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E. Paul Zehr
World Cup: Tripping vs. fake falling
University of Victoria expert on walking, running, tripping, falling and human performance is available to media to discuss the ways referees can tell true tripping from fake falling at the 2018 FIFA World Cup Russia.
Brain to brawn: Stroke recovery
The Ring
To recover strength and ultimately perhaps the ability to walk, the best bet after a severe stroke might just be to forego working the weaker, more-affected side. It seems counter-intuitive, but high-intensity strength training on the less-affected side could have remarkable potential for helping recover mobility after a stroke, new UVic research indicates.
Craigdarroch Research Awards 2012
The Ring
Passion, enthusiasm, a commitment to making a difference in our lives—these are the qualities that are shared by all winners of the Craigdarroch Research Awards, and this year’s “class” is no exception. The 2012 Craigdarroch Research Awards, which honour achievement in research at UVic, were presented at a celebration event on May 1.
UVic Announces 2012 Craigdarroch Awards
Media release
The University of Victoria's 2012 Craigdarroch Research Awards were presented May 1.
How to talk about science
The Ring
UVic’s Dr. E. Paul Zehr, who earned a reputation locally for holding gatherings in local pubs to reach out to the community to share scientific knowledge, and internationally for using comics to make neuroscience more understandable to the general public, is chairing a three-day conference at UVic in May called How to Talk About Science. Among the participants are CBC Radio’s Bob McDonald, Petti Fong of the Toronto Star and the Vancouver Sun’s Science reporter Randy Shore. More info: http://bit.ly/wCMgNe
Batman, Iron Man and me
The Ring
The tipping point for me was a Friday afternoon five years ago. I was sitting in my office searching Google Scholar for publication information on one of my recent papers. My most heavily cited paper at the time had about 150 citations. In my scientific domain, anything over 100 was considered a very high-impact paper. But what if that number really means that only 150 people read my paper? Was 150 readers an acceptable impact?
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