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Three 鶹Ƶ early-career researchers awarded prestigious Polanyi Prize

Assistant Professor Husam Abdel-Qadir, post-doctoral researcher Jason Hunt and Assistant Professor Jiaying Gu
Three University of Toronto early-career researchers – Assistant Professor Husam Abdel-Qadir, Assistant Professor Jiaying Gu and post-doctoral researcher Jason Hunt – are three of five 2018 Polanyi Prize winners (all photos by Perry King)

Husam Abdel-Qadir is making strides in breast cancer treatment. Jason Hunt is giving a clearer vision of our galaxy. Jiaying Gu is making economic behaviour more accessible.

The University of Toronto researchers are among this year’s winners of the John Charles Polanyi Prize, which recognizes researchers in the early stages of their career – pursuing post-doctoral studies or having recently been appointed as faculty at an Ontario university. The $20,000 prizes, awarded by the Council of Ontario Universities, are named after 鶹Ƶ John Polanyi, who received the 1986 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.

Of the five Polanyi Prize recipients this year, three are 鶹Ƶ researchers.

"The University of Toronto is proud of our researchers who are being recognized for their contributions to medicine, astrophysics and economics,” said Vivek Goel, 鶹Ƶ's vice-president of research and innovation. 

"The prize is a significant early-career recognition that they are having an impact. It really helps to raise the profile for these researchers and gives them further opportunities as they continue in their careers.”

Meet this year's winners from 鶹Ƶ:


Husam Abdel-Qadir: Researching the link between breast cancer treatment and cardiovascular condition

Dr, Husam Abdel-Qadir, an assistant professor in 鶹Ƶ’s department of medicine, is being recognized for his focus on the cardiovascular health of breast cancer survivors. As a clinician-scientist at Women’s College Hospital and University Health Network, he examines the suspected link between breast cancer treatments – including chemotherapy and radiation therapy – with the development of heart diseases, including atrial fibrillation, a serious heart rhythm abnormality.

In previous research involving the rates of hospitalization for women with heart problems after breast cancer, Abdel-Qadir found that women who had breast cancer had a higher risk of atrial fibrillation. He's now working to prove the link by studying data on all women in Ontario who were diagnosed with early stage breast cancer between 1988 and 2016, and comparing the data to women with no history of cancer.

He says he sees the Polanyi Prize as positive reinforcement of the work he’s pursuing.

“My career trajectory has involved a lot of delayed gratification,” he said, adding that he has spent almost 20 years as a postsecondary student.

He considers it a privilege to both practise medicine and conduct relevant research. “To walk down that path requires positive feedback to keep you motivated, and getting awards along the way, in particular the Polanyi Prize, is a very powerful form of positive motivation,” said Abdel-Qadir, who is also the director of continuing professional development for the Black Physicians’ Association of Ontario.

Abdel-Qadir has also received an early-career chair in women's heart and brain health from the Heart & Stroke Foundation and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) to support his work. He aims to use this chair to bring more structured solutions to patients with complicated health profiles.

“I want to develop a better understanding of breast cancer patients' level of depression, anxiety and stress and I want to see how that relates to their social environment,” he said.

Jiaying Gu: 'Bringing the economic theory to the data'

Jiaying Gu, an assistant professor in the department of economics, was awarded the Polanyi Prize for her work that focuses on econometrics, which emphasizes the use of statistical methods in describing economic behaviour. She is seeking to understand the impact of an individual’s tastes and economic choices on the larger economic landscape.

The practice of econometrics, explaining traits like heterogeneity and employing multi-linear regression models, can be dense and complicated. But Gu has been working at translating the discipline into terms that the public can easily understand – beginning in the classroom.

“I do try to emphasize the kind of application, the methodology that I’m developing that can help to apply in real-life situations,” said Gu.

She is using the data to better understand purchasing decisions, and describes it as "bringing the economic theory to the data."

One example of her work involves teachers' performance evaluations. Teachers are often judged on student grades, but their evaluations often don't factor in individual teaching styles. By analyzing data from U.S. primary schools, she is hoping to develop a fairer method of evaluating teachers.

She says the Polanyi Prize was a welcome bit of news.

“It was definitely a very pleasant surprise,” Gu said. “If the work is very technical, then it’s harder for a big audience to accept, so it’s certainly very encouraging, and I’ll definitely continue to produce high-quality research. [The prize] relieves some pressure as well going forward.”

Jason Hunt: Answering galactic questions

Jason Hunt

The core of the work of Jason Hunt, a post-doctoral researcher at the University of Toronto’s Dunlap Institute for Astronomy and Astrophysics, revolves around the structure and dynamics of the Milky Way. As part of a global consortium of researchers, Hunt uses raw data obtained from the Gaia mission, a deep space probe launched by the European Space Agency, to uncover our galaxy’s many mysteries.

He received his PhD in 2015 from the Mullard Space Science Laboratory at University College in London and has been working with 鶹Ƶ Assistant Professor Jo Bovy since 2016.

“We’re getting detailed positions and motions of about 1.5 billion stars, and this is orders of magnitude more data ­– both in terms of quality and quantity – than we’ve ever had before,” said Hunt, who began his digging with Gaia in 2013.

He added that despite what we know about our home galaxy, there’s still an innumerable amount we do not, including the number of stars in the Milky Way.

“It’s important for a lot of things and it’s still not super well constrained,” said the native of Devon, England. “Even Gaia, you would see only one per cent of the stars.

"It's up to us to try and work out what else is there.”

About the Polanyi Prize, Hunt says he's "pretty proud to be within that same bracket of people, looking back over the past winners."

 

UTC