Student Presentation Awards

| Awards |

Purpose

The Canadian Acoustical Association offers awards to the best student presentations during the technical sessions at Acoustics Week in Canada. Three awards of $500 are offered each year. A fourth award in the same amount can be given in case of a tie for third place.

Eligibility

Both undergraduate and graduate student presenters are eligible for the Presentation Awards. Other requirements are as follows:

1.   Full-time student at the time of application;

2.   Student member of the CAA;

3.   The first author of the paper to be presented; and

4.   Registered to the conference.

Note: One-year CAA membership can be obtained at the time of registering to the conference, and this is accepted to meet eligibility condition 2 above.

Application

Students contemplating presenting papers at Acoustics Week in Canada should apply for these awards by first notifying the conference organizers with the submission of their abstract. An application form available on the CAA conference website (follow the Students link) must also be transmitted to the conference organizers by the deadline indicated. The form must be co-signed by the applicant and supervisor.

Procedures and Duties

  1. The Conference Chair (or his/her representative) must compile a list of eligible students indicating (a) the student name, (b) the supervisor’s name, (c) the title of presentation, and (d) the day and time of the presentation.
  2. The student list must be forwarded to the Coordinator at least two weeks before the beginning of the conference.
  3. The Coordinator must appoint at least three independent judges for each eligible student presentation. In return, each judge typically evaluates three students. Supervisors cannot judge their own students, and co-authors and members of the same research group are also ineligible.
  4. The Coordinator must prepare and distribute scoring sheets to the judges during the Conference.
  5. Presentations are judged on the following merits:
    1. The way the subject is presented;
    2. The explanation of the relevance of the subject;
    3. The explanation of the methodology/theory;
    4. The presentation and analysis of results;
    5. The consistency of the conclusions with theory and results.
  6. The Coordinator tallies the results from all judges and students, and selects the winners.
  7. The names of the winning students are announced immediately after the last technical session.
  8. The CAA Awards Coordinator issues certificates and transmits relevant details to the CAA Treasurer by December 1st for prompt payments.

Coordinator

Alberto Behar Scarborough, ON. Tel: (416) 265-1816; Fax: (416) 265-1816.

Award Winners (last 5 years)

2007 − Montréal
Marc-André Gaudreau, École de Technologie Supérieure (Montréal)
Variabilité de l’atténuation des protecteurs auditifs mesurée par le méthode Field-MIRE en fonction de la direction du son incident et des bruits du porteur

Huiwen Goy, University of Toronto (Mississauga)
Effect of within and between-talker variability on word identification in noise in older and younger adults

Susan E. Rogers, McGill University
Memory for Musical Intervals: Cognitive Differences for Consonance and Dissonance

Gurjit Singh, University of Toronto (Mississauga)
Auditory Cognitive Attention in Younger and Older Adults: A Comparison of Laboratory and Self-Report Measures

2006 − Halifax
Rida Al Osman, University of Ottawa
AlarmLocator: A software tool to facilitate the installation of acoustic warning devices in noisy work plants

Jeff Defoe, University of Windsor
Computational Aeroacoustics for electronics coolers

Matt Nantais, University of Windsor
Graphics processing unit cooling solutions: Acoustic characteristic

Ewen MacDonald, University of Toronto
Making young ears old (and old ears even older)

2005 − London
Elisabeth van Stam, University of Western Ontario
Recognizing individual Wild Big Brown Bats (Eptesicus fuscus) using their echolocation calls

Ralph Baddour, University of Toronto
The effects of pecking order on ultrasound backscatter from cells at different volume fractions

Jenn Bouchard, University of Western Ontario
Characteristics of Chimney Swift in-flight vocalizations

Julianne Tennhaaf, Brock University
Normative thresholds levels for a calibrated, computer-assisted version of the Ling Six-Sound test

2004 − Ottawa
William E. Hodgetts, University of Alberta
Advanced measures of bone anchored hearing aids: Do they correlate with perceptual judgments?

Dominic Pilon, Université de Sherbrooke
Influence of micro-structural properties on the acoustic performances of novel metallic foam

Emmanuelle Gros, Université de Sherbrooke
A missing mass method to measure the open porosity of porous solids

2003 − Edmonton
Carrie Gotske, University of Alberta
Comparison of intelligibility measures on single word and spontaneous speech tasks for children with and without cleft palate

Ann Nakashima, University of British Columbia
Effect of the ground surface and meteorological conditions on the active control of a monopole noise source

Benjamin Zendel, University of Calgary
How music of different rhythmicities and intensities affects driver performance

| Awards |