EdUHK showcases research achievements at award-winning innovations salon

With the aim of promoting knowledge transfer, The Education University of Hong Kong (EdUHK) hosted the Award-Winning Innovations Salon (AWIS) to showcase its award-winning projects recognised in international invention and innovation competitions in 2020. During the past year, the University won 22 international awards.

AWIS is an annual event, organised by the Knowledge Transfer Sub-office of the Research and Development Office, with the goal of fostering communication and stimulating collaboration among different sectors and the University by bringing together academics, educational practitioners and industry experts.

Themed “Invent • Edu-novate • Cohesive Community”, the 2020 virtual Salon featured a series of online activities, including panel discussions and a virtual exhibition of the awarded projects.

Showcased at the event were 11 award-winning entries from the International Invention Innovation Competition in Canada 2020 and International Innovation and Invention Competition 2020 in Taiwan.

The innovations cover a wide range of disciplines, ranging from educational technology for language learners, SEN learners and educational practitioners, to other research areas, such as arts and culture, and environmental technologies.

Speaking at the opening of the event, Professor Lui Tai-lok, Vice President (Research and Development) said, “These research projects and inventions demonstrate EdUHK’s academic diversity and capability, and reinforce the University’s leading role in developing innovative technologies that foster educational, social and technological growth in Hong Kong.”

In addition to showcasing the research projects, the “EdUHK Education and Social Entrepreneurs Fund (EASE Fund)” Scheme was featured in the virtual exhibition. As a knowledge transfer initiative, the EASE Fund Scheme is the University’s first scheme for entrepreneurs featuring education technology, and education and social innovation. It provides seed grants and comprehensive support to EdUHK students and alumni to start up their ventures.

UiTM Malaysia and UNESA Indonesia initiate the Trans-Border Research Collaboration

The Faculty of Business and Management (FBM), Universiti Teknologi MARA (UiTM), Malaysia and the Faculty of Economics, Universitas Negeri Surabaya (UNESA), Indonesia inked the Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) on 23 February 2021 to officiate their trans-border research collaboration.

The online ceremony was attended by the Dean, Prof. Dr. Noryati Ahmad, Deputy Deans and Deputy Registrar from FBM, while Faculty of Economics, UNESA, was represented by the Vice Rectors, Prof. Dr. H. Bambang Yulianto, Dean and Deputy Deans as well as the researchers from both universities.

The research collaboration covers the areas of Marketing, Finance, Islamic Finance and Human Resource Management (HRM) and will be led by Dr. Nazura Mohamed Sayuti, Mr. Nurul Hafez Abd Halil, Dr. Moch. Khoirul Anwar and Assoc. Prof. Dr. Anang Kistyanto respectively. Both institutions have agreed to contribute MYR12,000 each for this collaboration. The funds will be used to facilitate research activities, publication in the high impact journals and participation in innovation competitions.

The research focuses on the setting of both countries, Malaysia and Indonesia with specific interest on the purchase intentions for halal cosmetics, saving behaviour among higher institution’s students, Muslim’s financial behaviour during Covid 19 pandemic, and influence of career adaptability on the relationship between entrepreneurial leadership and social capital on the managerial success for both countries. The research collaboration is expected to be the catalyst for future research agenda for both institutions and to benefit the society, students and the universities.

Seeking Inspiration in Adversity – FBM UiTM Collaborates with Malaysian Women’s Graduate Association to inspire Undergraduates

Faculty of Business and Management (FBM), Universiti Teknologi MARA (UiTM),
Malaysia recently collaborated with the Malaysian Women’s Graduate Association
(PSWM), on a special Webinar program, You Are The Source of My Inspiration
(KSIK). The motivation program anchored on three PSWM inspirational icons,
Rashidi Abdullah (Shidi), Khairil Azreen Mohd Jasni (Khai) and Dinie Rashid
(Dinie). The inspiring fact is that all three of the icons were not born blind
but one day in their teens found themselves blind.

 

Assoc. Prof. Dr Geetha Subramaniam, a FBM lecturer and also
an exco-member of PSWM, together with two lecturers from FBM, Mrs. Ainie
Hairianie Aluwi and Mr. Muhammad Abd Hadi Abd Rahman organised the three-hour
programme, assisted by students from the Human Resource Society UiTM, Puncak
Alam (HURES). The President of PWSM, Datin Fauziah Mohd Ramly, moderated the
session with Mohammad Danish Durrani (HURES representative) as the emcee.

 

Considering all the challenges faced by students, with
the shift of campus experience to online classes, this program was designed as
a motivational session with a difference for the UiTM students.

 

Despite the loss of their sight, the three young men
shared how they used their enhanced senses to develop other talents, like
singing, playing instruments, creating and reciting poems. This talent
management would not have happened if not for the President of PSWM Datin Fauziah
Mohd Ramly, who recognised their hidden talent, nurtured them with love and
brought them out as role models who could motivate the younger generation of
students at schools and universities.

