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Three teams of Waterloo Architecture undergraduate students presented papers at the 2024 Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture conference.

The students were the only undergraduates to have papers accepted at the conference, and they received recognition for engaging in research at this early stage of their academic journey.

Waterloo Engineering researchers have paired inexpensive wireless communication antennas with artificial intelligence (AI) to improve how doctors can detect bone fractures.

Led by Dr. Omar Ramahi, an electrical and computer engineering professor, the team has created a new system to detect bone fractures that is fast, accurate and safe.

Dr. Sushanta Mitra, a professor in the Department of Mechanical and Mechatronics Engineering and Executive Director of the Waterloo Institute for Nanotechnology, has been announced as Fellow of The Electrochemical Society (ECS) for his exceptional contributions in sensor technology for water quality monitoring and deployment of sensors in communities and industries.

Fellows are selected for demonstrating advanced individual technological contributions in electrochemical and solid state science and technology, as well as active membership and involvement in the society.

Dr. David Clausi, a professor in the Department of Systems Design Engineering and Associate Dean - Research and External Partnerships for the Faculty of Engineering, has been appointed as a University Research Chair.

The award recognizes researchers who have a distinguished record of accomplishments and a continued outstanding trajectory of excellence in research and scholarship, as well as research leadership.

An interdisciplinary research team at the University of Waterloo is  working to improve treatment adherence for a children’s eye condition with the help of a social robot.  

Dr. Kerstin Dautenhahn, a professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering and Ali Yamini (MASc ‘22, electrical and computer engineering) joined colleagues with backgrounds in optometry and psychology to develop this novel treatment for ‘lazy eye’.   

This June, members of the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering took home three awards from the Institute of Transportation Engineers (ITE) Canada Annual Conference.

There were awards for the University of Waterloo’s ITE student chapter and a scholarship for undergraduate Adriana Ceric (BASc ‘26, civil engineering).

Three women leaders in their chosen fields share with the Waterloo Engineering community how they harnessed the power of their STEM backgrounds to chart exciting life and career paths.  

Waterloo Engineering alumni Inderjit Takk (BASc ‘98, systems design engineering) and Stephanie Thompson (BASc ‘01, chemical engineering) joined Linda Archer Cornfield (LLD ’24), in an inspiring discussion moderated by Dr. Mary Wells, dean of the Faculty of Engineering. 

Dr. Nadine Ibrahim, a Lecturer in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, has been inducted as Fellow of the Canadian Engineering Education Association – Association Canadienne de l’éducation en génie (CEEA-ACÉG).

She was
also elected as president of the organization, having previously served as vice-president.

At the recent spring convocation, the University of Waterloo awarded David J. Cornfield and Linda Archer Cornfield with honorary doctorates.  

Following successful careers at Microsoft, David (BASc, ‘85, systems design engineering) and Linda chose to pursue their shared interests and passion for systems thinking to find pragmatic, sustainable approaches to better stewardship of the earth. 

Two teams of Waterloo Engineering students received first prize in the prestigious  Society for Manufacturing Engineers Digital Manufacturing Challenge.

Shahed Saleh (BASc mechatronics engineering) and Joy He (BASc systems design engineering) were overall winners of the Undergraduate competition, while Xianchen Ouyang and Lubin Wang were first in the Graduate category.