1. Communities of Innovation: A functional categorization

    September 1, 2010 by AURP Canada

    By Dr, Kamiel S. Gabriel

    RE$EARCH MONEY
    July 19, 2010
    Volume 24, Number 11, Page 8

    Webster defines research as an “investigation or experimentation aimed at the discovery and interpretation of facts, revision of accepted theories or laws in the light of new fats, or practical application of such new or revised theories or laws”. This is a far cry from the simplistic classification commonly uttered in discussions these days. I am referring to the debate on what kind of institutions should focus on performing “basic” research versus “applied” research? As a researcher for more than 30 years, and a senior research administrator for over a decade, I find this increasingly popular categorization very simplistic, incomplete and alarmingly naive.

    Harkening back to the Webster’s definition, research by its nature (an in almost every field of inquiry) is a complex, non-linear process in which the outcome is often not known or pre-determined. Whether it is the discovery of a new drug, the invention of a new mechanical system for more efficient extraction of natural resources, creating the next social network or improving literacy levels through interactive internet-based unties, these examples go through a process of discovery, initial testing of the hypothesis and improvements made to initial conditions/assumptions. Once verified, they are finally introduced to the public place as a new concept, theory, law, product or service.

    The problem with such simplicity goes beyond differences of opinions or disagreement on definitions. The rhetoric has in recent months moved to the public areas with heads of academic institutions across Canada debating what kind of institutions should be focused on (and ultimately funded) performing research versus undergraduate teaching. The debate, while not dealing primarily with the question of basic versus applied research, assumes that a research divide can be crated based on arithmetically-driven metrics. These include measures such as research awards received by institutions and number of citations and faculty awards. While such metrics reflect the emphasis institutions put on attracting research dollars to support their research goals, they don’t tell the whole story. Namely, what do institutions do with the research output?

    There is also growing rhetoric in S&T department of provincial and federal governments to focus future research funding on industry-driven research (versus research funds directed to academia). This is obviously motivated by the emphasis on commercialization of research output and the desire to see a higher return on investment gained from funding research. Some put it as focusing on the D side of R&D (rather than the traditional focus on the R side).

    It is easy to understand the motives behind each of the two arguments. The academy is seen to be arguing for “research for the sake of knowledge”, and that research dividends in terms of commercialization and spin-offs can take years and cannot be predicted at the outset. Governments and businesses, however, advocate for short term deliverables by putting research dollars into the hands of industry to conduct targeted research aimed at solving “real-life” problems and, as a result, may increase productivity, enhance creativity, and accelerate commercialization of research outcomes.

    Asking Different Questions

    While the motives behind each argument are justified, it’s clear that we need to ask different questions that help us understand the underlying motives and hopefully see the bigger picture. While the self-interest of the academy is to promote research for the sake of knowledge, and that of industry and governments to support research efforts that directly contribute to problem solving, the argument appears to be missing a couple of crucial questions. First, how about receptor capacity? Unless there is a community of innovators ready to exploit the proceeds from research for the benefits of society, such knowledge opportunities will remain buried in library archives and conference proceedings. It is for this reason that attention should be first given to the building communities of innovation (COI).

    A COI is a well integrated research business community where post-secondary institutions are effectively linked to the business and social communities. It is a community where much of the research and innovation activities are aligned with the community’s strategic growth opportunities, and where entrepreneurs are nourished and supported. In short, it is a community where the self interests of the academy and those of the local governments and business community are well aligned. The Waterloo, London and Ottawa regions are good examples of such communities.

    So, should higher education institutions be categorized based on whether they focus on basic or applied research? Undergraduate teaching or research initiatives? Suffice to say it is in this domain, we also appear to be taking a very narrow view of a much wider and more complex world.

    Given that research and scholarly activities are part of the formal duties required of faculty members at post-secondary institutions (and have now become more of interest to college professors as well), it is safe to assume that faculty members are well motivated to do scholarly work whether they are located in Thunder Bay or downtown Toronto. There will always be pockets of very good science and research communities regardless of where they are physically located. The answer to the question then becomes one where we should consider what emphasis institutions place on research for the sake of knowledge, versus research that is well “stitched” around the community’s economical and social goals.

