The Research Committee ensures that the research at the LRI is leading edge and of the highest quality.

About

The Research Committee members are made up of all levels and areas of expertise, without distinction of their membership to other institutes or centres. More specifically, its members:

  • Evaluate the research merit of proposals submitted for consideration to the institute. This includes evaluation of the unifying, interdisciplinary nature of the proposal and the relevance of the research lines of inquiry and projects to the uOttawa strategic plan and the mission and vision of the Institute. It also includes evaluation of proposals that are destined to external partnership contracts and agreement;
  • Provide advice to the Steering Committee with regards to research direction, outcomes and dissemination;
  • Transmit research committee’s classification of proposals with constructive comments to the Steering Committee;
  • Report to the Steering Committee.

Members of the Research Committee

Brian Ray

Brian Ray

Faculty of Arts, Research Committee Lead

Brian Ray is currently the Vice-Dean Research in the Faculty of Arts. A member of the Department of Geography, Environment and Geomatics, his research generally revolves around the ways in which people organize their everyday lives in multi-ethnic cities. Brian’s research interests include discrimination, racism, and anti-racism in Canada, evolving linguistic landscapes in Ottawa-Gatineau, housing affordability and homeownership among refugees and immigrants, gender inequality, social networks, and the geographic dimensions of employment in large metropolitan areas. Some of Brian’s recently funded research projects include the Toronto Second Generation Project (with York University) and Ottawa-based projects in association with the Migration and Resilience in Urban Canada/Immigration through a SSHRC-funded grant.

Amélie Gauthier-Beaupré

Amélie Gauthier-Beaupré

Faculty of Health Sciences

Amélie Gauthier-Beaupré is a Ph.D. candidate in Population Health at the University of Ottawa. Dr. Jeffrey W. Jutai is supervising her work which revolves around developing a framework for policy-making for older adults’ self-management of disabilities using information and communication technologies. Amélie completed an Honours Bachelor’s degree in Health Sciences and completed her first year of Master of Science with a specialization in Interdisciplinary Health Sciences, both at the University of Ottawa. After her first year in the Master’s degree, she fast tracked to her current Ph.D. in Population Health at the University of Ottawa. Amélie participated in entrepreneurial activities which are the product of one of AGE-WELL’s HQP opportunities. She is the co-creator of MouvMat, an interactive digital gaming surface for older adults to remain physically, cognitively and socially active in their daily lives. Beyond her academic and entrepreneurial activities, Amélie works for the social determinants of health division of the Public Health Agency of Canada, where she focuses on health equity integration in policy, programs and services. Overall, Amélie’s activities all revolve around one main goal: empower older Canadians from coast to coast to live meaningful and dignified lives.

Michelle Giroux

Michelle Giroux

Faculty of Law

Michelle Giroux, LL.L. (Ottawa), M.A. Medical Law and Ethics (London, UK) is Full Professor at the Faculty of Law, Civil Law Section, at uOttawa and Member of the Québec Bar. She is also a member of the Interdisciplinary Research Laboratory on the Rights of the Child, of the Centre for Health Law, Policy & Ethics and of the LIFE Institute, at uOttawa. She is a specialist in family and persons law, medical law, bioethics, multidisciplinary approach and comparative law methods. She is interested in the issue of end of life care, including medical aid in dying. In 2012, Professor Giroux was on the panel of legal experts appointed by the government of Québec to implement the report of the Select Committee on Dying with Dignity. In September 2015, the Law Commission of Ontario invited her to sit as a member of the Advisory Group for the Project on Improving the Last Stages of Life. She speaks at conferences and publishes in Canada and abroad, namely in the field of healthcare at the end of life. As the President of the Québec Society of Comparative Law, in 2014, she organized a conference on the Québec law reform on end of life care at McGill University, spoke in a symposium on advance car planning at the Age Well in the 21st century—International Congress of Francophone Association of Gerontology and Geriatrics. She is actually working on a comparative research study on advance medical directives and end of life care.

Burak Kantarci

Burak Kantarci

Faculty of Engineering

Dr. Burak Kantarci is a globally recognized researcher in Computer Science and Engineering, particularly in mobile computing, mobile crowd-sensing and AI-driven solutions for secure and trustworthy cyberspace. He is the founding director of the Next Generation Communications and Computing Networks (NEXTCON) lab at the University of Ottawa where he is currently an Associate Professor. His current research addresses Internet of things, Behavioural Biometrics, Cyber and physical security, privacy and trust, and machine learning for digital health. He is the co-author of over 180 publications in established journals and conferences, and 13 book chapters. Dr. Kantarci is known for his contributions to the quantification of data trustworthiness in community/crowd-sensing systems, and game theoretic incentives to promote user participation in community sensing campaigns with high value data. Furthermore, he led the research that introduced behaviometric authentication solutions on personal devices. Dr. Kantarci has served as the Technical Program Co-Chair/Symposium Co-chair of more than fifteen international conferences/symposia/workshops. Dr. Kantarci is a senior member of IEEE, and a Distinguished Speaker of the ACM. Dr. Kantarci’s research has been supported by various funding agencies and industry partners. More specifically, he has secured and managed funds from various agencies including U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF), NSF-Industry University Collaborative Research Center for Identification Technology and Research (CITER), NSERC, Ontario Centres of Excellence (OCE), and MITACS. Further information about Dr. Kantarci can be found at: http://nextconlab.academy

Juana M. Liceras

Juana M. Liceras

Faculty of Arts

Juana M. Liceras is a Distinguished University Professor and a professor of Hispanic and General Linguistics in the Department of Modern Languages and the Department of Linguistics of the University of Ottawa as well as the director of the Language Acquisition Research Laboratory of the Faculty of Arts of this university. She is the Director of the Nebrija-Santander Global Chair in Spanish as a Migrant and Refugee Language and a Senior Researcher in the Applied Languages Program of the Universidad Nebrija (Madrid, Spain). She is also editor-in-chief of Languages and of the Spanish Journal of Applied Linguistics (RESLA/SJAL), a member of the editorial board of several periodicals, among them Second Language Research, Journal of Spanish Language Teaching and Lengua y Migración, as well as a member of the editorial board of the John Benjamins’ book series Romance Languages and Linguistic Theory and Studies in Hispanic and Lusophone Linguistics. Her research interests and publications centre around the relationship between linguistic theory and language acquisition, bilingualism in typically and non-typically developing populations, psycholinguistics, comparative grammar and language contact.

Linda Garcia

Linda Garcia, Ex. Officio

Faculty of Health Sciences, Director of the LRI, Steering Committee Chair

Linda Garcia is a Professor in the Interdisciplinary School of Health Sciences and Founding Director of the LIFE Research Institute (LRI). Her personal research interests focus on the impact of physical, social, technological and clinical environments on the quality of life of individuals with neurological disorders, especially dementia. She is interested in developing interventions that include approaches based on human interactions, especially in long-term care living environments. Prior to joining the University of Ottawa in 1993, she worked for over 10 years in a large teaching hospital as a Speech-Language Pathologist. After completing her PhD with Dr. Yves Joanette, and helping found the Audiology and Speech-Language Pathology Program, she created the Interdisciplinary School of Health Sciences and became its first Director in 2010, prior to becoming Vice-Dean of the Faculty of Health Sciences from 2014 to 2017.