Thesis Defense – Human Nutrition – MSc – Oliver Sage

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UBC – Faculty of Land and Food Systems Announces

The Oral Examination for the Degree of

Master of Science
(Human Nutrition)

Oliver Sage

Assessing the suitability of nutrition education resources on sugars and health among dietitians”

Thursday, December 14, 2023 – 2:30 PM

Room 220, Food, Nutrition and Health Building, 2205 East Mall

 


EXAMINING COMMITTEE

Chair: Dr. C. Karakochuk

Supervisory Committee:
Dr. T. Cohen – Supervisor
Dr. S. Grant  – Committee member
Dr. S. Purcell – Committee member

Defense Committee Composition
Dr. T. Cohen – Supervisor
Dr. S. Grant  – Committee member
Dr. S. Purcell – Committee member
Dr. G. Hammond – External

MEDI 504B course information

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With positive feedback and support from the students last year, the Department of Medicine is pleased to offer the second delivery of MEDI 504B this upcoming January. We are extending the invitation to graduate-level students outside of the Faculty of Medicine – we ask that you kindly share the opportunity with students and faculty in your program who may be interested. For inquiries, please direct them to medi.exptlmed@ubc.ca. Thank you.

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Course Name: MEDI504B Emerging Topics in Experimental Medicine (Machine Learning Analysis in Health Data)

Course Instructor: Dr. Aline Talhouk (Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology)

Date/Time: 2023/24 WT2 Mon & Wed 1-3pm (Location: DHCC); Jan 8th – Feb 21st, 2024

Credit: 1.5

Course Summary: We target students who are interested in how medical care can be transformed by “Big data”. We use real-life clinical use cases to motivate how clinical care can be enhanced with collecting unconventional data of various kinds and feeding such data to machine learning methods to build next-generation clinical tools. However, even with the appropriate data collected, we describe the data science challenges that need to be overcome before the data can be used properly. We give an introduction of the main concepts and methods in biostatistics, machine learning, including unsupervised and supervised methods, and data visualization. Last but not least, we discuss ethical, fairness issues and other potential pitfalls of applying machine learning to medical care.

Pre-requisite: MEDI504A (*For pre-req exemption, please email medi.exptlmed@ubc.ca)

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Best,

Sharon Xu
Experimental Medicine Program Office
Department of Medicine
The University of British Columbia | Vancouver General Hospital
2775 Laurel Street | Vancouver BC | V5Z 1M9 Canada
medi.exptlmed@ubc.ca

Doctoral Deadlines for Spring 2024 Graduation

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Attention Doctoral students

I hope you enjoyed the fog this morning! Happy almost December.

The deadline for submission of Nominations for External Examiner for PhD candidates wanting to complete on the timeline for Spring 2024 Graduation was last Friday, November 24. While this is a slightly flexible deadline, forms should really be in by Friday this week, to avoid delays. We do find that potential examiners are slower to reply as the winter break approaches.

Please note, these are the deadlines for candidates who want to participate in the Spring Graduation ceremony. The dates for April 30, 2024 program completion are similar but not the same; they are a few days later in each case.

As a reminder, the other dates candidates need to meet are as follows:

FRIDAY, 26 JANUARY 2024 – Doctoral dissertation (and supporting documentation) submitted to Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies for external examination

FRIDAY, 22 MARCH 2024 – Last Day for Final Doctoral Oral Examination

FRIDAY, 19 APRIL 2024 – Acceptance of final, approved doctoral dissertation by Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies

 

Students will be able to choose to defend either in person or on Zoom. We will work with students to select the most appropriate mode for their defence.

 

Please distribute this email to any faculty or students you think may be interested.

 

Best,

Robyn

Robyn Starkey (Pronouns: No Preference)
Doctoral Exams Coordinator
Office of the Dean | Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies
The University of British Columbia | Vancouver Campus | Musqueam Traditional Territory
The University of British Columbia 170 – 6371 Crescent Road | Vancouver BC | V6T 1Z2 Canada
Phone 604 822 3989
robyn.starkey@ubc.ca | grad.ubc.ca

The UBC Vancouver campus is situated within the traditional, ancestral and unceded territory of the xʷməθkʷəy̓ə

IRES Seminar Series: Thurs, Nov 30 with David Tindall

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Next week’s IRES Seminar is in a new location – CHBE Room 102, UBC Chemical and Biological Engineering Building (main floor, 2360 East Mall)
November 30, 2023: IRES Faculty Seminar with David Tindall
Explaining Who is Perceived as Influential in the Canadian Climate Change Policy Network: A Hybrid Network Approach

Time: 12:30pm to 1:20pm

Location: CHBE Room 102; the Chemical and Biological Engineering Building; 2360 East Mall

No food or drinks allowed in the Theatre. 

Click here to register for Zoom link. Zoom will be terminated if we encounter tech problems 5 to 10 mins into the seminar.

