The Bernhard Cinader Award is awarded annually by the Canadian Society for Immunology (CSI). It is presented to an immunologist who is an exceptional researcher working in Canada, a full member of CSI and who has an additional activity in which they excel.[1][2]
This award was inaugurated at the first meeting of the CSI in 1987 and is named in honor of Dr. Bernhard "Hardy" Cinader.[1] The recipient presents the keynote lecture at the annual CSI meeting.[3][4][2]
Recipients
editThe Bernhard Cinader award lectureship is given to a Canadian scientist who exemplifies distinguished scientific leadership and accomplishments in Immunology.[3][5]
Year | Recipient | Lecture title |
2022 | Brad Nelson[6] | 30 Years in the Cancer Immunotherapy Field, and More OptimisticThan Ever |
2021 | Martin Oliver[5] | A life of Wasps and Caterpillars[7] |
2019 | Jean Marshall | Building Bridges with Mast Cells[2] |
2018 | Michael Grant | Edge to edge: Look straight ahead[8] |
2017 | Claude Perreault | Know Thyself[4] |
2016 | Tania Watts | From planar membranes to TNFRs, a tale of costimulation and collaboration |
2015 | Eleanor Fish | The Art Behind Going Viral |
2014 | Pamela Ohashi | From Y Y Z and Beyond |
2013 | Mike Gold | When You Come to a Fork in the Road, Take it! |
2012 | Paul Kubes | Imaging the Immune System in Blood Vessels: Seeing a Whole New World |
2011 | Michelle Letarte | Experiments and Adventures with Endoglin and Immunology! |
2010 | Christopher Paige | Dancing with the Bees |
2009 | André Veillette | Signaling in the Immune System: T cells and Beyond |
2008 | Kent HayGlass | What is Normal? |
2007 | Rafik-Pierre Sékaly | Human Immunology: 15 years experience and an eternal challenge |
2006 | Chris Bleackley | Confessions of a Thanatologist |
2005 | Michael Julius | Une Histoire D'Amour |
2003 | Gillian Wu | G.O.D. is in the details: Life forces and the Generation of Diversity |
2002 | Linda Pilarski | Challenging the Status Quo: From Sombreros to Nanobiotechnology |
2001 | Bhagirath Singh | Life before signaling: peptides, microbes, and regulation of autoimmunity |
2000 | John Schrader | Science and Sunday afternoons: P-cells to proteomics |
1999 | Dean Befus | From worms to asthma: the road to little feG |
1998 | Jack Gauldie | From the Chicken to the Egg and with a Virus in Between |
1997 | Arnold Greenberg | The molecular basis of cell mediated cytotoxicity |
1996 | Peter Bretscher | Regulation of the immune response: the significance of quantitative and qualitative signals as physiological signs |
1995 | Dennis Osmond | A B-cell biography: the soil and the seed |
1994 | Tak Mak | And appear to be and appear not to be |
1993 | Tim Mosmann | T-cells and cytokines: why does the immune system have to be so complex |
1992 | John Bienenstock | From there to here |
1991 | Emil Skamene | Experiments of nature and natural resistance |
1990 | John Roder | The ghost of Metchnikov |
1989 | Rick Miller | T cell differentiation |
1988 | Alec Sehon | Tolerogenic derivatives of biologically active antigens for therapeutic intervention |
1987 | Hardy Cinader | Developmental change in the second half of life - challenge and opportunity |
References
edit- ^ a b "The Bernhard Cinader Award". Canadian Society for Immunology.
- ^ a b c "Dal Researcher Wins Canada's Top Immunology Award". Dalhousie University.
- ^ a b "Cinader Award Recipients". Canadian Society for Immunology.
- ^ a b "Claude Perreault Receives the Prestigious Bernhard Cinader Award from the Canadian Society for Immunology (CSI)". Institute for Research into Immunology and Cancer.
- ^ a b McGill Reporter (June 3, 2021). "Martin Olivier wins top immunology award".
- ^ "Dr. Brad Nelson – Recipient of the Canadian Society for Immunology's 2022 Hardy Cinader Award | Deeley Research Centre". www.bccrc.ca. Retrieved 2023-07-25.
- ^ "2020 Scientific Meeting - Awardees".
- ^ "A Perfect Run". Memorial University Faculty of Medicine.