boukar茅 is excited to pursue his research and explore new scientific horizons with students at 快播视频.

Jeremy Webb
Jeremy Webb

Jeremy Webb

Jeremy Webb joins the Division of Natural Science within the Department of Science, Technology & Society as an assistant professor, teaching stream. Webb has a master of science in space studies from the International Space University and a PhD in physics and astronomy from McMaster University. He went on to complete postdoctoral studies on star cluster evolution at Indiana University and the University of Toronto through an NSERC postdoctoral fellowship.

In 2019, Webb was hired as an assistant professor at the University of Toronto, where he studied planetary system evolution in star clusters, stellar streams and galaxy structure. He also led a summer undergraduate research program, taught the two largest introductory astronomy courses in Canada and taught an astrobiology-themed course about life on other worlds. At 快播视频, Webb looks to continue teaching astrobiology- and astronomy-themed courses, while finding active and interdisciplinary ways to connect with students.

Feng Yuqing
Yuqing Feng

Yuqing Feng

Yuqing Feng will be joining the Department of Biology at 快播视频 as an assistant professor in January 2024. Feng received her bachelor of science from the University of Saskatchewan. She completed her PhD degree in Linda Chelico鈥檚 laboratory in the Department of Microbiology & Immunology at the University of Saskatchewan. For Feng鈥檚 PhD, she worked with APOBEC3 enzymes from the AID/APOBEC super family of cytidine deaminases and biochemically characterized the function of these enzymes as host restriction factors against RNA viruses and retrotransposons. As a recipient of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research postdoctoral fellowship, Feng is currently a postdoctoral Fellow in Alberto Martin鈥檚 laboratory in the Department of Immunology at the University of Toronto. There, she is working on antibody gene diversification mechanisms in B cells. Feng鈥檚 research interests include DNA damage and repair mechanisms that create genetic diversity in immunity and cancer.

Luz Adriana Puentes Jacome
Luz Adriana Puentes J谩come

Luz Adriana Puentes J谩come

Luz Adriana Puentes J谩come joins the Department of Biology as an assistant professor, teaching stream. Puentes completed her undergraduate degree in environmental engineering in her native Colombia. She completed her master of applied science degree at Carleton University and her PhD at the Centre for Applied Bioscience and Bioengineering (BioZone) at the University of Toronto. During this time, she actively engaged in teaching biotechnology and bioprocesses. Puentes was awarded a Natural Sciences & Engineering Research Council (NSERC) Postgraduate Fellowship which took her to Delft University of Technology, Netherlands, to conduct research on the characterization and scale up of anaerobic mixed cultures for bioremediation applications.

Puentes is deeply inspired by her colleagues and collaborators in Ontario working to apply biotechnology in areas such as the production of sustainable food and biochemicals, cell and gene therapy, and environmental remediation. She is excited to combine her passion for teaching and learning with her interest in advancing biotechnology in Canada. Thus, she joins colleagues in the Department of Biology to continue to build the biotechnology programs that will be offered at the Markham campus in the Fall of 2024.

Gordon Fitch
Gordon Fitch

Gordon Fitch

Gordon Fitch joins the Department of Biology as an assistant professor. Fitch is an ecologist, studying how environmental stressors shape ecological interactions and thereby influence ecosystem function and biodiversity. Much of his work focuses on interactions between plants, bees, and bee disease. He uses a combination of field surveys, lab experiments, and theoretical modeling to derive mechanistic understanding of these complex interactions and leverage that understanding to promote biodiversity conservation and just human flourishing. He joins York鈥檚 interdisciplinary Centre for Bee Ecology, Evolution, and Conservation (BEEc).

Before joining the faculty at York, Fitch was a National Science Foundation postdoctoral fellow at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. He received his master of science degree and PhD from the University of Michigan. Prior to this, he was a middle school science teacher. Fitch retains his passion for communicating science to diverse audiences and promoting science as a tool for liberation and improved relations between people and planet. At York, he is excited to engage in research and teaching that advances transformative understanding of and appreciation for the complex web of interactions undergirding life on earth.

