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CityU's Data Science Day - City University of Hong Kong

CityU's Data Science Day 2020

The CityU’s Data Science Day is organized by the School of Data Science and the Hong Kong Institute for Data Science. The Day will begin by President Way Kuo’s opening address. World-renowned Artificial Intelligence scholar and entrepreneur, Dr Kai-Fu Lee, will deliver the keynote speech through online platform. The Day will feature two technical sessions to showcase HKIDS project presentations by faculty members across CityU. A panel discussion on data science for interdisciplinary research and education will be held in the late morning. The Data Science Day also celebrates the occasion of SDSC’s and HKIDS’s two-year anniversary.

Date: 7 August 2020 (Friday)
Time: 9:00 am – 4:00 pm (Registration starts at 8:30am)
Highlights:

     Opening Remarks by the President
     SDSC and HKIDS Status Update
     Keynote Speech by Dr Kai-Fu Lee 
     Panel Discussion by Deans of Colleges and Schools 

CityU Leaders

Prof Way KUO

Prof Way KUO

(President and University Distinguished Professor, CityU)

Prof Alex JEN

Prof Alex JEN

(Provost, CityU)

Prof Jian LU

Prof Jian LU

(Vice President (Research and Technology), CityU)

Prof S. Joe QIN

Host

Prof S. Joe QIN

(Dean and Chair Professor, School of Data Science;
Director, Hong Kong Institute for Data Science, CityU)

Dr Kai-Fu LEE

Keynote Speech by

Dr Kai-Fu LEE
(Chairman and CEO, Sinovation Ventures;
President, Sinovation Ventures Artificial Intelligence Institute)

Topic: The Tech Superpowers & Next in AI

Time: 9:35 - 10:35

Abstract
In this talk, Dr Kai-Fu Lee will walk the audience through the technology development history between U.S. and China and how the two nations have formulated tech superpowers of today. Among the many new technologies, China has joined the US as a leader in AI. Dr Lee will deep dive into three unique advantages of the Chinese AI market: huge user base and data, techno-utilitarian policy, and gladiator-like entrepreneurs. He will also share some of the latest progress in other new frontier technology areas such as digital currency, CRISPR, quantum computing, and genomics. Calibrating on next phase of AI development, he will analyze both in the aspects of research breakthroughs and application focused areas. AI research gradually moves from perception-driven “system I” to recognition-driven “system II.” AI applications focuses on applying existing technology to real-world problems and solve issues faced by our collective human society.

Deans at CityU Serving as Panelists

Mobirise

Prof Richard ALLEN

(Dean, School of Creative Media, CityU)

Mobirise

Prof Chak Keung CHAN

(Dean, School of Energy and Environment, CityU)

Mobirise

Prof Raymond Hon-fu CHAN

(Dean, College of Science, CityU)

Mobirise

Prof Tei Wei KUO

(Dean, College of Engineering, CityU)

Mobirise

Prof Nikolaus OSTERRIEDER

(Dean, Jockey Club College of Veterinary Medicine and Life Sciences, CityU)

Mobirise

Prof Richard WALKER

(Dean, College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences, CityU)

Chairs of HKIDS Research Project Presentations

Prof Ding-Xuan ZHOU

(Associate Dean and Chair Professor, School of Data Science, CityU)

Prof Minghua CHEN

(Professor, School of Data Science;
Assistant Director, Hong Kong Institute for Data Science, CityU)

HKIDS Project Teams

Prof Richard WALKER

(Dean, College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences;
Chan Hon Pun Professor of Behavioural and Policy Sciences;
Chair Professor, Department of Public Policy, CityU)

Prof Min XIE

(Chair Professor, Department of Systems Engineering and Engineering Management;
Chair Professor, School of Data Science, CityU)

Prof Hong YAN

(Chair Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, CityU)

Prof Jonathan ZHU

(Chair Professor, Department of Media and Communication;
Chair Professor, School of Data Science, CityU) 

Prof Meichun LIU

(Head and Professor, Department of Linguistics and Translation, CityU)

Dr Patrick LEE

(Associate Dean and Associate Professor, School of Energy and Environment, CityU)

Dr Edmund CHENG

(Associate Professor, Department of Public Policy, CityU)