 

Throughout the Webinar, the PSWM icons touched the hearts
of the UiTM academics and students by inspiring them with their experiences in
overcoming adversity. The underlying theme throughout the webinar expressed by
Shidi, Khai and Dinie i.e “To have an attitude of gratitude for everything you
have” kept the 650 attendees spell-bound for a good three hours.

 

The participants listened to the experiences of these
icons who are in their 20s who highlighted that “There’s no point of having
Sight without Vision”. Some of the feedback from students include, ‘Very
Touching”, “We feel so small in front of these three Blind youngsters”, “Such a
peaceful and calm presence”, etc.

 

They further showcased their talents and mesmerised everybody
with their guitar, poem and songs. In fact one of the icons –Dinie beat
hundreds of youngsters in a highly competitive talent show called BIG STAGE and
successfully made it to the top five finalists, coming out fourth placing. Despite
his sight impairment every week he put up a very impressive performance in terms
of singing and dancing too.

 

This type of university – Non-Governmental Organisation
(NGO) partnership should definitely be conducted more for the betterment of
students and society. As Fauziah says,

                                           Go,
Go, Go – Sky is the Limit”.

 

CU and SET organize ASEAN’s and Thailand’s Top Corporate Brands 2020 awards

Chulalongkorn University’s Master in Branding and Marketing (MBM) and the Stock Exchange of Thailand (SET) recently held, for the 11th year, the “ASEAN and Thailand’s Top Corporate Brands 2020“ event as part of “Chula the Impact 2” project, to present research results and awards to organizations with the highest corporate brand value in Thailand and ASEAN.

Professor Dr Bundit Eua-aporn, Chulalongkorn University President, presided over the event on November 27, 2020.

Assistant Professor Dr. Guntalee Ruenrom and Assistant Professor Dr. Ake Pattaratanakun, creators of the Corporate Brand Success Valuation (CBS Valuation) tool from the Department of Marketing, Faculty of Commerce and Accountancy, Chulalongkorn University, stated that despite the unusual circumstances of the COVID-19 pandemic, the research team has continued to measure the corporate brand value of registered companies both in Thailand and in Southeast Asia.  This is all done to encourage top executives to focus on corporate brand building and development for long-term sustainability.

Minor International Thailand Plc has been awarded the Thailand’s Top Corporate Brand for five consecutive years, and also made it to Thailand’s Top Corporate Brands Hall of Fame 2019.  

The 15 companies that have been awarded Thailand’s best corporate brands are Carabao Group, Kasikorn Bank, Krungthai Card, Dhipaya Insurance,  P.C.S. Machine Group Holding Plc., Indorama Ventures, Siam City Cement, Land and House, Energy Absolute Plc.,  Chularat Hospital Plc., VGI, The Erawan Group, Bangkok Expressway and Metro, KCG Electronics, and Intouch Holdings.

Six companies from six countries won the best corporate brands in ASEAN:  Bank Central Asia, Indonesia; Public Bank, Malaysia; SM Prime Holdings, the Philippines; Singtel, Singapore; Vietnam Dairy Products, Vietnam; and Airports of Thailand (AOT), Thailand.

The CBS Valuation tool calculates “corporate brand value” in actual currencies, and enables corporations to build a positive reputation and trust, as well as communicate with business stakeholders and the public.

Results from this award-winning brand valuation research (Outstanding Research Award in Economics from the National Research Council of Thailand in 2014) are being used by leading businesses as Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) to evaluate corporate success in organizational development.

Health Social Service by President University

At the end of February, many areas in Indonesia were hit by floods. One of them is Pantai Harapan Jaya Village, Muara Gembong District, Bekasi. To help relieve flood victims,  President University and Jababeka Peduli from Jababeka Infrastruktur collaborated with the Bekasi Regency Government to hold social service activities by conducting free health checkup.

A total of 105 residents, ranging from children to the elderly, came to have their health checked. The residents who attended were not only checked but were also given medicines. In addition, the team also distributed food and masks for free.

Mahir Nuwarman, Head of Pantai Harapan Jaya Village, expressed his gratitude. “I am delighted with this initiative by President University and Jababeka for residents who are located far from the city centre,” he said.

As the Jababeka Peduli community leader, Diane Damayanti said she was happy to be able to carry out social health services with the university and she hopes that in the future, she can do more such social activities.

Thammasat University students receive awards from EIT

Two students from Thammasat University have won the best Engineering Handbook Award from the Engineering Institute of Thailand under H.M. the King’s patronage(EIT.

