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New study: Goats more ‘cognitively flexible’ than sheep
Goats can adapt to changing environmental conditions more quickly than sheep probably because of different feeding ecologies, according to a new study involving Dr Alan McElligott, an expert in animal behaviour and welfare at CityU.
Trawl ban boosts marine biodiversity
The prohibition of trawling activities in the Hong Kong marine environment for two and a half years has significantly improved biodiversity, an inter-university study led by CityU has found.
CityU-led collaborative research worth of HK$19m rewarded for Covid-19 projects
Funding worth HK$19 million has been secured for four highly competitive collaborative research projects into Covid-19 led by scholars at CityU.
	Renowned experts advocate nuclear safety and clean energy for net-zero carbon emissions
Thirty eight world-leading scholars, industry leaders and policy makers from around the world debated recent advances in low-carbon energy technology and nuclear safety in a specially convened online Forum on clean energy and nuclear safety on 10 March.
Advanced bioaerosol project to eliminate Covid-19 and other pathogens secures HK$6.15m from Research Impact Fund
A bioaerosols research project aimed at developing innovative and effective methods for detecting and disinfecting bacteria and viruses including SARS-CoV-2 in indoor environments led by CityU has secured HK$ 6.15 million from the Research Impact Fund.
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HK and Taiwan universities have to adapt to the changing times by holding everyone on campus accountable, said Professor Kuo at a higher education forum on university governance in Taipei on 12 December.
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Quality and a culture of change are keys to modernising industrial engineering, said Professor Way Kuo at the IEEE International Conference on Industrial Engineering and Engineering Management 2012 on 11 December.
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Professor Philippe G. Ciarlet, University Distinguished Professor, discussed various fundamental notions of geometry and elasticity at the latest President’s Lecture on 7 December.
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Professor H. T. Kung at Harvard University, gave a lecture on 6 December describing “compressive sensing”, a new approach to the huge volumes of Big Data in its processing, transporting, and storing.

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