Tomlinson Scholars from 2013-2023

2022-2023

Anne Imouza, Political Science

Tomlinson Scholar- Imouza Anne Imouza is a first-year Ph.D. student in the Department of Political Science at McGill University. Her research interests are at the intersection between political behavior and computational social science studies. Specifically, she will build an online index measure to assess political skepticism compared to traditional methods in political science. Political cynicism is a crucial indicator of citizens’ trust in government, institutions, and democratic systems. Only a handful of studies attempt to explain the rise in skepticism through the rise of new information and communication technologies. The general research question proposed is: to what extent do social media such as Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram impact political cynicism?

To address this question, she will proceed to a systematic literature review of poll data about users’ social media consumption on political cynicism. Then, a longitudinal and textual analysis will be led through a quasi-experimental design to present the extent of political news consumption on various social media that may impact users’ political cynicism. Lastly, a longitudinal network analysis will be conducted to depict whether the variation in political skepticism of a user is similar to his network of friends over time. The Richard H. Tomlinson Doctoral Fellowship will significantly contribute to this goal and help her bring new evidence to the burgeoning body of research that explains how social media may foster political cynicism with network and textual data.


Anthony Bozzo, Experimental Surgery

Tomlinson Scholar- BozzoAnthony is excited to begin a PhD in Experimental Surgery at McGill University under the supervision of Dr Sahir Bhatnager, Dr John Healey and Dr Ahmed Aoude.

After graduating from McGill's medical school in 2014, Anthony completed a residency in Orthopedic Surgery and a thesis-based MSc with a focus on sarcoma at McMaster University under the supervision of international sarcoma trial pioneer Dr Michelle Ghert. Anthony completed a clinical fellowship in Orthopedic Oncology at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York City last year. During this fellowship, he became familiar with the role of radiation therapy in the treatment of patients with high-grade soft tissue sarcomas. His research focus is on developing and validating a multi-input neural network model to predict overall survival, risk of local recurrence, and risk of complications from radiation therapy for sarcoma patients. Anthony and his collaborators seek to improve current prognostic systems by incorporating neural network analysis of a pre-operative MRI of the tumor, as well as the clinical variables. The goal is that better prediction of the benefits and complications of radiation therapy for soft tissue sarcoma patients will lead to more personalized treatment decisions. Once developed and validated for this project, the team hopes to apply similar machine learning methods to other clinical research questions.

Anthony is very grateful and honored by the support of the Tomlinson Doctoral Fellowship.


Chuta Sano, Computer Science

Tomlinson Scholar- Sano"I am honored to receive the 2022-23 Tomlinson Doctoral Fellowship. I am a first year PhD student in the computer science department, but honestly, I think that is almost as descriptive as me introducing myself as a human being. Although I expect this can be repeated for almost everything considered an academic “field,” computer science has broadened its scope and applicability over the years and will continue to do so. This is great; it speaks to the strength and utility of what might initially seem like abstract nonsense. One change to observe is that due to said broadness, “computer scientists” are quite diverse in interest, experience, and overall approaches to their respective areas of interest.

To descend one step below the giant entity that is computer science, I work in programming language theory… and to go even further, type theory: a particular intersection of mathematical logic, philosophy, and computer science. Historically, this field manifested out of a desire to define the notion of “good” computation in the 20th century and may perhaps be one of the oldest areas of research in what we loosely identify as computer science. Yet, there is so much more to be done! The very early pioneers of computer science graciously left many interesting problems for us to continue to ponder about and develop for time to come, partly due to the fact that we constantly find new interesting problems to consider as our assumptions about computers, such as hardware, demands, etc. shift. One important topic is in concurrency; how do we reason about multiple programs that work together to achieve some goal? How do we take properties of interest, such as “concurrent programs never get stuck,” and express it precisely in the language of mathematics? How do we enforce those properties? These are small samplers of broad questions that many people are trying to take a poke at using various interesting techniques and tools, and I too hope to take a small yet important step in our collective search for these answers using tools from proof theory and logic… just give me a few years to take that step though!"


Kit Chokly, Art History and Communication Studies

Tomlinson Scholar- ChoklyKit Chokly is a white nonbinary trans student who began their PhD in Communication Studies at McGill University in 2022. Their research looks at the pleasures and affordances of media, especially as they intersect with trans experiences. His dissertation project, tentatively titled Feeling weird: An affective analysis of digital trans media practices, proposes using digital curation to explore an emerging niche of digital media practices which utilize “weirdness” to express trans sentiments. These media explore gender in its embodied, social, and subjective forms; are situated in the affective mode of the weird; and are largely made by and for trans people. Their work aims to consider how such media work to circumvent problems of trans media representation and potentially contribute to novel ways of imagining or becoming a gender in mediated and often collaborative spaces.