    I see a third category of post-secondary institutions taking shape in Ontario and Canada. In addition to traditional institutions that focus either on undergraduate teaching or fundamental research, we now see a thir4d category with its focus placed more on ensuring that they are well connected to the communities they serve. I call these innovation-driven institutions. Applied arts and colleges who aspire to be engaged in the innovation agenda rit well in this category without compromising their main mission of training the next generation of much needed trades.

    Kamiel Gabriel, PhD, MBA, PEng, FCAE, is the founding associate provost of Research & Graduate Studies at the University of Ontario Institute of Technology, Oshawa ON. Over the past year, he was on secondement to the Ontario Ministry of Research & Innovation as its ADM Research and first science adviser.

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  2. New APRTQ President Elected

    August 24, 2010 by AURP Canada

    Mario Monette elected President of the Association des parcs se recherché et technopoles du Quebec for a one-year term.

    Montreal, June 30, 2010 – during the General Meeting of the Association des parcs de recherché et technopoles due Quebec (APRTQ) held on June 16, 2010, in Bromont, members elected Technopark Montreal President and CEO Mario Monette as its new president.

    While Monette stated that he was pleased by the appointment, he reminded members that: “the challenge in developing Quebec can only be met with innovation and recognition on the part of our government agencies of the need to upgrade the host infrastructures of start-up and foreign technological companies that choose to do business is Quebec.”

    On the heels of the Quebec government’s announcement of the new 2010-2013 Quebec Research and Innovation Strategy (QRIS), the new president said he was pleased to see that Quebec has set out even more ambitious research and innovation return objectives. He hopes that science parks will play an even greater role within the framework of this new strategy by hosting even more joint industrial research projects or upgrading existing infrastructures. The new president feels strongly that “science parks remain premiere sites when it comes to setting up common research infrastructures.”

    The APRTQ brings together world class science and technology parks from across Quebec so as to help ensure their harmonious development, generate synergies, and boost their profile and standing across the province and worldwide. To this end, the Association pursues networking, prospecting and host activities with a view to supporting the development of the primary infrastructures which constitute Quebec’s science and technology parks. For further information, please visit www.qprtq.com

     

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  3. Nature Presents a Special Editorial Feature on Science Parks

    August 10, 2010 by AURP Canada

    Nature Publishing Group (NPG) is a publisher of high impact scientific and medical information in print and online. NPG publishes journals, online databases, and services across the life, physical, chemical and applied sciences and clinical medicine. NPG will be publishing a new editorial feature in Nature Biotechnology and Nature Reviews Drug Discovery. Titled: Modern Evolution of the Ideal Science Park, the editorial will aim to focus on research clusters in Canada as well as other prominent regions around the world.

    For more information about Nature Biotechnology and Drug Discovery, please visit www.nature.com/siteindex/index.html.

    If you would like addition information about this feature, please contact:

    Neville Burroughs
    Account Executive, Nature Jobs Canada
    Nature Publishing Group
    P: 212.726.9689 or 800.989.7118
    n.burroughs@us.nature.com
    www.naturejobs.com


  4. Saskatchewan disease control laboratory – more than just diagnostics

    August 3, 2010 by AURP Canada

    The new Saskatchewan Disease Control Laboratory (SDCL) building at 5 Research Drive in Regina is a welcome addition to Innovation Place, but what, you may wonder, actually goes on behind the new glass and stone walls?

    Dr. Greg Horsman, Medical Director for SDCL sums it up this way. “The public health system of Saskatchewan is a network of teams working with a common goal to protect and enhance the health of the general public. This consists of the Medical Health Officers and their teams in the health regions and the Population Health team from the Ministry of Health, as well as the SDCL.”

    Since communicable diseases can be spread through a wide variety of means, SDCL has a long list of the types of tests they perform. Along with the publicly accessible water sample testing, SDCL provides services to health facilities which don’t have their own laboratories, providing diagnostic tests for bacterial, viral, fungal and parasitic infections. Using DNA-based molecular technologies, they detect, identify and keep track of a wide variety of infectious diseases. Sometimes, they find things they’re not even looking for and which leads to interesting research programs.

