Professor recognized by Chinese Canadian foundation
A ݮƵ electrical and computer engineering professor has been honoured with the .
A ݮƵ electrical and computer engineering professor has been honoured with the .
An online celebration this week honoured the achievements of outstanding alumni with awards in four categories and a supporter of engineering research and education.
Hosted by Mary Wells, dean of engineering, the event recognized an emergency room physician, the CEO of a company advancing the field of spectroscopy, the developer of a unique radiation therapy system, the inventors of technology that helps disabled children take their first steps, the creator of software to support disaster relief, and a valued friend of the Faculty.
A ݮƵ School of Architecture professor is a member of a team that took silver in the main category of the North America section of the .
New technology developed by researchers at ݮƵ Engineering could help doctors make the best use of limited resources during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Their system uses artificial intelligence (AI) to identify patients who require intensive care unit (ICU) treatment based on vital signs, blood test results, medical history and other data.
Mary Robinson was a Grade 7 student standing in a hallway of her Ottawa school when she heard about the Dec. 6, 1989 tragedy.
Only 11 years old at the time, Robinson recalls the “gut punch” she felt after finding out 14 women, mainly engineering students, were murdered during an anti-feminist rampage at École Polytechnique in Montreal.
Now an engineering lecturer, she served as associate director of first-year engineering for more than a decade before being appointed the Faculty’s first associate dean of outreach, equity and diversity earlier this year.
Two former ݮƵ Engineering students have made a prominent list of young luminaries from the worlds of business, sports and everything in between.
Apoorva Mehta, the founder of Instacart, and Alex Rodrigues, co-founder of Embark Technology, appear on a list published this week by Forbes magazine.
Others on the list include LeBron James, Mark Zuckerberg, Rihanna, Malala Yousafzai, Kylie Jenner and Naomi Osaka.
Five panelists will discuss what it's like to identify as LGBTQ+ while at ݮƵ Engineering or in industry during a Dec. 2 discussion hosted by EngiQueers.
A Faculty chair, a data solutions and research program manager, a professional engineer with 30 years of experience in the transportation sector and two recent alumni will talk about their experiences with coming out as gay or transgender.
Three student teams featuring members from ݮƵ Engineering took home $5,000 each from the recent Concept $5k pitch competition for fall 2021.
MicroBuild Masonry, Learnlist and Hydro House were among eight finalists competing for four prizes at the virtual event, which is staged three times a year.
(Adrian Simone, third-year civil engineering) is developing a sustainable, biological method to manufacture masonry units.
A professor at the School of Architecture at ݮƵ is racking up awards as a member of the design team for an innovative project in China.
David Correa, a design partner at architecture studio LLLab, worked with the team on a canopy and a group of pod-like pavilions mainly made of woven bamboo.
Shoukry Saleh, a retired faculty member who helped build a ݮƵ Engineering department, died on August 9 at the age of 91.
In 1968, he was one of four professors recruited by Archibald Sherburne, then dean of ݮƵ Engineering, to establish the Faculty’s management sciences department.
Instrumental to its launch the following year, Saleh served as department chair from September 1974 to August 1978.