Feeling weird will examine how these weird trans media practices can be an important part in the development of trans subjectivities, communities, and spaces. Through this research, he intends to contribute to the growing field of transgender media studies and communication studies more broadly by showing that weird trans media and their surrounding community are worth taking seriously—not in spite of, but because of their weirdness. Kit is grateful for the significant opportunity that The Richard H. Tomlinson Fellowship presents to these research pursuits.


Mahdi Mahdavi, Physiology

Tomlinson Scholar- MahdaviMahdi is a first-year PhD in the Cerebral Systems Lab (CSL) within the Department of Physiology. After completing his MD degree, Mahdi decided to continue his passion for systems neuroscience through a research-centered PhD program at McGill. CSL’s research focuses on sensory and multisensory information processing in the brain. Our brains rely upon multisensory data from the environment to gather information about the external world. For these data to be processed, a crucial intermediate step is required where sensory object inputs are encoded into neural representations in the form of dynamic neural population activity patterns. Although population neural activity might seem complex and high-dimensional at first glance, studies have revealed that population neural activity is often restricted into a low-dimensional manifold spanned by a few independent components called modes. Mahdi’s research will focus on understanding the hierarchical neural representations of multisensory objects and how these representations might be decomposed into linear or non-linear manifolds.

“It is an honor to be a recipient of the Tomlinson Fellowship, which has enabled me to deepen my focus on my research by providing support and financial stability. I am thrilled to pursue my research as a part of the McGill community.”


Mingyu Wan, Integrated Program in Neuroscience

Tomlinson Scholar- Wan"I am a first year Ph.D. student in Integrated Program in Neuroscience at McGill University. As my MSc. in Dr. Tiffany Schmidt’s lab at Northwestern University was winding down, I looked for other leading visual neuroscience labs, as I wanted to continue in this field for my PhD. McGill University is widely known as a leading neuroscience university, and I became fascinated by Dr. Stuart Trenholm’s research program, which combines various scales of research (from cellular, to synaptic, to circuits, to full brain and behavior), and various experimental models (mice, marmosets, humans, in silico) to address problems in visual neuroscience in a holistic manner. By having access to a wide range of cutting-edge experimental tools, I felt that with my strong analytical and statistics background, I could make a significant impact while performing exciting and important experiments. In Dr. Trenholm’s lab at the Montreal Neurological Institute, I propose to use state-of-the-art RNA sequencing and tracing methods to gain unprecedented insights into how the visual brain is wired, and how vision loss results in changes in brain connectivity. Therefore, I hope that I can embark on this proposed program in the hope of realizing my dream to be a future professor in visual neuroscience at a research university and making my contributions to serving the blind people better in the future.

The Tomlinson Doctoral Fellowship has made it possible for me to pursue my research at McGill University. It is my honor to be one of Tomlinson Scholars."


Rachael Morgan, Educational and Counselling Psychology

Tomlinson Scholar - MorganRachael Morgan is a first year Ph.D. student in Counselling Psychology, working under the co-supervision of Dr. Caroline Temcheff and Dr. Alexa Martin-Storey in the Healthy Development Lab. She is also a Registered Psychotherapist (Qualifying) with the College of Registered Psychotherapists of Ontario. Rachael obtained her Master's degree in Counselling Psychology at the University of Ottawa in 2022, under the supervision of Dr. Tracy Vaillancourt in the Brain and Behaviour Laboratory.

Rachael's research interests broadly focus on examining the links between bullying and child and youth mental health. She is particularily interested in understanding the risk factors that increase students' vulnerability for being bullied, as well as the protective factors that can help prevent adverse outcomes.

Rachael's Doctoral research will examine the associations between gender-based discrimination (i.e., sexist and homophobic discrimination) and adolescent depression and substance use, focusing on the moderating role of conduct problems. The goal of Rachael's research is to inform the development of school-based mental health intervention and prevention efforts that prioritize and meet the needs of gender and sexual minority students, who are particularly vulnerable for experiencing adverse outcomes as a result of being bullied, both in adolescence and over time.

Rachael is honoured represent the Department of Educational and Counselling Psychology as the recipient of the 2022-23 Tomlinson Doctoral Fellowship. This generous funding has allowed her to continue to pursue her research in bullying, stigma, and adolescent mental health at McGill University as a Ph.D. student. Rachael looks forward to continuing to her Doctoral research as part of the McGill community.


Sainico Ningthoujam, English

Tomlinson Scholar - NingthoujamSainico is a first-year doctoral student in the English Department at McGill University. Her project focuses on literary narratives from South Asia to interrogate the imagination and representation of the environment, and how they map multiple lived experiences of the Anthropocene. The Anthropocene is a proposed geological epoch to recognise the significant impact of humans on the environment. But it is also a cultural concept that has wide-ranging ramifications on how we think about nature, human and non-human relations. Her research excavates how different aesthetic forms and genres of indigenous and non-indigenous literary texts confront homogenising convictions of modernity and development to decolonize the Anthropocene. By focusing on local, national and transnational entanglements in relation to the Eastern Himalayas, her thesis reflects on how postcolonial and indigenous narratives navigate multiple identities to retain and reclaim their history, traditions and culture.

