Jozsef Kövecses awarded NSERC Synergy Award for Innovation

Annual award recognizes exceptional academic-industry partnerships in three categories.
Jozsef Kövecses / Photo: Martin Lipman/NSERC

Professor Jozsef Kövecses, of the Department of Mechanical Engineering and the Centre for Intelligent Machines, and Montreal-based software company CM Labs Simulations, have together developed enhanced virtual prototyping and training simulators for various types of heavy equipment, including space and ground-based robotics. Today, the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) recognized their collaboration with the Synergy Award for Innovation (small and medium sized companies).

Julie Payette, Governor General of Canada, will present the prestigious award to Professor Kövecses and Dr. Arnold Free, CCO of CM Labs Simulations, at an award ceremony at Rideau Hall this evening. Kirsty Duncan, Minister of Science, and Mario Pinto, President of NSERC, will also celebrate the awardees at the ceremony. Launched in 1995, the NSERC Synergy Awards for Innovation recognize partnerships in natural sciences and engineering research and development (R&D) between universities and Canadian industry. Kövecses’ is the first award in this category for McGill since 2012. As an awardee, he will receive a $200,000 NSERC research grant. CM Labs Simulations will receive a $30,000 voucher, valid towards the cash portion of their required contribution in a new Collaborative Research and Development Grant (CRD).

“Professor Kövecses’ leadership in the development of realistic computer simulations and his commitment to understand the industry’s technical challenges has resulted in this exemplary partnership, as well as a rich training-environment for students and this well-deserved award,” said Martha Crago, Vice-Principal of Research and Innovation. “Congratulations to Professor Kövecses and to CM Labs Simulations, who together will lead engineering innovations in the years to come.”

“The work we do with CM Labs has enriched the graduate student experiences of those in my lab,” said Kövecses. “Winning such a prestigious award is a great honour.”

Kövecses’ research group develops mathematical models that generate lifelike computer simulations of mechanical systems. By simulating versions of new robots, vehicles, farm equipment, and other heavy machinery, CM Labs Simulations helps their clients experience how physical objects will perform under various circumstances. Testing mechanical systems in a simulated environment, clients are able to identify problems with the proposed models before producing a final design. Engineering firms and training schools for heavy machinery and vehicles are increasingly using these simulations as a way to lower costs, eliminate risks and lessen the environmental impacts of the industry.

Learn more about Professor Kövecses’s research by watching the video below