    For example, the Section Manager of Molecular Diagnostics at SDCL, Dr. Nick Antonishyn, recently co-authored a scientific paper identifying a genotype of the human papillomavirus with a higher risk of causing cervical cancer than previous studies around the world. This finding in Saskatchewan women has since been confirmed by other studies across Canada and other parts of the world and could have implications for monitoring vaccine efficacy. “Even though we are a public health lab and a service lab first, we do come across unusual things that haven’t been identified before,” says Horsman.

    Another example occurred during last year’s H1N1 epidemic, when the SDCL identified an unusual strain of influenza. “We found three cases from people who were working in a pig barn where the virus was behaving differently than the flu strain in widespread circulation,” said Horsman. It turned out to be a unique strain, the first time a new flu strain was identified in Saskatchewan. Horsman adds, “This is exciting stuff for microbiologists.”

    Horsman says the opportunity to explore these types of unexpected discoveries encourages the molecular biologists and chemists to stretch their knowledge base and keeps everyone on their toes.

    “This type of applied research is part of the culture we’ve created and it leads to medical health officers asking more questions because they know we will really look into things,” says Horsman. “SARS emphasized the important role public health laboratories have in looking for new and emerging pathogens, so it’s good to keep up research and development so we keep getting better at detecting unusual things.”

    For more information about the Saskatchewan Disease Control Laboratory, please go to www.health.gov.sk.ca/lab

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  5. Ag-west bio – welcoming the world in abic 2010

    by AURP Canada

    It’s the final countdown to the 10th Agricultural Biotechnology International Conference (ABIC) being held in Saskatoon from September 12 to 15. Long time client of Innovation Place Ag-West Bio Inc. is hosting the event for the fourth time. Dr. Wilf Keller, President and CEO of Ag-West Bio is the conference steering committee chair.

    “I’ve been involved with ABIC since it started back in 1996 and it’s evolved into a meeting that includes a lot more business leaders and managers rather than just a technical conference,” said Keller. “ABIC gives potential investors, international business partners and even legal firms a snapshot of where biotech is at as well as being a great networking opportunity.”

    Muriel Adams, Managing Director of the ABIC Foundation, has been overseeing the preparations for this conference for more than a year. She says delegates include major decision makers from several multinational corporations as well as policy makers, politicians and bureaucrats from around the world. “We’ve also got 15 start up companies, many of them are international and they usually come to this conference because of the opportunities for them to meet the corporate leaders as well as the researchers.”

    Many of those researchers will be participating in the poster competition. “The 56 posters in the competition is where we see the most technical information presented,” said Adams who adds, “It’s very high level work, usually post-doctoral work and up.”

    The poster competition, like the rest of the conference, is divided into three broad themes: energy, human and animal health, and new for this year, sustainability. “There is a growing interest in environmental concerns so there is more interest in renewable resources, nutrient use efficiency and the overall environmental impact of agricultural production,” said Keller.

    Conference program committee co-chair Brett Zettl, President of Prairie Plant Systems, is even more adamant about considering sustainability. “The role of agriculture will become more important, especially as water resources become increasingly taxed,” said Zettl. “Food will become more expensive again and it’s important for technology to keep ahead of the curve.”

    Along with the growing interest in sustainability, Keller says he’s also noticed more emphasis over the years on convergent technologies bringing together agriculture and health and more recently, technologies bridging agriculture and bioproducts such as fuels, plastics and polymers. The plenary sessions reflect those themes with talks on food security and safety, vaccines and advances in biofuels.

    While the focus of the talks has changed over the years, the conference continues to have a strong international component. This year, speakers and delegates will come from as far away as Australia, China, Japan Thailand, Italy, Belgium and throughout the United States and Canada.

    “Research and the challenges that go with it are global, and this is a chance to broaden our perspectives,” says Adams who points to the example of jatropha, which is increasingly grown throughout Africa as biofuel. “We obviously don’t grow jatropha in Canada but some of the technologies around using it are transferrable to the things we are doing here.”