She is honoured to receive the Tomlinson Fellowship, which facilitates and supports her research. Through her project, she foregrounds the role of literary and other modes of cultural imagination in how the environment is articulated, represented and communicated in popular discourses and how these narratives influence our perception of climate change.


Swati, Religious Studies

Tomlinson Scholar - SwatiSwati is a first-year PhD student studying South Asian Religions at the School of Religious Studies. She focuses on how religious texts conceptualize divinity with attentiveness to the scholarly interpretations of new theological formulations in medieval Hinduism. Her doctoral research investigates several texts known as the Rama Upanishads, seeking to explain their textual intricacies and reconstruct their role in canonizing Rama as a principal deity within modern Hinduism. Her research also highlights how competing sectarian Hindu movements modulated and redefined orthodox religious categories. Focusing on this shift at a time when various sects were formulating their theologies, differentiating amongst themselves, and creating localized histories contributes to a more nuanced discourse of Hindu sectarianism.

Her research involves philological analysis of Sanskrit texts, including the collection, collation, and study of their extant manuscripts and recensions to piece together their history, contexts, and reception. She is honored to pursue her research at McGill through the generous support of the Tomlinson Fellowship. She is delighted to work with related manuscripts at the university’s Rare Books and Special Collections and study with scholars reading diverse religious and scholarly traditions.

2021-2022

Benjamin Crosby, Religious Studies

Tomlinson Scholar Benjamin Crosby Benjamin Crosby is a first year PhD student in ecclesiastical history at the School of Religious Studies at McGill University. His research is in the history of the English Reformation, the period of religious and political strife which would eventually produce a Church of England independent of the Roman Catholic Church; this independent Church of England is the parent church of global Anglicanism, the third-largest body of Christians in the world. Specifically, he focuses on how two key early theologians of the Church of England, John Jewel and Richard Hooker, constructed a pan-Protestant identity that bound the Church of England to its fellow Protestant churches in Continental Europe.

He is thrilled to be undertaking this research at McGill, which has been prominent in a scholarly reassessment of the thought of Richard Hooker that has emphasized his continuities with Protestant thought in continental Europe. He is so thankful that the Tomlinson Fellowship makes it possible for him to undertake this work, which has relevance not only for Reformation history but also contemporary conversations about cooperation between Christian churches in Canada and beyond.


Cameron So, Biology

Tomlinson Scholar-Cameron SoCameron So is a first year PhD student in the Conservation, Ecology, Evolution, and Behaviour group within the Department of Biology. After completing his master’s degree in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, he is interested in combining genomic tools and field studies to understand how plants will adapt to changing environments across spatial scales. His interests lie between the intersection of conservation genetics and environmental impacts caused by climate change. Importantly, his research aims to aid the conservation of plant species vulnerable to extirpation or extinction in Canada.

The Tomlinson Doctoral Fellowship has made it possible for Cameron to pursue his research questions of interest. He is excited to collaborate with regional conservation organizations to further the protection and conservation of biodiversity in Canada and worldwide. He is grateful for becoming part of the larger McGill community and looks forward to carrying out research goals.


Charlotte Spruzen, Earth & Planetary Sciences

Tomlinson Scholar-Charlotte SpruzenI am a first-year PhD student working in the Precambrian Research Office and Publican Society, within the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences. My research focuses on the Cryogenian period of Earth history, which lasted from 720 to 635 million years ago. During this time, the Earth experienced two long-lived and extreme global glaciations, often referred to as 'Snowball Earth' events, in which ice sheets extended to the tropics and potentially covered the entire globe. The interval between these events saw the deposition of the first massive carbonate reef complexes in Earth's history. These ancient reefs are the focus of my PhD research, the underlying objectives of which will be to establish the timing of reef formation relative to the Snowball Earth events, evaluate microbial and potentially metazoan communities responsible for building the reefs, and to use the reefs to document past seawater chemistry.

I am honoured to be the recipient of the Tomlinson Fellowship, which makes it possible for me to pursue my research at McGill.


Corinne Sejourne, Psychology

Tomlinson Scholar-Corinne Sejourne Corinne is a doctoral student in the Clinical Psychology program. She was drawn to the field by a longstanding interest in the underlying mechanisms and clinical application of emotion and emotion regulation. Wide-reaching experiences — including clinical psychology research in depression, bipolar disorder, dementia and caregiver populations; people operations work in the technology sector; and ongoing personal yoga practice and yoga teaching to both clinical and non-clinical populations — have influenced her research aims.