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Professor H茅l猫ne Mialet leads CIFAR鈥檚 new Future Flourishing program /science/2023/04/03/professor-helene-mialet-leads-cifars-new-future-flourishing-program/ Mon, 03 Apr 2023 20:10:30 +0000 /science/?p=24650 Media Release from April 3, 2023 A new program proposed by Professor H茅l猫ne Mialet of the Department of Science, Technology & Society was one of three winners of the international 鈥淔uture of Being Human鈥 competition held by the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR). Mialet (principal investigator) will serve as co-director of CIFAR鈥檚 new Future […]

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Media Release from April 3, 2023

Helene Mialet
H茅l猫ne Mialet

A new program proposed by Professor H茅l猫ne Mialet of the Department of Science, Technology & Society was one of three winners of the international 鈥淔uture of Being Human鈥 competition held by the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR). Mialet (principal investigator) will serve as co-director of CIFAR鈥檚 new program, which also includes Professor Kristin Andrews (LAPS, Department of Philosophy) as a new Fellow.

Mialet, along with co-directors Tarek Elhaik (University of California, Davis) and Christopher Kelty (University of California, Los Angeles), has assembled a network of 16 exceptional scholars and practitioners, including philosophers, historians, curators, conservators, artists and anthropologists from around the world to participate in the program.

Her longstanding research aims to set out an innovative methodological and empirical trajectory for the study of the human as a distributed centred-subject. This work has been foundational to the inception of the Future Flourishing program, which will explore how human exceptionalism can be reconfigured by extending the boundary and definition of the human to the living and non-living beings that make us who we are.

鈥淭he fundamental question at the core of the Future Flourishing program,鈥 explains Mialet, 鈥渋s how can we live well without human exceptionalism. How can we live well and flourish with those upon whom we depend or with whom we share a common world? The establishment of a new definition of the human will have tremendous implications for how we think about and 鈥榙o鈥 politics, ethics, knowledge and morality.鈥 In addition, she points out that 鈥渢his is an important award for York. It has the potential to make profound change in how we engage with our complex world.鈥

Read the press release from 快播视频.

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Course for non-science majors focuses on understanding how everyday materials work /science/2022/11/18/course-for-non-science-majors-focuses-on-understanding-how-everyday-materials-work/ Fri, 18 Nov 2022 21:55:03 +0000 /science/?p=22403 Mysteries of Everyday Materials is an intriguing course offered by the Faculty of Science that teaches students about materials such as sunscreen and non-stick coatings. Ever since Ravinder Singh took the Faculty of Science course Mysteries of Everyday Materials (NATS1830), taught by Stephanie Domenikos, he has been a strong believer in wearing sunscreen. 鈥淚 was […]

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Mysteries of Everyday Materials is an intriguing course offered by the Faculty of Science that teaches students about materials such as sunscreen and non-stick coatings.
Stephanie Domenikos
Stephanie Domenikos

Ever since Ravinder Singh took the Faculty of Science course Mysteries of Everyday Materials (NATS1830), taught by Stephanie Domenikos, he has been a strong believer in wearing sunscreen.

鈥淚 was never big on sunscreen, but we looked at different brands with different SPF levels under ultraviolet lamps in the lab,鈥 said Singh, a recent 快播视频 graduate who works for BDO Canada as a tax accountant. 鈥淚t really opened my eyes; I realized it actually mattered to my skin.鈥

That鈥檚 exactly the impact Domenikos, an assistant professor and environmental chemist, hopes to have on the students in her course.

鈥淭his is a science course for non-science majors and it teaches the students how everyday materials work,鈥 said Domenikos. 鈥淚 try to give my students enough of a science background to allow them to answer life鈥檚 simpler questions. It鈥檚 also a great opportunity to get non-science students into a lab setting.鈥

The course, which was previously delivered solely as a lecture, hadn鈥檛 been offered for a while, but when Domenikos joined York in 2018, she overhauled it to include lab experiments. Then came the pandemic, and she was reduced to doing demonstrations on Zoom for her students, which 鈥渋s not the same experience.鈥 This year, students are back in the laboratory.