    This year’s conference is continuing the tradition of kicking off with a public forum. Local biotech businessman John Cross and author and broadcaster Jay Ingram will speak at the public forum scheduled fro 1:30 to 3:00 p.m. on Sunday, September 12 at TCU Place.

    For more information about the ABIC Conference please go to www.abic.ca/abic2010

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  6. Wind turbine installed at Innovation Place

    July 29, 2010 by AURP Canada

    Innovation Place, in collaboration with the University of Regina, has installed one of the first roof mounted wind turbines in the City of Regina at 2 Research Drive. The 3.5kW vertical axis turbine towers an additional seven meters over the highest point of the rooftop and with its vertical blades is reminiscent of than egg better rather than the more common propeller like wind turbines.

    The turbine is tied into the power grid of 2 Research Drive thereby reducing the demand on SaskPower’s supply of electricity, however even operating at full capacity, a 3.5kW turbine does not make a big dent in reduced energy costs of the building. Rather, the turbine serves as both a research tool and a symbol of Innovation Place’s commitment to sustainable, innovative development and the reduction of our carbon footprint. It also serves as a daily reminder of the connection between the University of Regina and Innovation Place and our mutual commitment to research and development.

    The wind turbine and related equipment were purchased by the University of Regina. Along with providing the building on which to mount the turbine, Innovation Place provided the necessary alternations to the building’s structure and electrical infrastructure to support the turbine and coordinated the installation.

    The initiative is part of the University of Regina’s efforts to support the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Decade of Education for Sustainable Development. The turbine will provide a key opportunity for researchers and educators from the University to conduct research associated with alternative energy technologies. Along with the technical research, the turbine serves as a demonstration of sustainable technology and will be used to assess public understanding and acceptance of alternative energy. It will also be used for educational practices around sustainability.

    The final phase of installation is the commissioning of the turbine. As of July 16, the turbine is in operation and is now generating electricity that is being used at 2 Research Drive.

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  7. Cheap gas just a click away: a look at gb internet solutions’ signature product

    by AURP Canada

    Of a road trip is in your summer plans you might want to check out the trip cost calculator on a popular website developed by one of the newer tenants at Innovation Place. GB Internet Solutions is the crator and operator of gasbuddy.com, a network of gas pricing websites covering all of Canada and the United States. The domain names for the website follow the same format: name of the city followed by gasprices.com, as written as one word. So you can check out gas prices all the way from www.victoriagasprices.com to www.miamigasprices.com.

    According to co-founder Jason Toews, it is the local feel to the websites that make GasBuddy’s network such a success. “It’s really simple and easy to use,” says Toews who adds, “the whole idea behind this was people banding together to share tips on where the cheapest gas is so everyone can save money.”

    Over the years features have been added to the websites, including local statistics, maps charting gas prices, and the above mentioned trip cost calculator. Just fill in your destination and some information about your vehicle such as fuel economy and tank size. The trip cost calculator will tell you where to stop for the cheapest gas along your route and can even make suggestions on how to optimize your trip with fewer stops.

    The venture is fueled by more than one million volunteer spotters who report prices to GasBuddy every day. Volunteers are motivated to report prices by getting points and a chance to win $250 worth of gas every week. Toews points out that some spotters have logged in for more than 3,000 consecutive days. That is pretty impressive considering GB Internet Solutions just celebrated its 10th anniversary in early June.

    Toews started the company with co-founder Dustin Coupal and both worked at it part time for the first five eyars. They’ve seen steady expansion since then and now have a team of 24 employees with plans to double in size within the next few years. The growth is due in part to new areas they are venturing into including websites for hotel bookings and classified ads.

    “We have 1,500 domain names, similar to our www.reginagasprices.com and we’ve got so many ideas but just don’t have the time or the people right now to get everything done,” says Toews.

    Toews is cautious about expanding too fast and getting ahead of their revenue stream. GasBuddy makes money selling advertising and, with 10 year experience watching gas prices, also sells gas price data which is particularly useful for organizations with large fleets of vehicles. Toews has also become the go to guy for the media because is able to provide independent analysis.

