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Video
In this ‘Student Voices’ session, students share their views on, and experiences with, emerging Generative AI tools, including ChatGPT. The session will provide a conversation opportunity between teachers and students in this rapidly changing area, and a valuable chance to hear the learner's perspective.
Event Date: 23/3/2023
Facilitator(s): Dr Julia Chen (EDC), Mr Anthony Ho (EDC)
Honourable moderator for Q&A session: Prof David Shum, Dean of FHSS
EDC Coordinator: Darren Harbutt
- Subjects:
- Lesson Design
- Keywords:
- Artificial intelligence College teaching Artificial intelligence -- Educational applications
- Resource Type:
- Video
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Video
ChatGPT is the latest generative AI tool to hit the news and universities worldwide are racing to respond to the challenges to academic integrity and opportunities to higher education it offers. In this online session, a range of participants discuss the big issues surrounding ChatGPT and other AI technology, and outline possible responses universities can make.
Event Date: 16/2/2023
Facilitator(s): Dr Julia Chen (EDC), Mr Darren Harbutt (EDC), Mr Dick Chan (EDC), Mr Adam Forrester (ELC), Prof Song Guo (COMP),Dr Melody Lu (CPCE),Prof Eric Friginal (ENGL)
- Subjects:
- Lesson Design
- Keywords:
- Artificial intelligence College teaching Artificial intelligence -- Educational applications
- Resource Type:
- Video
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Video
EDC is organising a series of Sharing Sessions that present departmental project deliverables and innovations in Technology Enhanced Learning, promoting sustainable and impactful practices that resonate across PolyU and beyond, and funded by PolyU’s Quality Incentive Scheme on Online Teaching, Stage I.
This session proudly presents four departments:
EDC: Impact of changes in the modes of delivery on academic performance by Mr Kenneth Tam
EDC: Global Classroom for enhancing inter-cultural knowledge by Dr Eric Tsui
ENGL: ENGL online initiatives by Prof. Eric Friginal & Dr Renia Lopez
ISE: Educational research by Dr Y.M.Tang
OUS: Evaluation Study of the Three Offshore Online SL Subjects by Prof. Daniel Shek
Event Date: 22/2/2023
Presenter(s): Mr Kenneth Tam (EDC), Dr Eric Tsui (EDC), Prof. Eric Friginal (ENGL), Dr Renia Lopez (ENGL), Dr Y.M. Tang (ISE), Prof. Daniel Shek (OUS)
Facilitator(s): Mr Roy Kam (EDC)
- Subjects:
- Lesson Design and Good Practices
- Keywords:
- College teaching Web-based instruction Internet in education Lesson planning Educational technology
- Resource Type:
- Video
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Video
EDC is organising a series of Sharing Sessions that present departmental project deliverables and innovations in Technology Enhanced Learning, promoting sustainable and impactful practices that resonate across PolyU and beyond, and funded by PolyU’s Quality Incentive Scheme on Online Teaching, Stage I.
This session proudly presents four departments:
EE: VR, AR & machine learning by Dr Fung Yu-fai
LIB: Using DataCamp to Support Online Learning and Teaching of Data Literacy by Mr Ernest Lam
LMS: Gamification and simulation-based teaching by Dr Anthony Pang
SLLO & COMP: Metaverse and virtual learning platforms by Dr Grace Ngai
Event Date: 15/2/2023
Presenter(s): Dr Yu-fai Fung (EE), Mr Ernest Lam (LIB), Dr Anthony Pang (LMS), Dr Grace Ngai (SLLO)
Facilitator(s): Mr Roy Kam (EDC)
- Subjects:
- Lesson Design and Good Practices
- Keywords:
- College teaching Web-based instruction Internet in education Lesson planning Educational technology
- Resource Type:
- Video
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Video
EDC is organising a series of Sharing Sessions that present departmental project deliverables and innovations in Technology Enhanced Learning, promoting sustainable and impactful practices that resonate across PolyU and beyond, and funded by PolyU’s Quality Incentive Scheme on Online Teaching, Stage I.
