Metadata
Title
Striking Image Competition 2026
Category
scholarships
UUID
47968be1c1444e5faf68038e6e6db7a4
Source URL
https://cumming.ucalgary.ca/strikingimage2026
Parent URL
https://cumming.ucalgary.ca/research/advanced-Imaging-microscopy-network-aim
Crawl Time
2026-03-24T03:45:02+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Striking Image Competition 2026

Source: https://cumming.ucalgary.ca/strikingimage2026 Parent: https://cumming.ucalgary.ca/research/advanced-Imaging-microscopy-network-aim

11th Annual Competition



Striking Image Competition - Information and Submission

Rules, Criteria, Prizes, and Resources

Competition Information

Please read the following information before making your submission.

Competition Rules

Submission Deadline: November 6, 2026

Maximum one entry per category per person.

All entries must:

File requirements:

Submitting an image or video implies that you (the submitter):

Failure to comply with these rules will result in disqualification.

Competition Categories

Judging Criteria

Prizes

The top THREE submissions for the Single Cell/Subcellular and Tissue/Organ/Whole Body categories will receive prizes.

The top ONE submission for the Lightsheet and Video categories will receive prizes.

First Prize: $300 to spend at a list of local businesses

Second Prize: $200 to spend at a list of local businesses

Third Prize: $100 to spend at a list of local businesses

NB: Organizers reserve the right to modify the number of winners based on number of submissions and other factors.

Resources

About Colour Blindness & Colour Blind Friendly Images

About Lay Summaries

Submission Form

To submit an entry your must be a member of the University of Calgary with a valid @ucalgary.ca email address.

Submission form is open from September 15th to November 6th.

Submission Form


Single Cell/Subcellular Images

First Prize (Joint)

Viruses seek to hijack host cells to replicate and spread, while cells evolve mechanisms to detect and suppress viral invasion. Here, we show that P-bodies (ancient cytoplasmic organelles) can trap SARS-CoV-2 RNA (cyan). The cell nuclei are yellow.

Rory Mulloy

First Prize (Joint)

Astrocytes are the most abundant cells in the human brain—even outnumbering neurons by 3:1 in some regions. We used these images to confirm that our dish contained exclusively astrocytes before performing additional experiments.

Yohan Ricci Zonta

Third Prize

Neurons are the longest-lived cells in the body; most neurons survive for our entire lives. Connections between neurons can be seen in the image here: green and yellow fibers project outward from the nucleus (blue/grey) to connect with nearby cells

Zachary Bailey

Tissue, Organ & Whole Body Images

First Prize

Somite-forming organoids derived from human pluripotent stem cells allow modelling the development of our vertebral column and congenital disorders that affect the spine.

Pranav Saligrama Ramesh

Second Prize (Joint)

When iron builds up in the spinal cord it causes injury to nerve cells. Teal nerve cells on the right are marked by red scars of damage, while those on the left remain unharmed. The faint red spreading left shows the injury moving into healthy tissue

Dorsa Moezzi

Second Prize (Joint)

This image captures a detailed microscopic view of a section of murine colonic tissue, revealing the remarkable organization and complexity of the gut lining.

Rita Hannawayya

Lightsheet Image Category

This image of a transparent mouse heart shows the dense network of sympathetic nerves which course throughout and are used by the nervous system to communicate with heart muscle cells.

Jordan Lee

Video Category

This video shows liver macrophages called Kupffer cells (pink). These cells are specialized at catching foreign components out of the blood, such as microbes. When bacteria (cyan) enter the bloodstream, Kupffer cells capture and internalize them.

Josefien Hommes