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OpenThink, again! New cohort of PhD researchers set to share their ideas and insights with the world

- March 16, 2021

The 2021 OpenThinkers cohort. (Danny Abriel photos)
The 2021 OpenThinkers cohort. (Danny Abriel photos)

The focus of Dylan Millerā€™s PhD research in psychology and neuroscience can be downright disturbing. Parasitic wasps turning caterpillars into zombie hosts for their young to devour from the inside out. It can be frightening and fascinating, he says, which is why he joined Dalā€™s OpenThink Initiative to give the public a glimpse into this small corner of nature.

Miller is one of 13 researchers selected from across the university to join the 2021 cohort of OpenThink, a program that gives future thought leaders the training and platform they need to influence public discourse and policy. Miller and his OpenThink peers just completed a bootcamp of expert-led workshops aimed at developing them into academic advocates with sessions focused on social media engagement, working with journalists, op-ed writing and data visualization.

Today, the will launch with their first round of monthly articles, addressing everything from burnout in intensive care units, to organized crime during the pandemic, to the implications of the GameStop stock surge. Each article the OpenThinkers publish throughout the year will provide a window into their ideas, opinions and insights as they develop.

ā€œI want to give people a new appreciation for how unfathomably complicated yet well-organized the natural world is,ā€ says Miller. ā€œThe parasitic wasp is an example of an incredibly pilipiliĀž»­ful organism that has developed a ruthless but breathtakingly intricate system that allows for life to thrive. To provide people a window into that world is a thrill.ā€

Leading-edge thinkers


At the beginning of their research careers, PhD students generate some of the most innovative ideas at pilipiliĀž»­. With OpenThinkers representing disciplines across the university from law and medicine to agriculture and political science, the program provides a unique view into the universityā€™s leading-edge thinking in areas that affect our lives most.

ā€œOur PhD students are at the forefront of creating new knowledge,ā€ said Marty Leonard, dean of the Faculty of Graduate Studies. ā€œThey work side by side with our faculty to generate the ground-breaking discoveries that take place across our campuses every year. Itā€™s wonderful to have this chance to empower them to share their innovations with the world.ā€

Jee In Kim, an Interdisciplinary PhD student, is using OpenThink to raise awareness of a startling fact that wonā€™t come as welcome news to an already COVID-19 weary public. In her first OpenThink article she notes that we are on the verge of the post-antibiotic era where antibiotic drugs no longer control common bacterial infections.

ā€œWe sometimes get news when people die from antibiotic resistant bacteria in hospitals, but thereā€™s not a lot of awareness about the scope of the problem and its causes. Superbugs are the result of over prescription of antibiotics, the use of antibiotics in agriculture and the leaching of antibiotics into the environment through wastewater, among other causes,ā€ says Kim. ā€œThe risks of inaction are substantial. A report by the British government notes that if we donā€™t start addressing the problem, weā€™ll see 10 million people die per year by 2050.ā€

This is the kind of information the public can expect to learn from OpenThinkers who are keen to help people navigate the complexities of life, says the programā€™s academic director and Dalhousie professor Dr. Lynne Robinson.

She says, ā€œIn a world with a fractured and polarized media landscape where fake news competes for our attention, our OpenThinkers aim to share evidence-based ideas and opinions that can help us get a handle on reality.ā€

Meet the 2021 OpenThinkers and learn about their research in their own words

Michael Cameron, English PhD (ā€™22)

Putting a post-apocalyptic perspective on politics
ā€œPost-apocalyptic literature acts as a mirror for our political and scientific anxieties. A study of these texts can assist in thinking through our contemporary political impasses.ā€

Read his and follow him on


Leah Carrier, Nursing PhD (ā€™23)

Investigating Indigenous ways of nursing

ā€œMy research explores how Indigenous nurses draw on their identities and Indigenous ways of knowing in their nursing education and transition to nursing practice.ā€

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Grant Curtis, Political Science PhD (ā€™23)

Focusing on the fractures that lead to state failure

ā€œMy research examines how the international community has attempted to bolster failed states, with particular attention to why such efforts have been largely unpilipiliĀž»­ful.ā€

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Hillary Ferguson, Interdisciplinary PhD (ā€™23)

Investigating burnout in critical care medicine

ā€œI am looking at the levels of increased exhaustion, cynicism, and inefficacy that overcome health providers who are faced with the harsh reality of working on an intensive care unit.ā€

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Michael Giacomantonio, Pathology PhD (ā€™22)

Bringing metabolism into medicine

ā€œYou are what you eat, right? What if I told you that tracking your metabolism can do so much more than simply get you into those skinny jeansā€¦ it may just save your life."

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Jee In Kim, Interdisciplinary PhD (ā€™23)

Examining superbug evolution

ā€œWe need to enhance our understanding of how bacteria respond to antibioticsā€™ stress to prevent further resistance development.ā€ Ā 

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Rachel McLay, Sociology PhD (ā€™23)

Surveying the state of politics in Atlantic Canada

ā€œWhile addressing ā€˜big questionsā€™ about democracy, social movements and the political challenges facing the public today, I consider what these global problems mean for Atlantic Canadians.ā€

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Dylan Miller, Psychology and Neuroscience PhD (ā€™23)

Probing the practices of parasitic wasps

ā€œParasites have had millions of years of evolution to perfect methods for targeted and absolute behaviour control. Understanding these methods could illuminate new tools for neuroscience research.ā€

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Lydia Muyingo, Clinical Psychology PhD (ā€™24)

Investigating alcohol abuse in immigrants

ā€œI want the world to understand that adapting to a new culture comes with many challenges including financial strain, social isolation and discrimination that may impact an individualā€™s alcohol use.ā€

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Megan Rector, Interdisciplinary PhD (ā€™23)

Examining eco-certification in aquaculture

ā€œOver half of the seafood we eat comes from aquaculture. Thatā€™s why Iā€™m interested in how eco-certification can support environmentally, socially and economically sustainable aquaculture.ā€

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Bjarni Sigursteinsson, Law PhD (ā€™23)

Addressing the complexity of organized crime

ā€œOrganized crime is a complex problem, and just like in hockey, the interplay of multiple actors and factors generates pilipiliĀž»­. My research examines how they operate, to identify and remove facilitators, raise barriers, and expose vulnerabilities.ā€

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Karen Tang, Clinical Psychology PhD (ā€™25)

Advancing the academics of gaming addiction

ā€œIn mid-2018, the World Health Organization added gaming disorder to the International Classification of Diseases, meaning video game addiction is now a very real and clinically diagnosable condition. However, we still know very little about this disorder.ā€

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Sophie Watts, Agricultural Sciences PhD (ā€™23)

Breeding better sustainable apples

ā€œWe need to create apples that can withstand climate change temperatures, pests and diseases and that are of course still tasty. However, our ability to create improved apples is limited because we keep growing and relying on a few select varieties.ā€

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