Dr John LEE

(Associate Professor, Department of Linguistics and Translation, CityU)

Dr Chris Fei SHEN

(Associate Professor, Department of Media and Communication, CityU)

Dr Yanni SUN

(Associate Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, CityU)

Dr Ka-Chun WONG

(Assistant Professor, Department of Computer Science, CityU)

HKIDS Research Project Presentations

Presented by:
Prof Hong YAN
(Chair Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, CityU)

Prof Min XIE
(Chair Professor, Department of Systems Engineering and Engineering Management; Chair Professor, School of Data Science, CityU)

Project Introduction:
This project started in April this year. We aim to investigate big data processing techniques for performance analysis, prediction and control of smart factories. We will study effective methods for manufacturing data filtering and imputation to improve the data quality. Statistical models, machine learning algorithms and optimization techniques will be proposed for data classification and analysis. Computer software will be developed for automated and intelligent control of smart factories.

(Please click here for the PowerPoint slides.)


Presented by:
Prof Richard WALKER
(Dean, College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences;
Chan Hon Pun Professor of Behavioural and Policy Sciences;
Chair Professor, Department of Public Policy, CityU)

Dr Edmund CHENG
(Associate Professor, Department of Public Policy, CityU)

Dr Chris Fei SHEN
(Associate Professor, Department of Media and Communication, CityU)

Project Introduction:
Digital communication technologies have played a critical role in modern-day protests around the globe in the last decade. Labeled as “crowd-enabled connective actions,” the mobilizing structure of networked social movements may differ fundamentally from professional social movements led by movement organizations or political parties. These networked social movements can resolve free-rider problems of collective action by providing information networks and frame alignment to its participants, which undermines the need for formal leadership.

The Hong Kong protests have operated across diverse traditional media and social media platforms (a Reddit-like forum, Telegram channels, Instagram graphics, and Facebook pages) in a cosmopolitan city with an extremely high level of social media and smartphone penetration rate. This setting is ideal for big data analysis. In this presentation, we provided a preliminary topic and network analysis of 20 million comments over 44 weeks from 2019 to 2020 on LIHKG.com. We analyze all posts with those in the public affairs forum to understand the relationship between different topics and drill down to unpack post volumes, trend, pattern, centrality rank, degree distribution, and core-periphery comments. We identify that the pattern of user activity is highly correlated to offline events. We then reveal how specific topics and social networks form frame alignment. We also identified a number of hyper-active users who contributed frequently to the discussions related to the protests and found that over time a few dozen user accounts gained in-group and out-group recognition in different communities. In other words, while there were no authoritative individuals or organizations in mobilizing and framing the protests, a "networked and leaderful structure" helped distribute the role of information dissemination and frame coordination. In conclusion, we outline the value of big data analysis of social phenomena and point to the challenges it presents for social science research. 

(Please click here for the PowerPoint slides.)

Presented by:
Dr Yanni SUN
(Associate Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, CityU)

Dr Patrick LEE
(Associate Dean and Associate Professor, School of Energy and Environment, CityU)

Project Introduction:
Microbial communities, which contain microbes sharing the same living space, ubiquitously exist anywhere from various human body sites to different environmental niches. Elucidating the composition and functional profiles of the microbiome (i.e. the ensemble of all the microbes in a niche) is essential in many fields including pathogen discovery, ecology, epidemiology etc. Applying modern sequencing technologies to sequence all the genetic materials in various samples has become the most popular method for studying microbial communities. Massive amount of sequencing data has been accumulated, posing significant computational challenges for converting the data into knowledge. In this short talk, we will share the ongoing researches about this topic at CityU.

(Please click here for the PowerPoint slides.)

Presented by:
Prof Meichun LIU
(Head and Professor, Department of Linguistics and Translation, CityU)

Dr John LEE
(Associate Professor, Department of Linguistics and Translation, CityU)

Project Introduction:
Text readability assessment aims to analyze the difficulty of a document, and predict the school grade for which the document is most suitable. Classic approaches rely largely on surface cues, such as word frequency and sentence length. Syntactic and semantic complexity, however, also have significant impact on text difficulty. In this talk, we present a level-annotated corpus of Chinese textbook materials, and report preliminary results of a readability assessment system that takes not only lexical, but also syntactic and semantic complexity into account.