Questions at the heart of her work include: How do emotion and emotion regulation operate, and what are the downstream effects? How can we use a mechanistic understanding of these processes to develop and implement evidence-based treatments that promote adaptive emotion regulation widely? She is honored to have received the generous Tomlinson fellowship, which will enable her seek answers to these questions. Specifically, under the supervision of Dr. Blaine Ditto and Dr. Anna Weinberg, she will investigate how emotion and emotion regulation can operate to confer psychological resilience in diverse populations, and how mechanistic (i.e. psychophysiologic) understanding of this correlation can be applied and disseminated through thoughtful and technological interventions. She is especially interested in serving caregiver populations such as parents, family members of patients, and healthcare workers.


Daniel Jacinto, Political Science

Daniel JacintoDaniel is a first-year PhD student in the Department of Political Science at McGill University, investigating the relationship between rogue states and international global governance. The term 'rogue state' has been used to refer to regimes that openly challenge the fundamental norms of the international community through aggression, human rights abuses, and the pursuit of weapons of mass destruction. Such states have been perceived by politicians, policymakers, and the public to be immune to the pressures of international society and fundamentally opposed to its core values. However, the reality is that many rogue states can be seen, to some degree, to act in line with international norms and do occasionally respond to international pressure. How should we characterize the relationship between rogue states and international norms? To address this, Daniel’s research looks at how North Korea—the archetypal rogue state—engages with international norms by examining instances of partial or token compliance. His dissertation, supported by the Richard H. Tomlinson Doctoral Fellowship, aims to demonstrate how rogue states are, in fact, sensitive to pressures to conform with international norms, but at the same time take strategic steps to limit their compliance obligations when such obligations go against their political interests.


Gabriel Lévesque, Sociology

Tomlinson Scholar-Gabriel LévesqueProtracted public health controversies have often been understood by social scientists as being directly related to the ability of industries to deceive politicians. Whether it is uranium, tobacco, lead or glyphosate, research shows that the safety of these products has remained unquestioned for too long due to industry interference. While industrial deceit certainly tells part of the story, how can we understand the frequency of this kind of controversy without resorting to structural explanations? Furthermore, if industry’s involvement is constant across cases, how can we explain that controversies vary in length and gravity?

Focusing on the case of asbestos, my doctoral research seeks to provide answers to these questions. Major health hazards of asbestos exposure were identified as early as the 1930s. However, in Canada and the United States, asbestos mining only ended between the 1980s and 2010s. In my research, I want to know what structural factors have enabled this significant delay. I explore the role of economic dependence of mono-industrial towns on industry and of geographical concentration of risks as factors that prevented greater awareness on asbestos hazards. I am honoured to be granted a Tomlinson Doctoral Fellowship, which allows me to pursue this research in the Sociology Department at McGill.


Kelsey Huson, Educational & Counselling Psychology

Tomlinson Scholar-Kelsey HusonKelsey Huson obtained her Honours BA with Specialization in Psychology and a minor in Gerontology at the University of Ottawa in 2012. The following year, she completed the MSc in Public Health and Health Systems program at the University of Waterloo, under the supervision of Dr. Paul Stolee. Prior to returning to graduate school, Kelsey worked in the field of research and program evaluation across various settings, including public health, academia, and non-profit organizations. More recently, Kelsey completed the MA in Counselling Psychology program at Western University, where she supported the adaptation of healthy relationships programming for Indigenous youth, under the supervision of Dr. Claire Crooks. Kelsey is currently a doctoral student in the PhD in Counselling Psychology program at McGill University, under the supervision of Dr. Dennis Wendt. Kelsey’s research interests include the development and evaluation of strengths- and culture-based interventions related to mental health, substance use, healthy relationships, and community wellness through collaborative partnerships with Indigenous communities.

"It is an honour to be a recipient of the 2021-22 Tomlinson Doctoral Fellowship, which allows me to continue pursuing my research interests as a doctoral student at McGill University. My PhD thesis project will focus on the ongoing impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on traditional healing and culture-based substance use treatments for Indigenous peoples and communities. It is an absolute privilege to conduct this work and I look forward to further opportunities presented as part of being a Tomlinson Scholar."


Scott Sugden, Natural Resource Sciences

Tomlinson Scholar-Scott Sugden I joined the Department of Natural Resource Sciences in 2021 to study how climate change affects arctic ecosystems. We know that increasing arctic temperatures will cause glaciers to melt and permafrost to thaw, but we are less certain about what happens afterward. My research focuses on understanding the biological, geological, and chemical mechanisms behind how microorganisms help “build” brand-new ecosystems from the nutrient-poor soils left behind after glaciers retreat. Will these ecosystems become carbon sources or sinks? How will they contribute to global nutrient cycles? Can we use these systems as models for bioremediation programs designed to “restart” degraded ecosystems? These soils will eventually support plant and animal life, and by studying the early transition from lifeless dirt to a vibrant ecosystem, I intend to explore the future of the arctic landscape.