鈥淎t first, students were intimidated by the word 鈥榣ab,鈥欌 Domenikos noted. 鈥淢any of them actively avoided science in high school and found it daunting to have labs, but they realized that it isn鈥檛 complicated; it鈥檚 just an opportunity to apply what they鈥檝e learned in lecture and to use their hands. They began to enjoy it, said they felt like scientists and were proud of themselves.鈥

Singh was initially intimidated by the prospect, but quickly changed his mind.

鈥淚 had just transferred to York from Sheridan College and this was my first class,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 took it just because there was a science requirement. I didn鈥檛 remember anything about chemistry from high school, but Stephanie told us she would teach us everything from scratch. I鈥檓 so lucky, because she was a great professor.鈥

There are 10 lab periods in the two-semester course and the students work with the same partner throughout. The experiments they conduct complement the lectures Domenikos delivers in class. The lectures explore questions such as how batteries work, how fireworks get their colours, how soap cleans hands and how gasoline engines work.

The battery lecture, for example, is followed by a lab where students create their own batteries from wire and various solutions. They also test the conductivity of various foods, such as tomatoes and lemons, to see if these items allow electricity to pass through them.

Singh fondly remembers measuring the amount of fat in potato chips, causing him to realize that 鈥淚 really shouldn鈥檛 be eating these things.

鈥淲e discussed Advil and ibuprofen and what they actually do to stop pain; how non-stick cooking pans work; and how microwaves operate 鈥 little things you never think about.鈥

Domenikos says the labs allow them to see the application of the lectures and the experience 鈥渟tays with them. It worked really well to change their mindset. A lot of my students come into the course with a 鈥榟ate science鈥 mentality.鈥 She believes science knowledge is important no matter what career path her students are pursuing.

鈥淭his is our next generation. They will be our voters and our policymakers. An understanding of science will help them make more informed decisions. York wants to produce well-rounded students who can be active participants in society.鈥

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Research Areas /science/research/research-areas/ Sun, 12 Jul 2020 00:15:42 +0000 /science/?page_id=363 The Faculty of Science is home to five Departments with over 180 full-time faculty members focusing on research areas spanning nanotechnology to ecosystems to planetary systems. Some of our scientists are also members of Organized Research Units at 快播视频. Below is a listing of our major areas of research within the Faculty of Science, […]

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The Faculty of Science is home to five Departments with over 180 full-time faculty members focusing on research areas spanning nanotechnology to ecosystems to planetary systems. Some of our scientists are also members of at 快播视频. Below is a listing of our major areas of research within the Faculty of Science, organized by Department.


Biology

Our biologists excel throughout the various fields of study surrounding the biological sciences, with particular strengths in ecology and evolution, molecular and cell biology, and physiology.  


Chemistry

Our chemists focus on analytical chemistry, atmospheric chemistry, biological chemistry, inorganic chemistry, organic synthesis, and physical and theoretical chemistry. 

LEARN MORE ABOUT OUR RESEARCH IN CHEMISTRY


Mathematics & Statistics

Our mathematicians and statisticians focus on applied and industrial mathematics, pure mathematics, statistics, actuarial science, mathematical biology, and mathematics for education.


Physics & Astronomy

Our physicists and astronomers explore astronomy and astrophysics; atomic, molecular and optical physics; biological physics; chemical and condensed matter physics; high energy and particle physics; and planetary physics.

LEARN MORE ABOUT OUR RESEARCH IN PHYSICS & ASTRONOMY


Science, Technology and Society

Our researchers in Science, Technology and Society seek to expand our understanding of science and technology by exploring the historical, social, cultural, philosophical, and material dimensions.

LEARN MORE ABOUT OUR RESEARCH IN SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND SOCIETY

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