(Please click here for the PowerPoint slides.)

Presented by:
Dr Ka-Chun WONG
(Assistant Professor, Department of Computer Science, CityU)

Project Introduction:
The early detection of cancers has the potential to save many lives. A recent attempt has been demonstrated successful. However, we note several critical limitations. Given the central importance and broad impact of early cancer detection, we aspire to address those limitations. We explore different supervised learning approaches for multiple cancer type detection and observe significant improvements; for instance, one of our approaches (i.e., CancerA1DE) can double the existing sensitivity from 38% to 77% for the earliest cancer detection (i.e., Stage I) at the 99% specificity level. For Stage II, it can even reach up to about 90% across multiple cancer types. In addition, CancerA1DE can also double the existing sensitivity from 30% to 70% for detecting breast cancers at the 99% specificity level. Data and model analysis are conducted to reveal the underlying reasons. A website is built at http://cancer.cs.cityu.edu.hk/

(Please click here for the PowerPoint slides.)

Presented by:
Prof Jonathan ZHU
(Chair Professor, Department of Media and Communication;
Chair Professor, School of Data Science, CityU)

Project Introduction:
The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has once again demonstrated the complexity, vulnerability, and unpredictability of the contemporary international relations. Of various research traditions on global studies, network analysis has been an increasingly popular approach to help uncover hidden, indirect, and multilateral dynamics underlying the global structure. In the current study, we apply ego-network analysis, a set of useful but less known tools, to explore the ongoing reconfiguration of the global politico-economic ecosystems based on crossnational flow of goods, capital and information. While our findings are preliminary, the ego-network approach appears to be able to offer a variety of unexpected insights with important policy implications.

(Please click here for the PowerPoint slides.)

7 August 2020 (Friday) 
AM Session

(9:00 - 12:30)

9:00 - 9:15

Welcoming

Opening Remarks by
Prof Way KUO

9:15 - 9:35

Updates of SDSC and HKIDS

Presented by
Prof S. Joe QIN

9:35 - 10:35

Keynote Speech

Topic: The Tech Superpowers &
Next in AI

Presented by
Dr Kai-Fu LEE

10:35 - 10:45

Break (10 mins)

10:45 - 11:05
HKIDS Research Project Presentation

Topic: Big-data-driven Performance Analysis, Prediction and Control of Smart Factories

Presented by
Prof Hong YAN
Prof Min XIE

(PowerPoint Slides)

11:05 - 11:25
HKIDS Research Project Presentation

Topic: Blending Topic Modeling and Social Network Analysis: Big Data Analysis of the Hong Kong Protests

Presented by
Prof Richard WALKER
Dr Edmund CHENG
Dr Chris Fei SHEN


(PowerPoint Slides)

11:25 - 11:45
HKIDS Research Project Presentation

Topic: Illuminate Dark Matters in Microbial Community by Learning from Massive Genomic Data

Presented by
Dr Yanni SUN
Dr Patrick LEE

(PowerPoint Slides)

11:45 - 12:30

Panel Discussion on Data Science for Interdisciplinary Research

Panel members:
Prof Richard ALLEN
(Dean, School of Creative Media, CityU)

Prof Chak Keung CHAN
(Dean, School of Energy and Environment, CityU)

Prof Raymond Hon-fu CHAN
(Dean, College of Science, CityU)

Prof Tei Wei KUO
(Dean, College of Engineering, CityU)

Prof Nikolaus OSTERRIEDER
(Dean, Jockey Club College of Veterinary Medicine and Life Sciences, CityU)

Prof Richard WALKER
(Dean, College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences, CityU) 

Facilitator:
Prof S. Joe QIN

12:30 - 14:30

Lunch break (2 hours)

 

PM session

(14:30 - 16:00)

14:30 - 14:50
HKIDS Research Project Presentation

Topic: Automatic Readability Assessment for Chinese Text

Presented by
Prof Meichun LIU
Dr John LEE

(PowerPoint Slides)

14:50 - 15:10
HKIDS Research Project Presentation

Topic: Data Science for Early Detection from Blood

Presented by 
Dr Ka-Chun WONG

(PowerPoint Slides)