 

2020-2021

Adam Groh, Integrated Program in Neuroscience

Tomlinson Scholar-Groh Adam Groh is a first year PhD student working in the lab of Dr. Jo Anne Stratton within the Faculty of Neurology and Neurosurgery at the Montreal Neurological Institute-Hospital. His research focuses primarily on ependymal cells, a ciliated epithelium that lines the cerebral ventricles. Ependymal cells are vital regulators of cerebrospinal fluid flow, and interestingly, are also disrupted in diseases such as multiple sclerosis. Despite this, these cells have remained critically understudied compared to others in the brain. Adam’s research will investigate the influence of ependymal cell disruption on wider brain health using a novel transgenic model, while also assessing human brain tissues collected in collaboration with the Douglas Bell Canada Brain Bank. His project employs a variety of techniques, such as in vivo magnetic resonance imaging, single cell RNA sequencing, and immunohistochemistry. The Tomlinson Doctoral Fellowship has given Adam the financial stability necessary to focus entirely on his research and to grow as a leader and educator in neuroscience. Overall, Adam is excited to be a part of the Tomlinson community, to disseminate his research widely, and to further our understanding of ependymal cells as key support cells within the brain.


Alberto Acquilino, Music

Tomlinson Scholar-AquilinoAlberto Acquilino is a first-year PhD student at the Computational Acoustic Modeling Laboratory in the Music Technology Area and active member of the Centre for Interdisciplinary Research in Music Media and Technology. He combines his master’s degrees in Musical Performance and Mechanical Engineering with the aim of developing new technologies in support of music pedagogy. Learning to master a musical instrument involves different technical features that still have to be addressed by music technologies, such as facility with timbre, dynamics, steadiness of tone, attack and release precision and refinement, embouchure configuration and variation, finger position and movement, posture and breathing, other than intonation and rhythm. Alberto’s research, funded by the Tomlinson Scholarship, intends to apply novel signal processing and feature extraction techniques, together with intuitive and user-friendly software interfaces, to create new tools that can help instrumentalists and teachers in becoming more efficient and effective with their practice and instruction time.


Amanda Doucette, Linguistics

Tomlinson Scholar-DoucetteI am a first-year PhD student in the Department of Linguistics. My research examines how language is represented in the human brain. Specifically, I am looking at how phonology - the organization of speech sounds in a language - is learned and represented. By using machine learning techniques to model human behavior, I believe we can begin to understand what the structure of linguistic knowledge looks like. How much of our linguistic ability is innate, and how much is learned? The Tomlinson Fellowship has made it possible for me to pursue these questions as a PhD student at McGill, and I am excited to continue my research as a part of the McGill community.


Anna Halepaska, Architecture


Dennis Ohm, Anthropology

Tomlinson Scholar-OhmAfter studying Politics, Gender Studies, and Economics in Frankfurt, Gothenburg, Berlin and New York, I joined the PhD program in Anthropology in 2020. My research interests include queer archives, affect theory, ethnographic fiction, anarchism, and the anthropology of epidemics. In my PhD project, I investigate the politics of intimacy, love, and relationality through the lens of architecture, social movements, and temporality. I hope that my research will contribute not only to an understanding of how the spaces that are considered most intimate are actually political sites that consolidate and sustain capitalist, hetero-patriarchal, and racist structures of domination, but also how resistance in the past, present, and future undermine and re-configure these structures as well as the affective grammars that underwrite them.


Eleftherios Samartzis, Experimental Surgery

Tomlinson Scholar-SamartzisAs a trained gynecologist from Switzerland pursuing subspeciality training in Gynecologic Oncology at McGill University, the Tomlinson Fellowship has made it possible for me to pursue a PhD program in Experimental Surgery at McGill during my Clinical Fellowship. My PhD project assesses the acceptance and clinical performance of a novel intrauterine molecular screening test – DOvEEgene – to detect ovarian and endometrial cancer early. DOvEEgene is as an acronym for Detecting Ovarian and Endometrial cancer Early using genomics. This innovative screening test aims at improving prognosis of these cancers, which are currently within the top 4 causes of cancer-deaths in Canadian women, by increasing early detection. I am deeply honored to be a Tomlinson Fellowship recipient and grateful to Richard H. Tomlinson for his extraordinary legacy.