Mr Nitithorn Hengpakdee, the fourth-year student from TEP-TEPE, Faculty of Engineering, and Mr Metas Tanonwong, School of Information, Computer and Communication Technology, Sirindhorn International Institute of Technology (SIIT), Thammasat University received the royal honour plaques for their achievement.

H.M. King Maha Vajiralongkorn graciously ordered Mr Kasem Wattanachai, Privy Councilor, to be his representative to welcome the board of committee of the Engineering Institute of Thailand Under H.M. The King’s Patronage (EIT) and grant the royal best education award to 44 Engineering students who have achieved the outstanding academic success.

The venue for receiving the awards was the Sahathai Samakom Pavilion, Grand Palace.

Mining University researchers develop innovative technology for producing metallurgical alumina

St. Petersburg Mining University‘s research team has developed an effective technology for producing alumina by sintering kaolin ores with limestone and the addition of carbon-containing activating agents. Their solution may result in more uses for kaolin ores in the aluminium industry.

The scientists found the optimal content of additives, leading to an increase in alumina recovery of over 7%. The highest efficiency is seen with the carbon proportion in a furnace charge varying between 1.5% and 3%, depending on the type of carbonic material used.

The gradual depletion of high-quality bauxite deposits coupled with the increasing global demand for aluminium necessitates looking for alternative feedstocks. Nepheline formations, low-quality bauxites, clays, and kaolin ores can be the alternatives.

According to Mining University’s team, headed by Vyacheslav Brichkin, Doctor of Engineering Sciences, there is a potential for more extensive use of the ores in producing alumina.

The new technology’s significant benefit is that it reduces the costs of sintering the limestone-kaolin charge due to the self-dissipation effect. Alumina extraction with this technology reaches 93.5%. Moreover, the figure is only slightly affected by the chemical composition of the base kaolin ore.

Kaolin ores are especially relevant for countries lacking large reserves of bauxite and nepheline, such as Egypt. El Dib Amr Basyouni Saad, a postgraduate student at the Department of Metallurgy, representing Cairo-based Al-Azhar University, in also in the team.

Palaeodentistry lessons: scientists examine more than 60 teeth of stegosaurs from Yakutia

An international team of palaeontologists has examined 63 teeth of polar stegosaurs that inhabited the territory of present-day Yakutia. The team was led by Pavel Skutchas, Associate Professor in the Department of Vertebrate Zoology, St Petersburg University, Doctor of Biology.

The finds made it possible to understand that these herbivorous dinosaurs were sedentary, ate very solid food, changed teeth quite often, did not suffer from caries, and also had more complex jaw movements than previously thought. The research findings are published in the journal PLOS ONE.

Powerful and squat stegosaurs are now one of the most recognisable dinosaurs: they are easily identified by the spines on the tail and the bony plates on the back — osteoderms. The representatives of this group lived about 165–125 million years ago, during the Jurassic and early Cretaceous periods. They were five to seven metres long and had a disproportionately small head. Their teeth were therefore quite small — about a centimetre in height and about the same in width.

Palaeontologists from St Petersburg University worked together with colleagues from the Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences; the Borissiak Paleontological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences; the University of Bonn; and the Diamond and Precious Metal Geology Institute of the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences.

The research materials were collected during a series of expeditions to the Republic of Sakha in 2012 and 2017–2019. On the banks of the Teete stream, not far from the Yakut rural locality of Suntar, there is a large, but not yet fully examined the location of dinosaurs.

In the Cretaceous, these territories were located close to the North Pole, which means that they can shed light on the life of polar dinosaurs. Was the local fauna different from that of the southern regions? What was the climate here? How were animals affected by the polar day and polar night? The scientists are trying to find answers to these questions, including by studying the teeth of ancient lizards.

‘We have found teeth of animals of different ages — both adults and cubs,’ said Pavel Skutchas. ‘This suggests that the polar stegosaurs are most likely to have been sedentary: they multiplied and raised offspring on the same territory all year round. Additionally, almost all of the finds are extremely eaten away: many of them have two or three facets — worn edges from contact with adjacent teeth.’

This feature prompted the researchers to believe that second dentition in polar stegosaurs could occur sufficiently quickly. The scientists therefore investigated ‘temporary rings’ — the so-called von Ebner lines, which can be used to calculate the number of days required for odontogenesis.

It took stegosaurs only about 95 days to complete this task, although in other dinosaur species the process usually lasted 200 days or longer. These Yakut inhabitants are most likely not to have suffered from caries since it takes much more time for it to appear.

‘The fact that teeth formed quickly, grinded quickly and changed quickly is highly likely to indicate that the stegosaurs from Yakutia ate some kind of tough food. We cannot yet say with 100% certainty that we have found polar adaptation, since there is, in principle, very little information about the teeth of stegosaurs. However, their teeth, found in more southern areas, usually have only one wear surface. In a word, this is a new question for palaeobotanists — what was the hard plant growing in the polar regions that the Yakut stegosaurs ate?’ noted Pavel Skutchas.

