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York University

York University

York University (French: Université York) is a public research university in Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Air quality monitoring stations have been unknowingly collecting urgently needed biodiversity data

A 94 per cent loss of plant-pollinator networks over the last 30 years

New ecological niches for infectious diseases are being created by expansion of the world’s cities

The world’s most widely used insecticides could be partly responsible for a dramatic decline in songbird populations

New research at the University of Saskatchewan (USask) shows how the world’s most widely used insecticides could be partly responsible for a dramatic decline in songbird populations. The study, to be published in the journal Science on Sept. 13, is the first experiment to track the effects of a neonicotinoid pesticide on birds in the wild. The study

The world’s most widely used insecticides could be partly responsible for a dramatic decline in songbird populations

Simple Test Can Help Detect Alzheimer’s Before Dementia Signs Show

York University researchers say a simple test that combines thinking and movement can help to detect heightened risk for developing Alzheimer’s disease in a person, even before there are any telltale behavioural signs of dementia. Faculty of Health Professor Lauren Sergio and PhD candidate Kara Hawkins who led the study asked the participants to complete

Simple Test Can Help Detect Alzheimer’s Before Dementia Signs Show

Researchers say pharmaceutical ‘innovation crisis’ is a myth

Researchers say pharmaceutical ‘innovation crisis’ is a myth Two professors, including one from the Philadelphia area, wrote this week in the British Medical Journal that cries from the pharmaceutical industry over an “innovation crisis” borne of government intervention is a myth. The real innovation crisis, say Donald Light and Joel Lexchin, stems from current incentives

Researchers say pharmaceutical ‘innovation crisis’ is a myth

Recording data using heat could lead to faster, more efficient magnetic recording devices

  Allows for ten times the storage capacity and 300 times the performance   For the past several decades, it has been assumed that in order to store data on a magnetic medium, a magnetic field must be applied. Recently, however, an international team of scientists discovered that heat can be used instead of a

Recording data using heat could lead to faster, more efficient magnetic recording devices

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