Yes, absolutely. That's on a more macro scale. We also have a colleague—and I'm sorry, his name escapes me today—at l'Université Laval who's doing work on security and sensors, on how sensors are able to identify security threats in public places. The work that he does is within our disciplines. He uses the technology of remote sensing, but he has to apply to that a way that the camera or the system understands whether a person's actions, as monitored by the camera, constitute a threat or not. That's one of the things he's looking at.
We're also involved in projects around commercialization. We are in discussions around the appropriateness of a more open innovation platform versus a more closed model for technology transfer that's very incipient. It's coming out of some of our work in the knowledge synthesis grants. I need to be clear that we can always provide you with examples. We don't lead the research. We're trying to lead our researchers a bit in terms of the incentives to do this work, and they are.