Film scholar, 'accidental scientist' among winners of $100K Killam Prize
The Canada Council for the Arts names this year's winners
A film scholar, a clinical neuroscientist, a biomechanics pioneer, a particle physicist and a researcher who studies language in infants are among the Canadian innovators who will each take home a $100,000 prize for significant contributions to their respective fields.
Five academics from universities across the country are being awarded the prestigious Killam Prize, which honours researchers, scientists, doctors and scholars whose body of work has bettered the lives of people in Canada and beyond.
The Canada Council for the Arts named this year's winners in Ottawa on Tuesday.
André Gaudreault of Université de Montréal, who helped create Canada's first PhD program in film studies, is being commended for his research on the influence of technological innovation on the cinematic form.
- The (almost) lost history of Canada's cinematic birthplace
- 'Silent strokes' too often dismissed: Ontario neurologist
In the health sciences, Vladimir Hachinski of Western University in London, Ont., is at the forefront of understanding, diagnosing, treating and preventing neurological diseases like stroke and dementia.
The winners also include self-proclaimed "accidental scientist" Walter Herzog, the Killam Memorial Chair for Interdisciplinary Research at the University of Calgary, for his strides in the field of biomechanics and muscle contraction.
University of Alberta's James Pinfold, a founding member of the experiment that announced the discovery of the Higgs boson particle, is leading a new experiment that explores physics at the high-energy and cosmic frontiers.
Janet Werker of the University of British Columbia rounds out the list of honourees with her research examining language acquisition among infants who grow up in both monolingual and bilingual environments.
- Bilingual babies keep ability to discern languages from visual cues
- Canadian teens hunt subatomic particles that have eluded scientists for decades
Winners are chosen by a committee of their peers. Previous winners include Victoria Kaspi, the late Mark Wainberg, and Nobel Prize winner Arthur McDonald.
The Killam program also announced recipients of its research fellowships, which dole out $840,000 over two years to six scholars for independent research projects.
This year's group includes:
- Christine Bold of Ontario's University of Guelph for a project called "Indigenous Modernities: The Secret History of Vaudeville, 1880s-1930s".
- René Doyon of the Université de Montréal for "Searching and Characterizing Nearby Habitable Worlds."
- Yong Baek Kim of the University of Toronto for "Topological Phases of Correlated Quantum Materials".
- Deanne Williams of York University in Toronto for "The Girl on Stage in Early Modern England."
- At McGill University in Montreal, Chao-Jun Li will receive funding for "Umpolung Naturally Occurring Oxygenated Chemicals as Organometallic-Reagent-Surrogates," and Hanadi Sleiman has been awarded a fellowship for "DNA Nanostructures for Cancer Therapy and Imaging."