15:10 - 15:30
HKIDS Research Project Presentation

Topic: Ego-network Analysis of Global Flow of Goods, Capital and Information

Presented by
Prof Jonathan ZHU

(PowerPoint Slides)

CityU’s Data Science Day 2020: A Great Success

CityU's Data Science Day

School of Data Science (SDSC) and Hong Kong Institute for Data Science (HKIDS) celebrated their second anniversary by holding the CityU’s Data Science Day 2020 on 7 August, attracting over 180 participants. The event started with the opening remarks by Prof Way KUO, President and University Distinguished Professor of City University of Hong Kong. Dr Kai-Fu LEE, world-renowned artificial intelligence (AI) scholar and entrepreneur, delivered a keynote speech on the frontier development and future exploration direction of AI. The Day featured two technical sessions to showcase HKIDS project presentations by faculty members across CityU. At the same time, a panel discussion on interdisciplinary research and education of data science was held, providing a unique perspective for the various applications of data science which made another highlight of the Day.

President Way KUO delivered an opening remarks for the event, gathered together with Prof Alex JEN, Provost, and Prof Jian LU, Vice-President (Research and Technology). President Kuo noted the importance of the establishment of SDSC two years ago, anticipating the demand of data science professionals was on the rise.

“In the context of the rapid development of artificial intelligence, in order to perform data mining more efficiently, it is truly necessary to open up data science as a new academic discipline. The data sets we study have expanded from pure numbers in the past to complex forms such as texts, images and sounds. For this reason, frontier topics such as natural language processing and computer vision are also the main research directions of SDSC in the future.” He continued, “HKIDS is committed to providing new analytical tools for different disciplines and conducting interdisciplinary exploration based on data science.”

Prof S. Joe QIN, Dean of SDSC and Director of HKIDS shared the achievement and development of SDSC and HKIDS.

“At present, SDSC has graduated its first class of students as Master of Science in Data Science and a number of PhD students in Data Science respectively. Bachelor of Science in Data Science and Bachelor of Engineering in Data and Systems Engineering programmes will receive a new class of freshmen in addition to the sophomore class that was enrolled last year. The well-designed interdisciplinary curricula have further provided students with essential trainings in an ever-globalising workplace. Since its establishment, SDSC has been well-positioned to respond to the needs in this substantive trend. It provides students with extensive exposure across multiple industries and many well-known enterprises, such as Ant Group (formerly known as Ant Financial), JD Digits and Tencent. In the future, both SDSC and HKIDS will continue to devote effort to nurturing talents in data analytics and AI for Hong Kong and the world.”

In his keynote speech of “The Tech Superpowers & Next in AI,” Dr Kai-Fu LEE highlighted the unique advantages of China’s AI market, the latest progress in other cutting-edge technology fields, and the next stage of AI development. Dr Lee first analyzed how the two countries formed the status of today’s technological superpower by comparing the technological development history between the United States and China.

“The development of AI in China in the past decade can be regarded as a miracle. China’s AI development benefitted from a few unique advantages: first, huge user base and data. Data is oil in the new era. China has created a huge database with the largest number of users in the world. Taking the world’s leading intelligent healthcare as an example, AI has made it possible to realize information sharing and virus tracking, which helps China better cope with COVID-19; second, techno-utilitarianism policy, in which China takes the government centric driving mode as the leading mode, can achieve the maximum data utilization rate; third, diligent enterprises.” Dr Lee continued, “in addition to the rapid development of the industry, China is also heading up in the frontier research field of AI in deep learning, and the proportion of papers at the top meetings in 2019 has reached the region second only to the United States.” During the keynote speech, Dr Lee introduced the application of data science such as virtual currency, clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR) and quantum computing. As for the next stage of AI development, Dr Lee stressed that AI research gradually moves from perception-driven “system I” to recognition-driven “system II.” He also introduced the frontier research in NLP, CV and reinforcement learning. “Of course, there are still many limitations and challenges in the application of AI, such as the tedious manual annotation of data in supervised learning, the expensive requirements for computing power, and the security and robustness problems that may arise in practical application, but we have reasons to believe that the AI development is full of possibilities.”