    “Being involved with a gas price website for 10 years I’ve had a lot of conversations with industry insiders and learned a lot about how stations set their prices and how crude oil impacts gas prices, so we get a lot of publicity; particularly when prices jump.

    GB Internet Solutions can be found at 140 – 2 Research Drive in Regina.

     

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  8. Tech sector keeps multiplying in tough times

    July 5, 2010 by AURP Canada

    By Chuck Howitt, Record Staff
    therecord.com

    WATERLOO REGION – Waterloo Region’s technology sector just keeps on growing.

    The number of high technology companies in the region has jumped to about 700 from 550 in 2008, according to a new report from Communitech, the association representing tech companies in the area.

    That represents a growth rate of 21 per cent during one of the worst economic downturns of the past 20 years.

    This sector, which includes digital media, information technology and software companies, computer hardware firms and advanced manufacturing businesses, employs roughly 30,000 people with 2,000 job openings waiting to be filled, Communitech said in a news release Wednesday.

    The figures are based on a survey an inventory of technology firms in Waterloo Region Tech Directory, which will be released at the tech leadership conference sponsored by Communitech on July 14.

    Featured speakers at the conference, to be held at Bingemans in Kitchener, include Clayton Christenson, author of Innovators Dilemma, Bill Taylor, co-founder of Fast Company magazine, and Noel Biderman, president of Avid Life Media.

    Among other findings, the report notes that 51 percent of technology firms in the area are small businesses between one and five employees. The region is also home to 25 publicly traded tech companies, of which 15 have their headquarters here. They include Research In Motion, Open Text, ATS Automation Tooling Systems and Com Dev.

    Venture capital invested in area tech companies exceeds $300 million and the sector accounts for $18 billion in annual revenues, the report notes.

    Iain Klugman, chief executive officer of Communitech, said the latest inventory underscores the strength of the local tech sector. “We’re thrilled because so much has changed in the past five years,” he said in an interview. “We’ve really got the momentum going.”

    The region has been home to roughly 350 startups in the last 30 months, he noted. “Not all of them make it, but at the end of the day you’ve got to have startups if you want to have successful medium sized companies.”

    One of the key drives of recent growth, Klugman said, has been digital media, broadly defined as computer gaming, social networking software and digital tools to advance research in areas such as health care, finance and mineral exploration.

    The region has benefitted greatly in this regard through its designation as the headquarters of the Canadian Digital Media Network, a joint venture of all three levels of government, Communitech and industry partners. The network will set up shop in the tannery building in downtown Kitchener this summer along with a Communitech digital media incubator called the Hub.

    Apart from digital media, the local sector has shown its resilience during the recession by maintaining strong balance sheets and focusing on its research on “solving significant problems,” Klugman said.

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  9. beyond marijuana – prairie plant systems branches out

    June 25, 2010 by AURP Canada

    “Marijuana was our gateway drug,” jokes Brent Zettl, President and CEO of Prairie Plant Systems, the Saskatoon based company best known for being the official supplier of marijuana for Health Canada.

    Zettl says the 2000 contract to grow medicinal marijuana in an old mine near Flin Flon, Manitoba provided proof of concept and they are now using biosecure underground growth chambers to produce therapeutic proteins otherwise known as plant made pharmaceuticals.

    “We initially thought we would be a service provider to biotech companies but the big players got out of plant made pharmaceuticals and instead focused their biotech efforts on becoming seed companies,” explains Zettl. “That opened up plant made pharmaceutical development to smaller players and we saw the potential.”

    By 2003 Prairie Plant Systems, along with its partners at NRC’s Plant Biotechnology Institute, developed their own transgenic platform; a legume containing genes for a specific protein critical to the human immune system, adenosine deaminase (ADA).  ADA deficiency is a rare inherited disorder that results in severe combined immunodeficiency, more commonly known as bubble boy disease.  Treatment frequently includes an enzyme replacement therapy with the affected individual receiving an injection of ADA extracted from cow spleens.