Emma McKay, Integrated Studies in Education


Maggie Chang, Biology


Marjolaine Lamontagne, Political Science

Tomlinson Scholar-Lamontagne Who speaks on behalf of citizens internationally? If the coronavirus pandemic has shown us anything, it is that regional and federated governments are constitutionally responsible for, and hold distinctive views on, a great number of global issues, including healthcare, environmental politics, and the protection of cultural diversity. Yet, international law excludes them from multilateral organizations where global debates are held, and national and multilateral officials are reluctant to acknowledge their growing participation in international politics.

I am honored to be a recipient of the Richard H. Tomlinson Doctoral Fellowship, which allows me to fully dedicate myself to the pursuit of my Ph.D. in International Relations and Comparative Politics. My thesis research will investigate the transformation of diplomatic practices in multilateral organizations and forums where substate actors increasingly assume a formal and informal presence. Among other methods, I will interview diplomatic representatives from substate and national governments to apprehend the informal “ways of doing things” and “background assumptions” that contribute to the reproduction of state sovereignty beyond institutions and political discourse. The goal will be to examine if and how the balance of political legitimacy and the distribution of diplomatic tasks between central and substate governments are changing in the era of globalization, and what are the effects of this transition on global and national governance.


Mathis Messager, Geography

Tomlinson Scholar-MessagerMy research seeks to inform the management and conservation of freshwater ecosystems and, in turn, support human cultures and livelihoods that depend on these ecosystems. I take a multidisciplinary approach, leveraging ecology and geosciences, together with the most recent advances in statistics and computing, to promote freshwater sustainability.

My doctoral research, made possible by the Tomlinson doctoral fellowship, will focus on improving our understanding and promote the conservation of rivers that flow only part of the year. From Himalayan snow-fed creeks and Saharan wadis, to small streams in British Columbian rainforests, most rivers and streams on Earth flow only part of the year, yet we know very little about them. This oversight contributes to the degradation of these ecosystems, the main source of water and livelihood for millions of people. Through my thesis, I intend to correct this oversight and enable their conservation.

 

2019-2020

Alexander Herbert, Chemistry 

I am a first-year PhD student in the department of Chemistry working in Dr. Eric McCalla’s group. My research concerns lithium-ion (Li-ion) batteries. Nearly everyone has used a device powered by a Li-ion battery. They’re in our phones, tablets, laptops, and increasingly, our vehicles. This isn’t by accident. Compared to other types of batteries, Li-ion stores a large amount of high-quality energy in a small package. However, most batteries used today rely on cobalt-containing positive electrodes which are expensive, toxic, and harmful to the environment both to obtain and dispose of. One way to reduce the economic and environmental cost of these batteries is to recycle the cathode material. So far, this has been a challenging process and current economically-viable techniques are prone to contamination from metals such as aluminum. I’m working to increase understanding of the effects of these contaminants on a vast number of cathode materials and develop materials that are more easily recycled by having tolerance to contaminant metals, or potentially develop materials that can use these impurities to their advantage. To achieve this goal, specially designed batteries containing 64 materials are made where each of the samples has different composition and will include a small amount of contaminant metal. Then high-throughput experiments are performed on all 64 materials at the same time to determine which materials perform best. Using these high-throughput techniques, over 100 materials can be analyzed each week. For the top-performing materials, I take a deeper dive into the material, using more specialized techniques to uncover the reason they perform better than the others. Thanks to the Tomlinson fellowship, I have been able to fully focus on optimizing and perfecting the techniques described above using specialized 3D printed tools. This will allow me to screen many more materials more efficiently to give the best chance of uncovering next-generation materials and developing guidelines for the Li-ion battery recycling process making this ubiquitous technology a little greener.


Ege Bicaker, Psychology

Ege Bicaker carries her research in Clinical Psychology. Her research examines the factors that increase risk for and maintain eating disorder symptoms. More specifically, Ege is interested in understanding the role of self-compassion and experiential avoidance in eating disorders through the use of multiple methodologies. Central to her study is investigating whether self-compassion interventions could efficiently alleviate eating disorder symptoms. It is her goal to understand whether similar interventions can be used for different populations in a cost-efficient manner. She hopes to translate the findings of her research into the effective intervention strategies that could be easily adopted in mental health care settings.


Juan Giraldo, History

I’m a Colombian historian trained in the interdisciplinary crossroads between social, agrarian, and environmental fields with experience in archival research, geographical information systems, and journalistic investigation with victims of Colombian armed conflict. My research, funded by 2019 Tomlinson scholarship, explores the environmental history of cocoa farming in the formation of local agro ecological systems among the black communities of south-western Colombia in the period between 1850 and 1950. My purpose is to reconstruct the agro ecologies of freedom built in the wake of slavery by these peasant communities pushed to the natural frontiers of the colonial territorial order. Recovering this history, I believe, will resource contemporary discussions over how to rebuild the agro ecological foundations of Afro-descended communities in the aftermath of Colombia’s internal armed conflict.


