Thanks for the question.
Yes, absolutely, we are seeing it. You point out rightly that there is a bit of a delay. We are very much still a research organization, so we don't tend to work very close to the commercialization end. We're really more in the middle, not right at the very early discovery end, so we're seeing things sort of moving through the pipe as we move forward.
There are certainly examples where bringing in researchers.... For instance, we had a small company in Ontario—SideStix, I think it's called—that was developing prosthetic devices to assist with walking, and they really needed just to do some quality control research on some of the materials they were using in order to put some of the final pieces together for that commercial application. That was completed and rolled out.
What we often see, as I said in my presentation, is that companies have intellectual property that needs some expertise, perhaps, not to develop brand-new IP but maybe to refine it or to get more information around it. That's a key part of that commercialization process, but it isn't necessarily geared towards the creation of brand-new IP. We're certainly seeing commercialization happening through our companies. There's no doubt.