Kenneth Ng

Arezoo Emadi, Mike McKay, Kendall Soucie, and Kenneth NgProfessors Arezoo Emadi, Mike McKay, Kendall Soucie, and Kenneth Ng are pictured along the Windsor-Detroit riverfront, showcasing the interdisciplinary team leading the $15 million INSPIRE project to advance Canada’s biomanufacturing and pandemic response capabilities.

$15 million research project to boost Canada’s pandemic preparedness

The University of Windsor is leading a $15 million research project to help Canada respond to future pandemics.
Grade schoolers work at activity table stringing beads on bracelets.Grade 7 and 8 students bead bracelets using binary code during A Scientist Like Her, June 3 at the University of Windsor.

Grade school girls gain science experience

Young female scientists spent the day with the Faculty of Science for the annual A Scientist Like Her event on June 3.
Ambassador Bridge with Canadian and U.S. flagsA $500,000 grant will fuel a project to research improvements in detecting potentially pandemic pathogens in the region of North America’s busiest border crossing.

Researchers working to learn from the COVID pandemic and prepare for emerging global pathogens

A $500,000 grant will fuel a project to research improvements in detecting potentially pandemic pathogens.
Kenneth NgBiochemistry professor Kenneth Ng is a member of a multidisciplinary group of UWindsor researchers partnering in an effort to enhance Canada’s preparedness for future pandemics.

University of Windsor partners in pandemic peparedness research hub

The University of Windsor is a major partner in a new federal research hub set to enhance Canada’s preparedness for future pandemics.
Kenneth NgBiochemistry professor Kenneth Ng is studying a naturally occurring enzyme in poppy plants in the hope of developing new medical compounds.

Opiate research could lead to better pain management

Biochemistry professor Kenneth Ng is studying a naturally occurring enzyme in poppy plants in the hope of developing new medical compounds.
Tags: 
Mike McKay in lab at Great Lakes Institute for Environmental ResearchMike McKay, executive director of UWindsor’s Great Lakes Institute for Environmental Research, has received another $540,000 in funding for his research program that uses samples from wastewater treatment plants as an early warning system for COVID-19 outbreaks. The funding is part of a $12 million investment by the province to support and expand the network of researchers analyzing wastewater across Ontario.

Provincial funding boosts research tracking COVID-19 through sewage

A UWindsor research team received $540,000 to test samples from wastewater treatment plants as an early warning system for COVID-19.

Kenneth NgBiochemist Kenneth Ng joined the UWindsor faculty in July 2020, and is exploring treatments for coronaviruses.

Anti-viral expert joins Faculty of Science

Biochemist Kenneth Ng joined the UWindsor faculty in July 2020, and is exploring treatments for coronaviruses.

Tags: