Aug. 18, 2025
Summer research experience provides opportunity to make lasting impact
When U荔枝视频 researchers put out the call in October 2024 for 1,500 women to participate in a menopause study, they didn鈥檛 expect the amount of interest it would generate. More than 3,000 women from across Alberta signed up for MOMENTUM (MOvement, MENopause and opTimUM health), a collaborative research initiative in the aimed at developing evidence and resources about menopause, movement, and health.
This overwhelming response has kept zoology student Natasha Annor Bediako busy this summer, she has been working with the research group through the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) program. Under the supervision of Dr. , PhD, Annor Bediako has been helping with the cognitive testing for the study, which looks at the effects of perimenopause and menopause on memory and thinking ability.
鈥淚鈥檝e been helping with the cognitive testing for the study, which looks at the effects of perimenopause and menopause on memory and thinking ability,鈥 explains Annor Bediako. 鈥淭he test looks at executive functioning, working memory, and processing speed.鈥
The testing uses the , which employs digital measures and assessments to evaluate cognitive function. Through these assessments, the team has been assessing participants' executive functions (planning, multi-tasking, attention, problem solving, and decision making), verbal and visual episodic memory (associating personal past events with a time and place), working memory (holding and manipulating information in the mind), and processing speed (how fast the brain receives, interprets, and responds to information).
(This author can tell you from experience that the test is challenging and makes you feel quite unintelligent by the end!)
Natasha Annor Bediako is an undergraduate student studying zoology.
Natasha Annor Bediako
鈥業t takes a whole team鈥
For this type of cohort study, with thousands of participants, Annor Bediako has been surprised at how much work goes on behind the scenes to make sure participants feel comfortable.
鈥淚t takes a whole team and a lot of people for it to work, to make sure the testing is going right,鈥 she says. 鈥淪etting things up behind the scenes and helping other researchers with their work has been really interesting. I didn鈥檛 realize I鈥檇 have so much responsibility, but it鈥檚 helped me learn a lot.鈥
Over the summer, Annor Bediako has been able to experience research in action, not only from the clinical perspective, but from organic and social ways as well. She went into the project thinking she鈥檇 be working on her own. She was surprised that it was quite the opposite, adding that 鈥淚t鈥檚 very social and communicative, and you have to work as a team to get things done.鈥
Program sheds lights on different research methods
Participating in the USRA program has been eye-opening, shedding light on various research methods and piquing her interest in exploring different types in the future. She encourages all undergraduate students to apply to the program.
鈥淯niversity is the place to explore different areas of study and research. You have the safeguards and opportunities to try whatever you want,鈥 says Annor Bediako. 鈥淩each out to as many people as possible, even if they鈥檙e not in your faculty. Start early and be persistent. Remember that it鈥檚 never too late to be part of research.鈥
Overall, the experience has been really rewarding for Annor Bediako, not only for the hands-on experience, but for being able to be part of something that will make such a huge impact.
鈥淢OMENTUM is about menopause and about women鈥檚 health, which is so underfunded and under-studied. I鈥檝e interacted with participants who tell me they wish they had this kind of research when they were younger so they could have had the resources that this study will bring about. They鈥檙e very happy to be part of it so they can help younger women.鈥
"Knowing that what I'm doing right now is going to help a lot of women in the future has been really rewarding."
Dr. Cindy Barha, PhD, is an assistant professor in the Faculty of Kinesiology. She is also a member of the Hotchkiss Brain Institute, Libin Cardiovascular Institute and Alberta Children鈥檚 Hospital Research Institute in the Cumming School of Medicine.