Solve for X: Innovations to Change the World

By: MaRS Discovery District
  • Summary

  • Solve for X uncovers what’s next. Join journalist Manjula Selvarajah as she dives into the latest tech innovations shaping our world. How are satellites revolutionizing the fight against climate change? Could music be the medicine we need? What will it take for Canada to lead the global tech scene and achieve a zero-emission future? Discover the answers to these questions and more in the next season of Solve for X.
    2022
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Episodes
  • Innovation hotline: Answering the tech sector’s burning questions
    Dec 19 2024

    Featured in this episode:

    Alison Nankivell has spent more than 25 years moving Canada’s economic needle forward. Before being named CEO of MaRS in early 2024, Alison held pivotal roles at the Business Development Bank of Canada (BDC), the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan and Export Development Canada (EDC). At MaRS, she brings an experienced playbook to support startups working in climate, health and emerging technology.

    Kris Bennatti is the CEO and co-founder of Hudson Labs, a Toronto-based startup that builds specialized financial software to help improve corporate accountability in capital markets.

    Lise Birikundavyi is the co-founder and managing partner of BKR Capital, Canada’s first Black-led, institutionally-backed VC fund. Birikundavyi is a finance specialist who has worked with several international institutions, including the Jacobs Foundation where she managed its edtech impact investment strategy.

    Corey Ellis is the co-founder and CEO of Growcer. The Ottawa-based startup develops commercial hydroponic systems that help communities grow indoor produce, year-round in any climate.

    Charles Plant is a serial entrepreneur, innovation economist, fractional CFO and founder of The Narwhal Project, which helps tech startups raise capital and scale business.

    Further reading:

    • Welcome to the $100-million club
    • Undervalued and ignored: Why young Canadian firms are looking to foreign investors and buyers
    • Evolving ESG reporting regulations call for co-ordinated executive action in Canada
    • DEI in Canadian workplaces is hitting a wall, subscriber survey shows
    • North American outlook: Uncertain political environment adds to business, consumer fatigue
    • Climate adaptation is as important as climate mitigation

    Subscribe to Solve for X: Innovations to Change the World here. And below, find a transcript to “Innovation hotline: Answering the tech sector’s burning questions.” This interview was recorded October 17 in the MaRS Studio.

    Solve for X is brought to you by MaRS, North America’s largest urban innovation hub and a registered charity. MaRS supports startups and accelerates the adoption of high-impact solutions to some of the world’s biggest challenges. For more information, visit marsdd.com.

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    40 mins
  • Soak it up: Can sponge cities save us from flooding?
    Nov 21 2024

    Featured in this episode:

    Kongjian Yu is a Beijing-based landscape architect and founder of Peking University’s College of Architecture and Landscape. His concept of sponge cities — designing cities to absorb water — is being applied in urban areas across the globe.

    Further reading:

    • Landscape architect Kongjian Yu, pioneer of the “sponge city" concept, wins the 2023 Oberlander Prize
    • How letting water be water can lead to better climate resilience
    • Kongjian Yu has a plan for urban flooding: “Sponge cities”
    • Treading water — Toronto is spending billions on flood protection, but experts say it needs to spend billions more
    • Will a $1-billion flooding bill finally make the GTA take stormwater seriously?
    • Toronto’s Don River floods offer urgent planning lessons for climate-challenged cities

    Solve for X is brought to you by MaRS, North America’s largest urban innovation hub and a registered charity. MaRS supports startups and accelerates the adoption of high-impact solutions to some of the world’s biggest challenges. For more information, visit marsdd.com.

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    34 mins
  • Striking a chord: Why neuroscientists believe music could hold the power to cure what ails us
    Oct 24 2024

    Music makes us feel better — for most of us, this is an intuitive truth. But scientists are only now beginning to understand the remarkable ways that music affects our brains. With the help of innovation, researchers are working to assess and codify the whats, whys and hows that could help us harness this power as a therapeutic tool to treat people grappling with everything from mood disorders to Parkinson’s disease. Their data is helping prove that music could be one of our most vital, valuable and accessible forms of medicine.

    Featured in this episode:

    Dan Levitin is a best-selling author, music producer, renowned neuroscientist and professor emeritus in psychology at McGill University. His latest book, I Heard There Was a Secret Chord: Music as Medicine was released in August.

    Frank Russo is a cognitive neuroscientist and psychologist who serves as the chief science officer at LUCID, a Toronto-based company that uses AI to create personalized music therapy to help people with mental health challenges. He’s also a professor of psychology at Toronto Metropolitan University, where he heads up the Science of Music Auditory Research and Technology (SMART) lab.

    Jessica Grahn is a neuroscientist and a professor at Western University. She studies how the brain processes music and its power to activate music in people with mobility issues brought on by neurodegenerative diseases like Parkinson’s.

    Charlotte Cumberbirch is a professional choral singer who leads an online vocal health group for older adults at the Cummings Centre in Montreal. Many of her participants are recovering from strokes or dealing with brain diseases, such as Parkinson’s.

    Further reading:

    • The sound of science: How music can transform our brains
    • AI to benefit humanity: Innovations in senior care
    • The big idea: could we use music like medicine?
    • AI is unlocking the human brain’s secrets
    • How does music affect your brain?
    • This is your brain. This is your brain on music

    Solve for X is brought to you by MaRS, North America’s largest urban innovation hub and a registered charity. MaRS supports startups and accelerates the adoption of high-impact solutions to some of the world’s biggest challenges. For more information, visit marsdd.com.

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    34 mins

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