Talk summary:

Anthropogenic climate change is arguably the biggest existential threat to humankind, as well as many other species. While earth systems are complex, the natural science aspects of the problem are quite well understood. It is the social, political, economic, and cultural barriers to addressing climate change that are challenging to address. This study examines the perceived influence of different actors in Canada’s climate change policy network just prior to the signing of the Paris Agreement. In this research, we consider the problem of addressing climate change from a policy network perspective. We collect network data on both organizational and individual policy actors. We develop a hybrid approach (synthesizing whole network and ego network approaches) in our analysis. This analysis utilizes data from a representative survey of climate change policy network actors in Canada. Five network relations are examined: communication, sharing scientific information, collaboration, influence in domestic climate change politics, and influence on the respondent’s organization’s policy position. A main finding is that there is a positive association between an actor being central in the communication network and their being perceived as more influential in domestic climate change politics. Also, an actor’s perceived influence on the respondent’s organization’s stance was correlated both with the centrality of actors in the communication network, and in the collaboration network. However, when we examine these findings in more depth, we see that being an actor who provided expert scientific information was not correlated with being influential in either domestic climate change politics, or in influencing the respondent’s organization’s policy position. A related finding -which is also surprising – is that actors who were associated with research organizations were seen as being less influential in both domestic climate change politics, and in influencing the respondent’s organization’s policy position. These findings give us a more nuanced understanding of the relationship between network centrality and perceived climate policy influence, thereby making an important contribution to understanding the social dynamics of climate change policy networks.

 

  Dr. David Tindall, Professor, Department of Sociology, University of British Columbia

Bio:

David Tindall is a Professor in the Department of Sociology, at the University of British Columbia. His expertise is in social networks, social movements, environmental sociology, and climate change. A primary focus of Dr. Tindall’s research has been on contention over environmental issues. He has developed an ego social network model of micromobilization for collective action related to environmentalism. He has also published extensively on climate change policy and discourse networks. His current research examines the role of social networks in facilitating action to address climate change, and compares and contrasts the roles of virtual and non-virtual social network tie

 

See you next Thursday in CHBE Room 102!

 

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Bonnie Leung

RES Program Support (she/her/hers)

Institute for Resources, Environment and Sustainability (IRES)

University of British Columbia | Vancouver Campus | Musqueam Traditional Territory

Aquatic Ecosystems Research Laboratory (AERL Building)

Room 429 – 2202 Main Mall | Vancouver, BC | V6T 1Z4 | Canada

 

Email: bonnie.leung@ubc.ca

Tel: 604-822-9249

GradUpdate – LinkedIn, Designing Your Grad School/Career Strategy, Getting Started with Universal Design for Learning, Writing Consultations, Microaggressions in Racism, and more.

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GradUpdate

In this issue, LinkedIn, Designing Your Grad School/Career Strategy, Getting Started with Universal Design for Learning, Writing Consultations, Microaggressions in Racism, and more.

Registration open

LinkedIn
Online | Tuesday, Dec 5 | 1 – 2 pm

Register

Getting the Most Out of Your Academic Experience: Designing Your Grad School/Career Strategy
Online | Thursday, Dec 7 | 3 – 5 pm

Register

Seats available

Where Research Begins, Night Science, and the Quest for Breakthrough Research
Join experts from Stanford, NYU, and UBC for a discussion about learning the “what” your thesis or dissertation, knowing your “why” to help provide a sense of purpose, and ways to meet your intellectual “fellow travelers”.
Online | Wednesday, Nov 29 | 12 – 2 pm Register

Leveraging your Strengths to Strategize for Success
Registration includes access to a free CliftonStrengths Assessment
Online | Thursday, Nov 30 | 3 – 4:30 pm Register

Events and Opportunities

A selection of upcoming events are highlighted below.  Visit  community.grad.ubc.ca and grad.ubc.ca/current-students/professional-development for our full events calendar.

ACADEMIC

Free Statistical Consultation
Under the supervision of Statistics professors, Statistics students will provide free project-specific data analysis, including a formal written report, as part of their STAT 450/550 practicum consulting courses and STAT 540 course that will run next term
Submit a 1-page project description by Dec 14

25th Annual Legal Studies Graduate Conference: The Rise of Radicalism
May 2 – 3, 2024, Vancouver | UBCGradConference2024.org
Submit your 250-word abstract by Feb 1

CAREER

Exploring systemic racial equity in the workplace
Online alumniUBC event | Tuesday, Dec 5 | 12 – 1 pm Register

HEALTH AND WELLBEING

A Closer Look at the Role of Microaggressions in Racism
In-person | Wednesday, Dec 6 | 2 – 3:30 pm Register

RESEARCH

Data Bites – Introduction to depositing datasets in Borealis
Online | Wednesday, Dec 6 | 1 – 1:45 pm Register

Using R Markdown
Online | Thursday, Dec 7 | 2 – 3 pm Register

Web scraping with Python
Online | Friday, Dec 8 | 1 – 2:30 pm Register

TEACHING

Getting Started with Universal Design for Learning
Online CIRTL workshop | Thursdays, Dec 7 and 14 | 10 – 11:30 am Register

WRITING AND COMMUNICATION

Writing Consultations
In-person or written feedback | various dates, locations, and times until Dec 15 Book a consultation