Immunology award
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
The 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