Followed by the panel discussion session, Prof Qin and other Deans of CityU’s Colleges and Schools shared their insights in the data science for interdisciplinary research and education. The panelists comprised of Prof Richard ALLEN, Dean of School of Creative Media; Prof Chak Keung CHAN, Dean of School of Energy and Environment; Prof Raymond Hon-Fu CHAN, Dean of College of Science; Prof Tei Wei KUO, Dean of College of Engineering; Prof Nikolaus OSTERRIEDER, Dean of Jockey Club College of Veterinary Medicine and Life Sciences; and Prof Richard WALKER, Dean of College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences. The panel discussion addressed the two major issues: to enrich general education for students of various colleges and schools for data literacy and to introduce the application of data science and machine learning in their fields. The panelists shared how their students and research project teams had greatly benefitted from learning data science and machine learning so as to deal with complex data and systems effectively.

Prof Ding-Xuan ZHOU, Associate Dean and Chair Professor of SDSC, and Prof Minghua CHEN, Professor of SDSC and Assistant Director of HKIDS chaired the Day’s programme with speakers from six HKIDS project teams who brought exciting data analysis research in their respective fields. Respective speakers and session highlights include;

Prof Hong YAN, Chair Professor of Department of Electrical Engineering, and Prof Min XIE, Chair Professor of Department of Systems Engineering and Engineering Management and School of Data Science, presented the big-data-driven performance analysis, prediction and control of smart factories, aiming to study the application of intelligent factory.

Prof Richard WALKER, Dean of College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences; Chan Hon Pun Professor of Behavioural and Policy Sciences and Chair Professor of Department of Public Policy, Dr Edmund CHENG, Associate Professor of Department of Public Policy and Dr Chris Fei SHEN, Associate Professor of Department of Media and Communication, conducted big data analysis of Hong Kong protest with blending topic modeling and social network analysis.

Dr Yanni SUN, Associate Professor of Department of Electrical Engineering and Dr Patrick LEE, Associate Dean and Associate Professor of School of Energy and Environment, used modern sequencing technology to sequence all genetic material in different samples, and studied dark matter in microbial communities from a large number of genomic data.

Prof Meichun LIU, Head and Professor of Department of Linguistics and Translation and Dr John LEE, Associate Professor of Department of Linguistics and Translation, presented a level-annotated corpus of Chinese textbook materials, and report preliminary results of a readability assessment system that takes not only lexical, but also syntactic and semantic complexity into account.

Dr Ka-Chun WONG, Assistant Professor of Department of Computer Science, introduced the data analysis method his project team are studying to detect early cancer from blood, which can double the existing sensitivity from 38% to 77% for the earliest cancer detection (i.e., Stage I) at the 99% specificity level.

Prof Jonathan ZHU, Chair Professor of Department of Media and Communication and School of Data Science, shared the application of ego-network analysis to explore the continuous reconstruction of the global political and economic ecosystem based on the transnational flow of goods, capital and information.

Concluded a day full of knowledge sharing and inspiring talks, SDSC and HKIDS extended their warm gratitude to the joint efforts of all the participating leaders, experts, guests and representatives. 

        香港城市大學數據科學學院與香港數據科學研究院慶祝成立兩周年的慶典於2020年8月7日成功舉行,共吸引有逾180名參會者。本次活動在城市大學校長暨大學傑出教授郭位校長致辭中拉開帷幕。世界著名人工智慧學者、企業家李開復博士隨之發表了關於人工智慧(AI)前沿發展及未來探索方向的主題演講。本次活動亦舉行了兩個專題研討會,展示由城大學者所作的資料科學專案介紹,同時一個關於資料科學的跨學科研究和教育的圓桌論壇在上午舉行,為資料科學的多彩應用提供了獨特視角解讀,成為本次活動又一亮點。

        郭位校長與學務副校長任廣禹教授和副校長 (研究及科技)呂堅教授一同出席了本次慶典。郭校長在開幕致辭中強調,數據科學學院成立的初衷是考慮到日益增長的對專業數據分析的需求。“在人工智慧迅速發展的背景下,如何更有針對性且高效地從數據中挖掘資訊,將數據科學作為一門新的學科開闢出來是非常有必要的。我們研究的數據集從過去純粹的數位拓展到了文字、圖像及聲音等複雜的形式,為此而誕生的自然語言處理和電腦視覺等前沿的課題亦是數據科學學院在未來的研究方向”,郭校長表示,“與數據科學學院一同成立的香港數據科學研究院則致力於以數據科學作為基礎,為不同學科提供全新的分析工具,進行跨學科探索。”