Mary Miedema, Biological and Biomedical Engineering

The Tomlinson Fellowship has made it possible for me to pursue a Ph.D. in biological engineering within the thriving neuroimaging community here at McGill. Not only does this award support my research on signal processing techniques for functional magnetic resonance imaging, it helps me make time to engage with the McGill community by serving on the Graduate Engineering Equity Committee. I’m thankful for the opportunity to grow as a researcher and a leader as a Tomlinson Scholar.


Mohamed Dikna, Law


Muhammad Taha Manzoor, Mechanical Engineering 

Mr. Taha hails from Pakistan (Bhakkar). He completed his BS in Mechanical Engineering from National University of Sciences and Technology (NUST) in 2016, securing Chancellor’s Silver Medal. Later, he moved to Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) where he completed his MS in Mechanical Engineering. During his stay at KAIST, he worked on the application of hybrid nanocomposites to magnetorheological fluids and electromechanical actuators. Recently, his research findings were published in Advanced Functional Materials (I.F: 15.6) journal.
Mr. Taha joined McGill university in Fall 2019 as a doctoral candidate. His main research goal is to solve the problems concerning the long-term storage of solar energy. Currently, he is investigating key properties of molten salts which govern radiation, convection, and volumetric heat generation interactions.  Mr. Taha is also an enthusiastic writer, with particular interest in world politics and history.


Quinn Abram, Biochemistry 

My research focuses on how the molecular evolution of Zika virus (ZIKV) contributes to the recent epidemics in South and Central America. In contrast to historical strains of the virus that mainly circulated in Africa and Southeast Asia, contemporary viral strains from the recent epidemics were associated with new neurological symptoms, and are more infectious in humans and the mosquitos that transmit the virus. I’m interested in how changes in amino acid sequence and RNA genome structure in the contemporary viral strains contribute to the increased infectivity of these strains in mosquito cells. My PhD project will use molecular biology and virology techniques to measure how these biochemical changes in the contemporary strains impact the ability of ZIKV to enter cells, replicate, and produce new infectious viruses. The Tomlinson Fellowship provides financial support that will allow me to focus on conducting my research and unlock opportunities to collaborate and disseminate my research that would otherwise not be available. Through my research, our knowledge of ZIKV biology in mosquitos will be advanced, which will provide a foundation for the development of novel mosquito-based control strategies for combating future epidemics of ZIKV and other mosquito-borne viruses.


Renzo Jose Carlos Calderon Anyosa, Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Occupational Health


Shiann Whitebean, Integrated Studies in Education

I am honoured to be a 2019-2020 recipient of the Richard H. Tomlinson Doctoral Fellowship. I am grateful for the generosity of the donors and the backing I have received at McGill University. My path in academia over the past several years included many challenges and triumphs. To the best of my ability, I have strived to be a positive role model to my family and community. This funding supports my research on Indian Day Schools in my home community of Kahnawà:ke. My research brings Kanien’kehá:ka (Mohawk) knowledge, stories and voices to the forefront. Indian Day Schools were a source of intergenerational trauma for many First Nations, Inuit, and Métis communities. I hope to demonstrate through both my research and personal journey that our strength and resilience runs deeper than our trauma. As Indigenous peoples, we can harness the transformational power of education for the sake of our future generations.


Stuart Jackson, Music


 

2018-2019

Tomlinson Doctoral Scholars

Heather Anderson Anthropology
Durbis Javier Castillo Pazos Chemistry
Clara Freeman Psychology
Keavin Moore Earth and Planetary Sciences
Alvi Rahman Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Occupational Health

2017-2018

Tomlinson Doctoral Scholars

Khalil Alhandawi Mechanical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering
Renaud Boucher-Browning Performance Studies, Faculty of Music
Elizabeth Du Pre Integrated Program in Neuroscience, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences
Guido Guberman Integrated Program in Neuroscience, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences
Stephanie Gumuchian Educational and Counselling Psychology, Faculty of Education
Jessica Mettler Educational and Counselling Psychology, Faculty of Education
Rouzbeh Modarresi-Yazdi Physics, Faculty of Science
Gwenaëlle Philibert-Lignières Educational and Counselling Psychology, Faculty of Education
Vladimir Sicca Gonçalves Mathematics and Statistics, Faculty of Science
Maria Yepez Anthropology, Faculty of Arts
Mingfei Zhao Computer Science, Faculty of Science

2016-2017

 

Tomlinson Doctoral Scholars

Khalil Alhandawi Mechanical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering
Renaud Boucher-Browning Performance Studies, Faculty of Music
Elizabeth Du Pre Integrated Program in Neuroscience, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences
Guido Guberman Integrated Program in Neuroscience, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences
Stephanie Gumuchian Educational and Counselling Psychology, Faculty of Education
Jessica Mettler Educational and Counselling Psychology, Faculty of Education
Rouzbeh Modarresi-Yazdi Physics, Faculty of Science
Gwenaëlle Philibert-Lignières Educational and Counselling Psychology, Faculty of Education
Vladimir Sicca Gonçalves Mathematics and Statistics, Faculty of Science
Maria Yepez Anthropology, Faculty of Arts
Mingfei Zhao Computer Science, Faculty of Science

