 I'm Dr. Deborah Schietz. I'm an associate professor of nursing at the University of Victoria. I'm one of the co-site leads for the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging, the CLSA. The CLSA is timely, especially right now, because the number of older adults in Canada is going to double over the next 20 years. And so we have a lot to learn about aging, and the timing of the study couldn't be better. My personal research interests are about creativity in aging, about healthy aging, and about how we can help people to remain independent and have a high quality of life as they grow older. And so the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging is going to give us a lot of information about that and how we can support people to have the best later life possible. I'm particularly excited about the ways the information that the CLSA will provide that will hopefully allow us to understand a little bit more about creativity and how it can help older people to adapt as they face some of the challenges of growing older.