    The development of a bean that produces ADA could dramatically reduce the cost of this type of treatment.  Zettl says a partner company is expected to have the plant-produced ADA into clinical trials within the year, paving the way for other transgenically produced products. He says Prairie Plant Systems currently have four other proteins in the production pipeline. “We see ourselves becoming a biogeneric producer of off-patent and orphaned drugs; drugs that are difficult to produce which don’t have a lot of demand for them.”

    Zettl says developing these plant made pharmaceuticals has been a long haul and was only possible because Prairie Plant Systems was self-sustaining, relying on its Environment Division which conducts revegetation and reclamation projects and its BioProducts Division which specializes in cloning new varieties of prairie hardy fruits developed at the University of Saskatchewan. The have also continued doing contract work in the underground growth chambers and have four business process patents pending in relation to that work.

    “We’ve really turned the corner with 30 percent growth in sales in the past few years and a similar growth rate for the foreseeable future,” says Zettl. There are currently more than 50 employees at the Saskatoon head office and five employees at the Michigan based subsidiary where the underground growth chambers are now located. While the head office is located just outside Saskatoon, Prairie Plant Systems continues to have a presence at the L.F. Kristjanson Biotechnology Complex where it has been located since 1989.

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  10. Blacksun – a space for success

    by AURP Canada

    There’s a warm blue glow from the windows at the top of the west stairs in the Concourse building in Saskatoon. The light is coming from the foyer of web hosting company BlackSun. Step inside the front door and it’s obvious you are in a workplace that values creativity and the employee experience. Visitors and employees are welcomed with trophies, awards and an assortment of oddities and memorabilia including a replica C3PO head from the Star Wars movies and an autographed book about Einstein. In a closet around the corner are stacks of Nibble magazines, the go-to read for Apple II enthusiasts in the 1980s. Tucked away in various corners you can find old ColecoVision computers and game consoles and first generation Apple computers from the 1970s.

    BlackSun CEO and co-founder Steve Rogoschewsky says creating a collection of memorabilia was never an intentional part of his corporate strategy but it has served a purpose over the years. “In our business there’s so much change. What’s cutting edge today is an antique tomorrow.” Along with being a bit of fun, the collection serves as a daily reminder that being complacent is not an option.

    While the technology keeps changing, Rogoschewsky believes excellent customer service remains a cornerstone to BlackSun’s success.  “Our customers are from across Canada, North America and even Europe and they comment on their interactions with our people,” he chuckles. “Maybe it’s that small town Saskatchewan thing, but there’s a certain friendliness to people here that just comes naturally and our clients appreciate that.”Â

    The collections are Rogoschewsky’s way of keeping things interesting in the office which helps keep employees engaged. “Your office space shapes how employees work, how they feel and how they interact with each other and their customers,” he says adding “I think there’s an energy flow here and a really nice feel to the space.”

    That appreciation of the feel for a space recently drew Rogoschewsky to purchase a letter written by the late Princess Diana.  In it, she talks about the benefits of feng shui – a practice of aesthetics and room design believed to increase energy flow.  “She was using her environment to shape her life,” says Rogoschewsky, “and she shares some of the same values we have in this company so I think her letter makes an interesting addition.” Â

    The letter will soon be framed and up on the walls with other various works of arts and interesting documents including a 1894 one page annual report from the Edison Electric Light Company signed by Thomas Edison. Art, sculptures and handcrafted items are scattered throughout the office with the intention of creating an interesting environment for both visitors and employees.Â

    Rogoschewsky’s focus on his employees and the employee experience has paid off.  BlackSun has an exceptionally low employee turnover rate and the company is starting to expand into new areas. Recently they’ve started doing website design, partly to meet customer demand, but also, explains Rogoschewsky “as a natural progression for some employees to explore their creative side in a different way.”Â

    Encouraging employees to stretch their creative energies is not only good for the employee, but good for the future of BlackSun. Rogoschewsky points to a quote from Einstein’s book which reads “You can’t solve problems by using the same type of thinking when we created them.” At BlackSun, these are words to live by.

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