Past Events

E.g., Apr 30, 2024

Aging better together symposium informational poster

Healthy Aging Symposium | Nov 19 & 20

Aging Better Together: Collaborating to Improve Outcomes across British Columbia Symposium
will bring together researchers, trainees, and stakeholders to provide a holistic and interdisciplinary perspective on aging.
November 19 - 20, 2023
Registration deadline October 19, 2023

The symposium is hosted by the Edwin S.H. Leong Centre for Healthy Aging in partnership with the Aging in Place Research Cluster, UBC Health, and the Centre for Technology Adoption for Aging in the North. The symposium will be in person on the UBC Vancouver campus.

This inaugural symposium will bring together researchers, trainees, and stakeholders across disciplines to provide a holistic and comprehensive perspective on aging. This interdisciplinary focus will enable reflection, discussion and community engagement on the biological, social, cultural and environmental determinants of healthy aging and strategies for prevention and early intervention to increase health span and add quality years to life.

The two-day event will feature oral presentations, a poster session, interactive panel discussions, and networking. To facilitate knowledge exchange and collaborations, the symposium will feature just one session at a time.

Registration deadline October 19, 2023 

Register Here

Thursday, 19 October 2023 - 9:00am
AMS Student Nest
6133 University Blvd
Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z1
Canada

Healthy Aging Research Seminar | Oct 18

Measured, Monitored, Optimized: Digital Technologies and Quantified Aging
with  Dr. Barbara Marshall, Professor Emeritus from the Department of Sociology at Trent University

How can we understand aging through things that are measurable and displayed as numeric scores, trends, and algorithmic predictions? How do digital technologies like wearable fitness trackers (such as FitBits and Apple watches) and ambient monitoring systems (such as in-home sensor systems) transform bodily movements and functions into data? What happens to such data? In this talk, Dr. Marshall will explore how this data is translated into actionable knowledge, shaped by cultural narratives that view aging bodies as potentially modifiable and open to optimization but at the same time inevitably in decline and always at risk. What gets highlighted, muted or left out altogether in this translation? Who has agency in shaping the stories told by the data? How might data collected and aggregated from digital technologies influence the standards we set for what is considered ‘successful aging’? And what does this mean for older adults? While the use of digital data may detect, predict or even prevent some age-related concerns, this quantification may also restrict fuller and more diverse understandings of aging. Drawing on insights from several collaborative research projects, as well as extant work in the emerging field of socio-gerontechnology, Dr. Marshall will suggest some critical questions that might guide our thinking about aging, technology and digital culture.

Speaker Biography: Dr. Barbara Marshall was a member of the Sociology department at Trent University for 32 years, where she was a founding member of the Trent Centre for Aging and Society and was honoured with Trent’s Distinguished Research Award in 2006. Both her teaching and research have been in the areas of social theory, gender, sexuality, embodiment, aging and technologies. She continues to collaborate, research, and write while enjoying retirement on Vancouver Island. She is currently principal investigator on the SSHRC-funded project “Digital Culture and Quantified Aging” (with Stephen Katz and Wendy Martin), co-investigator on the Aging in Data research partnership (PI Kim Sawchuk) and have recently completed a CIHR-funded project (with Stephen Katz) on digital infrastructures for health and aging as part of a four-country collaboration through the European “More Years, Better Lives” initiative. Some current projects include research on how old bodies are visualized through datafied care technologies (with Wendy Martin, Kirsten Ellison and Isabel Pedersen), the implications of AI systems for reshaping gerontological knowledge (with a team of collaborators from the international Socio-gerontechnology Network) and the need for more nuanced and multidimensional understandings of ‘technogenarians’ (with Stephen Katz, Nicole Dalmer and Kirsten Ellison).

This lecture can ONLY be viewed in-person at the BMO Great Hall, VanDusen Botanical Garden (virtual attendance is not provided). We plan to have a recording available. If you wish to receive the recording please contact us after the event at healthy.aging@ubc.ca

Register Here

Wednesday, 18 October 2023 - 2:00pm
BMO Great Hall, VanDusen Botanical Garden
Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z3
Canada
Event Poster

Institute for Healthy Living and Chronic Disease Prevention Lecture | Oct 17

Building palliative care capacity by engaging generalist providers and patients and families 
Please join Dr. Hsien Seow, Professor, McMaster University, and Canada Research Chair in Palliative Care and Health System Innovation, who will share results from a palliative care education trial called CAPACITI and the lessons learned from the Waiting Room Revolution.

The event is free and open to the public but registration is required.

Register to Attend

Tuesday, 17 October 2023 - 11:00am
Zoom
Kelowna, BC V1Y 1T2
Canada
Image of student walking with foliage in the background

Groves of Academe | Oct 16

READING: Janet S. Charles, The Paris Library

If you would like to join the group please contact convenor, Graeme Wynn (wynn@geog.ubc.ca). 

* Please contact the convenor for more information or to be added to the group. By nature of the intimate sharing format of the group, membership size is limited.*

Learn more

Monday, 16 October 2023 - 3:30pm
Zoom
Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z2
Canada
UBC Rose Garden

Vancouver Institute Lecture | Oct 14

Dr. William (Bill) Murray

Naval Conflict and the First Punic War: Discoveries from the Debris Field
with Dr. William (Bill) Murray, Mary and Gus Stathis Professor of Greek History, University of South Florida

Dr. Murray’s interests include all aspects of ancient seafaring from ships and their designs to trade, ancient harbours, naval warfare and weaponry. His research has been featured on the History and National Geographic channels. Over the past 40 years, he has worked at a number of archaeological sites, both under water and on land, in Greece, Israel, Turkey, France and Italy. Dr. Murray is currently a member of the Egadi Island Survey Project recovering ancient warship rams and other battle debris from the last naval battle of the First Punic War. He is also preparing with others the final publication of excavations conducted at Augustus’ Victory Monument near Actium. He is author of The Age of Titans: The Rise and Fall of the Great Hellenistic Navies (2012), a volume in the Onassis Series in Hellenic Culture.

More Information

Saturday, 14 October 2023 - 8:15pm
P. A. Woodward Instructional Resources Centre
2194 Health Sciences Mall
Vancouver, BC V6T 2A1
Canada
wine glass in front of grape vines

Wine Appreciation Group | Oct 12

WINE & MUSIC – DOES MUSIC ALTER THE SENSORY EXPERIENCE OF WINE?
Expertise level: all levels.

A welcome to returning/new members, briefly discuss wine explorations since last term, tentative plans, pick up ISO wine glasses where needed. Wine tasting theme: WINE & MUSIC – DOES MUSIC ALTER THE SENSORY EXPERIENCE OF WINE?  These 4 wines will be those that would be suitable for pairing with Thanksgiving dinner (varieties TBA: Pinot Gris, Chardonnay, Riesling, Gewurztraminer, Gamay Noir, Pinot Noir, Merlot+Cab blend, Syrah). 

The Wine Appreciation Group has a limited number of spaces available in this year's group. Please reach out to David MacArthur at david.mcarthur@ubc.ca to register.

Thursday, 12 October 2023 - 6:30pm
in-person
MCML BLDG room 158 (TBC)
Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z2
Canada

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