
Dana Lowry, winner of a Pre-doctoral Laureate Award. Photo by Advancement Staff
With expertise in probiotics to antibiotics, biometric security to biodiversity, the biographies of the 2022 Killam Awards recipients are blooming with innovative stories of transdisciplinary research.
More than 25 University of Calgary faculties and departments were represented at this year's Killam Awards celebration, which commemorates excellence in research and education. UCalgary is distinguished as one of only five post-secondary institutions to receive such endorsement from the Killam Program.
The award winners were honoured for their outstanding efforts with a ceremony and luncheon, which took place Oct. 20 at the MacEwan Ballroom.
Dr. Ed McCauley, president and vice-chancellor, took to the stage to congratulate these professors and students for their high-impact scholarship achievements.
"You'd think I would stop being amazed by the accomplishments of UCalgary's people, but every year I am. We are a place to start something and so many of you are doing just that," said McCauley.
"We salute the scholars whose innovations make for a better world. By enabling collaboration and exploration, we can empower brilliant minds then watch their bold ideas flourish."
Among this year's faculty winners was Dr. David Nicolas, PhD, a professor and associate dean of research and partnership, Faculty of Social Work. Nicolas was recognized with an annual professor award for his work with neurodivergent individuals and research into finding equitable pathways to employment for those with autism spectrum disorder.
According to Nicolas, the award goes beyond just his work: "To me, it really recognizes the amazing partners with whom I work fellow researchers, community members, individuals with neurodivergence and their families." Nicolas says the award serves as an encouragement to "move this work forward to even greater impact."
Dana Lowry, a first-year kinesiology doctoral student and winner of a Pre-doctoral Laureate Award, said the experience was both "humbling and exciting."
Lowry received the award for her research on how obesity risk can be transferred from pregnant or breastfeeding mother to child when taking antibiotics, and the potential use of probiotics to decrease the risk of metabolic disease in children. She noted how meaningful the award is to her as a second-generation Killam Awards winner, following in her father's footsteps.
"The Killam Awards are important to people like me because it gives us an opportunity to not only continue our research, but to also dive deeper into it."
Dr. Kathy McCoy, PhD, remains the current holder of the Killam Memorial Chair. McCoy is a professor at the Cumming School of Medicine's department of Physiology and Psychology and scientific director of the International Microbiome Centre. The Killam Memorial Chair is currently the most prestigious research chair at UCalgary, and McCoy intends to use this time to perform what could be groundbreaking research on immunology and microbiomes both topics on which she is a global expert.
Dr. Melanie Noel, PhD, continues as the Killam Memorial Emerging Leader Chair. Noel is an associate professor of clinical psychology, and a full member of the Alberta Children's Hospital Research Institute and the Hotchkiss Brain Institute. She has been celebrated for her work as the director of the Alberta Children's Pain Research Lab, where her research provides compelling evidence that how a child remembers pain impacts their development and health across a lifetime.
To learn more about the Killam Awards and see the full suite of awards visit the Killam Awards web page.








