SF2020 Schedule at a Glance
Scheduled Talks
The talks are open to all; please RSVP with subject line: “ScienceFest RSVP” if you would like to attend one or more of the sessions.
Wednesday May 6, 2020 [13:00-14:30]
- Opening remarks
Joel Trudeau - SPACE Independent Projects
SPACEÂ students will present and demonstrate independent projects on a diverse array of topics: sound visualization; simulations of fractal patterns and how they are found in nature; Arduino sensors and programming for Science Education, environmental monitoring and art-making.- Chladni Plates: Making Sound Visible
Ben Cheung, Maddy Walkington, Owen Rodgers - Envirostation
Ahmed Al-Asmar, Mohammed Barry - The Use of Arduino in Science Education: the HC-SR04 Ultrasonic Sensor
Rui Cong Su, Carlos Hidalgo Montesino - Bridging Nature in Science : An Exploration of Fractals
Angela Chen, Raul Sulea - Synesthesia: a work-in-progress sound sensor project
Amia Chowdhury
- Chladni Plates: Making Sound Visible
Friday May 8, 2020Â [13:00-14:00]
Plenary Talk: , in collaboration with ScienceFest, is pleased to present Dr. Sabrina Leslie, who will giving the plenary talk for the conference.
Single-molecule microscopy techniques for drug discovery and development: the next level of resolution
About Dr. Sabrina Leslie
Dr. Leslie is an Associate Professor of Physics and Quantitative Life Sciences at McGill University and the principle investigator at the  where her research focusses on the fascinating behaviour of macromolecules in squeezed, crowded, and complex environments; conditions which reflect the biochemistry inside living cells. She is also the co-founder of , a Canadian startup company whose mandate is to bring single-molecule precision and control to real-world applications. Most recently, Dr. Leslie has been awarded the 2020 Young Investigator Award from the Biophysical Society of Canada for her outstanding contributions to the field of single-molecule biophysics.
Friday May 8, 2020Â [14:00-16:00]
This session will include presentations from the Dawson Research in Neuroscience Group and students from the SPACE 365: Make Things That Matter course. In addition to neuroscience research, the students will present on topics that address problems around contemporary issues. These include waste management in the home, affects of technology on attention, the use of drones for wildlife monitoring, and how to reclaim memory for those impacted by dementia.
- SPACE 365: Make Things That Matter. Students from the contemporary issues complementary course overseen by Joel Trudeau.
- Stop Producing: A perspective on how to be a zero-waste household
Arezoo Haydari Darani - Eyes in the Sky: Using Drones for Wildlife Monitoring
Daud Khan Sherwani - In Memories
Lyna Ben Meddour - Priorii: An app to plan and to focus without distraction
Zi Chao Zhang
- Stop Producing: A perspective on how to be a zero-waste household
- Dawson Research in Neuroscience Group. Talks and discussion with students overseen by Hé±ôè²Ô±ðÌýNadeau
- EEG and the Stroop test
Claire Gao, Isabelli Pizzani Maurutto, Jennifer Robert, Yuliya Shpunarska
- EEG and the Stroop test
Awards Banquet : To Be Announced
Awards presentations, refreshments and discussion.
- Closing remarks
Nadim Boukhira, Brian Mader, Joel Trudeau