This session proudly presents three departments:
ME: Virtual robotic platforms by Dr David Navarro-Alarcon
SD: Student Centered Learning using Web 3 technologies by Dr Gino Yu
SFT: Learner-content & Learner-learner/teacher online resources by Dr Tracy Mok
Event Date: 8/2/2023
Presenter(s): Dr David Navarro-Alarcon (ME), Dr Gino Yu (SD); Dr Tracy Mok (SFT)
Facilitator(s): Dr Kai Pan Mark (EDC)
- Subjects:
- Lesson Design and Good Practices
- Keywords:
- College teaching Web-based instruction Internet in education Lesson planning Educational technology
- Resource Type:
- Video
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Video
In this lecture I consider the fundamental, challenging and largely unsolved problem of deriving rigorously the most popular kinetic equations, starting from the laws governing the dynamics of microscopic systems. I plan to present classical and recent results, discussing also some present perspectives.
Event date: 30/3/2023
Speaker: Prof. Mario Pulvirenti (University of Roma La Sapienza)
Hosted by: Department of Applied Mathematics
- Subjects:
- Mathematics and Statistics
- Keywords:
- Mathematical models Kinetic theory of gases -- Mathematical models
- Resource Type:
- Video
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Video
We investigate reversal and recirculation for the stationary Prandtl equations. Reversal describes the solution after the Goldstein singularity, and is characterized by regions in which u > O and u < 0. The classical point of view of regarding the Prandtl equations as an evolution equation in x completely breaks down since u changes sign. Instead, we view the problem as a quasilinear, mixed-type, free-boundary problem. This is a joint work with Sameer Iyer.
Event date: 14/3/2023
Speaker: Prof. Nader Masmoudi (New York University)
Hosted by: Department of Applied Mathematics
- Subjects:
- Mathematics and Statistics
- Keywords:
- Fluid dynamics -- Mathematical models
- Resource Type:
- Video
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Video
In the context of hyperbolic systems of balance laws with dissipative source manifesting relaxation, recent pr"Ogress will be reported in the program of passing to the limit, in 1he BV setting, as the relaxation lime tends to zero.
Event date: 16/2/2023
Speaker: Prof. Constantine Dafermos (Brown University)
Hosted by: Department of Applied Mathematics
- Subjects:
- Mathematics and Statistics
- Keywords:
- Equilibrium -- Mathematical models Relaxation Differential equations Hyperbolic
- Resource Type:
- Video
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Video
Models arising in biology are often written in terms of Ordinary Differential Equations. The celebrated paper of Kermack-McKendrick (19271, founding mathematical epidemiology, showed the necessity to include parameters in order to describe the state of the individuals, as time elapsed after infection. During the 70s, many mathematical studies were developed when equations are structured by age, size, more generally a physiological trait. The renewal, growth-fragmentation are the more standard equations. The talk will present structured equations, show that a universal generalized relative entropy structure is available in the linear case, which imposes relaxation to a steady state under non-degeneracy conditions. In the nonlinear cases, it might be that periodic solutions occur, which can be interpreted in biological terms, e.g., as network activity in the neuroscience. When the equations are conservation laws, a variant of the Monge-Kantorovich distance (called Fortet-Mourier distance) also gives a general non-expansion property of solutions.
Event date: 19/1/2023
Speaker: Prof. Benoît Perthame (Sorbonne University)
Hosted by: Department of Applied Mathematics
- Subjects:
- Biology and Mathematics and Statistics
- Keywords:
- Biomathematics Equations
- Resource Type:
- Video
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Video
Universities conduct research for three reasons: to educate students, to contribute to society, and to understand the world. While society often holds a view of the scholar as a solitary and singular genius, in reality scholars today participate in a highly collaborative, worldwide search for shared understandings that stand the test of time and the scrutiny of others. The problems in the 21st century often demand effort by teams of researchers with resources at scale: laboratories and equipment, compute resources, and expert staffing. Working with faculty, students, and other stakeholders to identify the greatest opportunities and the resources needed to address them is both a privilege and a challenge for modern academic administrators. In this talk, I will share three examples: fostering collaborative proposal-writing; planning for shared capabilities in experimental facilities, data, and computation; and transforming academic structures.
