-
Researchers at NU earn grants
ArticleA trio of researchers at Nipissing University have earned $265,000 in grants from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Council of Canada (NSERC) for work that provides a better understanding of our watersheds, creates new commercially useful chemical compounds more efficiently, and furthers scientific knowledge through the exploration of dimension theory. -
Researchers earn NSERC grants
ArticleA pair of researchers and a graduate student at Nipissing University have earned $137,500 in grants from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Council of Canada (NSERC) for work that contributes to a better understanding of our forests, provides tools for optimizing nanotechnology applications, and studies nitrogen application for field crops. -
Researchers helping understand Lake Nipissing
ArticleIn the face of harmful algae blooms popping up on Lake Nipissing, students and researchers at Nipissing University are working to better understand what is happening in the lake. -
Research into Common Book Common Ground
Article -
Research Matters featuring Dr. James
Article -
Research on diabetes in First Nations earns funding
Article -
Research on tap at Award Winners Speaker Series
Article -
Research shows testosterone makes some men aggressive
ArticleNew research out of Nipissing University shows that testosterone can quickly increase aggressive behaviour when administered to men with dominant and/or impulsive personality traits. -
Research talk on slowing down free radicals
ArticleNipissing University welcomes Dr. Derek Pratt, professor of Chemistry at the University of Ottawa, to campus for a special lecture, titled Free Radical Oxidation and its Inhibition: Taking the Battle from Fossil Fuel-Derived Products to Living Matter onFriday, October 21 at 3:30 p.m. in room A226. -
Research unlocking how testosterone impacts brain function for aggression
ArticleCarré and his team have just published an article,Testosterone Rapidly Increases Neural Reactivity to Threat in Healthy Men: A Novel Two-Step Pharmacological Challenge Paradigm, in Biological Psychiatry.