Another remarkable thing made it possible to take a different view on the structure of the jaws of these animals: on the surface of the teeth abrasion, the scientists were able to spot curved micro-furrows. Palaeontologists used to assume that very simple jaw movements were characteristic of stegosaurs — up and down, like scissors. However, now, thanks to the patterns on the facets, it became clear that jaw movements were more complex and included a longitudinal phase.

Another conclusion turned out to be associated with the wavy structure of the enamel. It used to be thought that it was unique to the younger Late Cretaceous dinosaurs, which had a complex dentition, such as the platypus. However, the palaeontologists saw this feature in stegosaurs from Yakutia and decided to examine the teeth of another Early Cretaceous dinosaur, a primitive relative of Triceratops — psittacosaurus. This unique feature turned out to have been prevalent among dinosaurs in general.

‘Stegosaurs are one of the most recognisable and popular dinosaurs that are often seen on T-shirts and various pictures. However, we still know little about them. This research has raised many new questions that can be solved without setting out on an expedition, but by studying materials that have been stored in museums for hundreds of years. We have managed to show what features the polar stegosaurs had. But what is an ‘ordinary’, ‘benchmark’ stegosaurus? This has yet to be investigated,’ stressed Pavel Skutchas.

Six ITS lecturers get selected as new members of AIR-AIPI

Six lecturers from Institut Teknologi Sepuluh Nopember (ITS) have been selected to be new members of the Engineering Science Commission (Akademi Ilmu Rekayasa/AIR), Indonesian Academy of Sciences (Akademi Ilmu Pengetahuan Indonesia/AIPI).

They are Professor Ir. Priyo Suprobo, Professor Ir. Eko Budi Djatmiko, Professsor Dr. Ketut Buda Artana, Professor Ir. I Nyoman Pujawan, Professor Dr. Ir. Gamantyo Hendrantoro., and Dr. Muhammad Nur Yuniarto S.T.

AIPI is a scientific institution that has the authority to provide opinions, suggestions, and considerations on science and technology to the government and society. AIPI is known as an independent institution that brings together Indonesian leading scientists.

Professor Ir. I Ketut Aria Pria Utama, or familiarly called Professor IKAP, was the first ITS lecturer to get selected as a member of AIPI in 2015. Five years later since his inauguration, six more ITS lecturers followed his journey as new members of AIR-AIPI.

Prof. IKAP said, “To be selected as a member of AIR-AIPI is not easy. This is because AIPI does not only seek scientists with dozens of research journals, they also look for scientific figures whose work plays a role in the development of Indonesia’s human resources. This achievement once again proves that ITS’s role in the world of engineering is being  recognized.”

Immune receptor protein could hold key to treatment of autoimmune diseases

TARM1 is a receptor protein whose role in the functioning of the immune system is unknown. In a new study, scientists from Japan, led by Professor Yoichiro Iwakura from Tokyo University of Science, and Rikio Yabe and Shinobu Saijo from Chiba University, have explored the potential role of TARM1 in the pathogenesis of rheumatoid arthritis by analyzing mouse models.

In their study published in Nature Communications , they found that TARM1 activated dendritic cells, and the development of collagen-induced arthritis (CIA) was notably suppressed in TARM1-deficient mice and by treatment with TARM1-inhibitory soluble TARM1 proteins. This makes the protein a potential therapeutic target.

As Prof. Iwakura explains, “Tarm1 expression is elevated in the joints of rheumatoid arthritis mouse models, and the development of collagen-induced arthritis (CIA) is suppressed in TARM1-deficient mice.”

The scientists observed that the immune system’s response to type 2 collagen (IIC), a protein crucial for the development of CIA in mice, was suppressed in TARM1-deficient mice. They also found that the antigen-presenting ability of DCs in TARM1-deficient mice was impaired.

With respect to the significance of these findings, Prof. Iwakura explains, “We have shown that TARM1 plays an important role in the maturation and activation of DCs through interaction with IIC”. Finally, they injected TARM1-inhibitory soluble TARM1 proteins into the knee of a mouse with CIA. Notably, this suppressed the progression of CIA in the mouse, suggesting that TARM1 inhibition is effective in weakening autoimmune arthritis.

The team’s findings of the TARM1 protein have wide implications with respect to the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis as well as other autoimmune and allergic diseases.

Commenting on their important discoveries, Prof. Iwakura states, “Because excess DC activation is suggested in many autoimmune and allergic diseases, our observations suggest that TARM1 is a good target for the development of new drugs to treat such diseases.”

The findings of this exciting new study surely indicate that there still remains much to be understood about autoimmune diseases like rheumatoid arthritis—and that the more we understand them, the better we can fight them!