Even date: 12/4/2023
Speaker: Prof. Kathryn Ann Moler
Hosted by: PolyU Academy for Interdisciplinary Research
- Subjects:
- Statistics and Research Methods
- Keywords:
- Research Science
- Resource Type:
- Video
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Video
In this CIHK webinar, we will discuss the material conditions of and historical background to the use of Classical Chinese or Literary Sinitic in writing-mediated brush conversation between literati of Sinitic engaged in cross-border communication within Sinographic East Asia or the Sinographic cosmopolis, which corresponds with today’s China, North Korea, South Korea, Japan (including Okinawa, formerly the Ryukyu Kingdom) and Vietnam. Compared with speech as a modality of communication, real-time writing-mediated interaction between talking humans, synchronously face-to-face, seems uncommon. In any society, speaking is premised on one condition: the interlocutors must have at least one shared spoken language at their disposal, but even then, there are circumstances under which speaking is either physically not feasible or socially inappropriate. Could writing function as an alternative modality of communication when speaking is not an option due to the absence of a shared spoken language, as in cross-border communication settings? Whereas real-time writing-mediated face-to-face interaction is rare where a regional lingua franca was known to exist (e.g., Latin and Arabic), there is ample historical evidence of literati of Classical Chinese or Literary Sinitic from different parts of Sinographic East Asia conducting ‘silent conversation’, synchronously and interactively in writing mode using brush, ink, and paper. Such a pattern of writing-assisted interaction is still practiced and observable in pen-assisted conversation – pen-talk – between Chinese and Japanese speakers today, thanks to the pragma-linguistic affordance of morphographic, non-phonographic sinograms (i.e., Chinese characters and Japanese kanji). We will outline the historical spread of Classical Chinese or Sinitic texts from the ‘center’ to the ‘peripheries’, and the historical background to the acquisition of literacy in Sinitic by the people there. Their shared knowledge of Sinitic helps explain why, for well over a thousand years until the 1900s, literati from these places were able to speak their mind by engaging in ‘Sinitic brush-talk’ 漢文筆談 in cross-border communication.
Even date: 13/5/2022
Speaker: Prof. David C. S. Li
Hosted by: Confucius Institute of Hong Kong, Department of Chinese Culture
- Subjects:
- Chinese Language and Language and Languages
- Keywords:
- Chinese characters History Chinese language -- Written Chinese Written communication China East Asia
- Resource Type:
- Video
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Video
Focusing on tensions and links between national formation and international outlooks, this talk shows how classical world visions persist as China’s modernizers and revolutionaries adopted and revised the Western nation-state and cosmopolitanism. The concepts of tianxia (all under heaven) and datong (great harmony) have been updated into outlooks of global harmony that value unity, equality, and reciprocity as strategies of overcoming interstate conflict, national divides, and social fragmentation. The talk will delve into two debates: the embrace of the West vs. aspirations for a common world, and the difference between liberal cosmopolitanism and socialist internationalism.
Even date: 16/9/2022
Speaker: Prof. Ban Wang
Hosted by: Confucius Institute of Hong Kong, Department of Chinese Culture
- Subjects:
- Chinese Studies
- Keywords:
- Civilization Diplomatic relations World politics China
- Resource Type:
- Video
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Video
During the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, the relaxation of the Ming sea ban, along with the arrival of the Europeans, generated a multipolar environment in East Asia. It revolved around the intra-Asian exchange centered upon Chinese silk and Japanese silver, and a nascent global flow of New World bullion to China and spices for Western Europe. The situation changed during the mid-seventeenth century amid mounting restrictions on overseas contacts from the Tokugawa shogunate of Japan and the consolidation and militarization of Chinese merchants under the Zheng family. By 1683, when the Qing forced the Zheng to surrender and occupied their bastion of Taiwan, China had achieved naval preeminence in the East Asian sea lanes. Other than a few outposts, the Europeans had largely withdrawn from the area north of island Southeast Asia, which remained under the hegemony of the Dutch East India Company. In 1684, the Qing court legalized private trade and travel abroad, prompting another wave of overseas migration. Authorities in China and across eastern maritime Asia enacted policies that kept the Qing merchants and immigrants separate from the earlier Ming loyalists. Additionally, both groups of Chinese were accorded significant political, economic, and legal privileges. This infrastructure, backed by Qing naval power, paved the way for the “Chinese century” in maritime Asia.