2015-2016

Tomlinson Doctoral Scholars

Prabakaran Balasubramanian Mechanical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering
Mabel Carabali Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences
Dana Carsley Educational and Counselling Psychology, Faculty of Education
Stephanie Chipeur Faculty of Law
Karolin Dietrich Bioresource Engineering, Faculty of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences
Sara Doody Integrated Studies in Education, Faculty of Education
Tomasz Grusiecki Art History and Communciations, Faculty of Arts
Amanda Jarrell Educational and Counselling Psychology, Faculty of Education
Md Ghulam Saber Electrical and Computer Engineering, Faculty of Engineering
Shoshana Schwebel German Studies, Faculty of Arts

2014-2015

Tomlinson Doctoral Scholars

Benjamin Armstrong Department of Psychology, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences
Peter Bullerwell School of Religious Studies, Faculty of Arts
Stefanie Carsley History and Classical Studies, Faculty of Arts
Shilpa Chennakrishnaiah Experimental Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences
Jesse Dinneen School of Information Studies, Faculty of Arts
Margaret Doll Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences
Mathew Evans Chemical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering
Mikhail Karpukhin Mathematics and Statistics, Faculty of Science
Connor Kemp Schulich School of Music
Philip Kesner Integrated Program in Neuroscience, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences
Carlotta Marturano Schulich School of Music
Boris Mayer Natural Resource Sciences, Faculty of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences 
Ebenezar Mbachu Integrated Studies in Education, Faculty of Education 
Omar Qaqish English, Faculty of Arts
Jesse Rieb Natural Resource Sciences, Faculty of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences
Molly Sauter Art History and Communications, Faculty of Arts
Eleanor Stephenson Geography, Faculty of Science
Alexander Tuttle Psychology, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences

2013-2014

Tomlinson Postdoctoral Scholars 

Dr. Claudia Maria Denkinger Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences
Dr. Michael David Wasserman Department of Anthropology, Faculty of Arts

Tomlinson Doctoral Scholars

Richard Paul Cummin Christian Thought and History Area, Faculty of Religious Studies
Benjamin D. Dangl Department of History, Faculty of Arts
Josephine Iacarella Department of Biology, Faculty of Science
Jason Jensen Department of Sociology, Faculty of Arts
Maiya Jordan Department of Philosophy, Faculty of Arts
Md Golam Kibria Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Faculty of Engineering
Vijay Krishnan Kolinjivadi
Department of Bioresource Engineering, Faculty of Agricultural & Environmental Sciences
Susanna Barbara Konsztowic Department of Psychology, Faculty of Science
Igor Kozlov Department of Physics, Faculty of Science
Pierre Lubin Department of Integrated Studies in Education, Faculty of Education
Dorothy Yasmine Maguire
Department of Natural Resource Sciences, Faculty of Agricultural & Environmental Sciences
Blair Adrianus Major
Faculty of Law
Hossein Mansour
Department of Music, Faculty of Music
Rachel Jane Sharkey
Department of Neuroscience, Integrated Pgm, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences
Gregory John Trevors
Department of Educational & Counselling Psychology, Faculty of Education
Daniel Zysman
Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences

Tomlinson Master's Scholars

Ismail Badawi
School of Computer Science, Faculty of Science
Ievgenii Vladimirovich Grebennikov
Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Faculty of Science
Vanja Polic
Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Science
Guillaume Saulnier -Comte
Department of Computer Science, Faculty of Science
Chun -Chih Wang
Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Science, Faculty of Science
Anna Pauline Zamm
Department of Psychology, Faculty of Science

Tomlinson Graduate Teaching Fellows

Drew Bush
Doctoral Candidate, Department of Geography
Corey Chivers
Doctoral Candidate, Department of Biology, Faculty of Science
Ria Ghai
Doctoral Candidate, Department of Biology, Faculty of Science
Jonathan Guillemette
Doctoral Candidate, Department of Physics, Faculty of Science
Sofia Ibarraran
Doctoral Candidate, Department of Biology, Faculty of Science
Elizabeth Ledwosinska
Doctoral Candidate, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Michael Ounsworth
Master’s Candidate, Department of Computer Science
Sarah Wilson
Doctoral Candidate, Department of Geography
Jonathan Verrett
Doctoral Candidate, Chemical Engineering

Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial 4.0 International LicenseThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial 4.0 International License.
Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies, McGill University.

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