Even date: 9/11/2022
Speaker: Dr. Xing Hang
Hosted by: Confucius Institute of Hong Kong
- Subjects:
- Area Studies and Chinese Studies
- Keywords:
- Qing Dynasty (China) Chinese diaspora Southeast Asia Chinese
- Resource Type:
- Video
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Video
In this lecture, Prof. Sifakis will discuss the relevance of existing criteria for comparing human and machine intelligence and show some notable analogies and differences between scientific knowledge and that produced by neural networks. Emphasising that autonomy is an important step towards Artificial General Intelligence (AGI), he will present a characterisation of autonomous systems, and showing key differences with mental systems equipped with common sense knowledge and reasoning, and advocate challenging work directions, including the development of a new foundation for systems engineering and scientific knowledge, and the joint exploration of physical and mental phenomena that embody human intelligence.
Even date: 3/3/2023
Speaker: Prof. Joseph Sifakis
Hosted by: PolyU Academy for Interdisciplinary Research
- Subjects:
- Human-Computer Interaction
- Keywords:
- Artificial intelligence
- Resource Type:
- Video
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Others
This study explained how it combined RV travel and camping, popular overseas, to create a brand that focuses on RVs' unique and personalized experience. It also analyzes how to create a new concept of RV travel and its financial benefits.
- Subjects:
- Hotel, Travel and Tourism
- Keywords:
- Hospitality industry -- Marketing Hotels -- Marketing Recreational vehicle camping Target marketing
- Resource Type:
- Others
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Others
This study discusses a new concept of co-branding between a hotel and a tea brand, which has given both parties a unique understanding of IP cooperation, providing differentiated and personalized services to customers.
- Subjects:
- Hotel, Travel and Tourism
- Keywords:
- Strategic alliances (Business) Hospitality industry -- Marketing Hotels -- Marketing
- Resource Type:
- Others
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Others
This study discusses a new concept of afternoon tea takeaway with a stylish box design - a calendar box and a Christmas bear developed by Conrad Hotels and its revenue outcomes.
- Subjects:
- Hotel, Travel and Tourism
- Keywords:
- COVID-19 (Disease) -- Economic aspects Hospitality industry -- Marketing Hotels -- Marketing Restaurant management
- Resource Type:
- Others
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Others
This study analyzes how Shangri-La Hotel worked on the live-streaming room through platform promotion, increased live-streaming popularity, and order conversion rate.
- Subjects:
- Hotel, Travel and Tourism
- Keywords:
- Hospitality industry -- Marketing Hotels -- Marketing Internet marketing Live streaming
- Resource Type:
- Others
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Others
This study discussed a new hotel package, "Study+vocation," a marketing program of Shanghai Pudong Mandarin Oriental Hotel during the CO-VID 19 epidemic. It takes the stress out of families with working parents and provides a comfortable and reliable learning environment.
- Subjects:
- Hotel, Travel and Tourism
- Keywords:
- Hospitality industry -- Marketing Hotels -- Marketing Hotels -- Pet accommodations Family vacations Target marketing
- Resource Type:
- Others
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Others
This study discussed a new hotel package, "Study+vocation," a marketing program of Shanghai Pudong Mandarin Oriental Hotel during the CO-VID 19 epidemic. It takes the stress out of families with working parents and provides a comfortable and reliable learning environment.
- Subjects:
- Hotel, Travel and Tourism
- Keywords:
- COVID-19 (Disease) -- Economic aspects Hospitality industry -- Marketing Hotels -- Marketing Target marketing
- Resource Type:
- Others