        秦泗釗教授作為數據科學學院院長兼香港數據科學研究院院長分享了數據科學學院和香港數據科學研究院目前的成就和發展。目前數據科學學院已畢業了第一批授課型碩士和博士研究生,學士課程在去年錄取了第一屆學生之後又完成了2020年招生,分為數據科學學士和數據與系統工程學士兩個學位。精心設計的交叉學科課程在未來將為學生在全球化的工作環境中提供專業的訓練。數據科學學院成立至今資源豐富,為學生提供了許多來自不同行業的許多知名企業的合作機會,如螞蟻集團 (前稱:螞蟻金服)、京東數科和騰訊等。在未來數據科學學院和香港數據科學研究院將繼續致力於為香港和世界輸送數據分析和人工智慧方向的優秀人才。

        李開復博士隨後發表了以“科技大國分析”及“人工智慧未來”為中心的主題演講,強調了中國AI市場的獨特優勢,其他前沿技術領域的最新進展及人工智慧發展的下一階段。李開復博士首先通過對比美國和中國之間的技術發展歷史來分析兩國如何形成當今技術超級大國的地位。“中國過去十年在人工智慧方面的發展堪稱是一個奇跡”,博士認為,“中國的AI發展得益於幾個獨特優勢:其一是海量的使用者基礎和數據,數據就是新時代的石油,中國以全球最多的用戶數創造了龐大的數據庫。以世界領先的智慧醫療為例,AI使得數據分享和病毒追蹤的實現成為可能,這幫助中國更好的應對新冠病毒;其二是技術功利主義政策,中國以政府中心驅動為主導模式,在犧牲一部分使用者隱私的情況下,能夠達到最大的數據使用率;其三是勤奮努力的企業和創業者,使得一個技術能夠以最快的速度進入到工業界並且實現項目落地。除了業界的高速發展,在學界AI的前沿研究領域,中國也迎頭直上,2019年頂級會議論文佔比僅次於美國。”同時,李開復博士介紹了以虛擬貨幣、基因編碼和量子電腦等為代表的其他領域技術應用。對於下一階段的AI發展,博士強調如今的AI研究正從以概念驅動的第一階段逐漸過渡到以認識驅動的第二階段,並分別介紹了在NLP、CV和強化學習三個領域的前沿研究。當然,誠如博士所言,如今的AI應用仍然存在著諸多限制和挑戰,例如:監督學習中人工標注數據的繁瑣、對電腦算力的昂貴要求和在實際應用中可能產生的安全性和穩定性問題等,但我們依然有理由相信,人工智慧的發展充滿了無限的可能。

        之後的跨學科研究的圓桌論壇,秦泗釗教授和其他幾位院長分享了他們對於數據分析交叉學科研究與應用的獨特看法。參與討論的學者包括創意媒體學院院長艾朗宏(Richard ALLEN)教授,能源與環境學院院長陳澤強教授,科學學院院長陳漢夫教授,工程學院院長郭大維教授,賽馬會動物醫學及生命科學院院長Nikolaus OSTERRIEDER教授及人文社會科學院院長華樂勤(Richard WALKER)教授。本次的研討會聚焦於兩個問題:如何豐富各個學院的學生學習數據分析的通識課程以及對本學科與數據科學交叉研究。小組成員們分享了他們領域中最新的研究專案應用了許多數據科學的內容已應對日益複雜的數據。

        另外,數據科學學院副院長兼講座教授周定軒教授及香港數據科學學院教授兼香港數據科學研究院助理院長陳名華教授主持了兩個專題研討會,由報告人分享了來自香港數據科學研究院的六個領域中令人激動的數據分析研究專案。主要內容有:

        ● 電子工程系講座教授嚴洪教授和系統工程及工程管理系兼數據科學學院講座教授謝旻教授做了以“大數據驅動的智慧工廠性能分析、預測與控制”為題的演講,旨在研究對工廠智慧化的應用。

        ● 人文社會科學院院長、陳漢斌教授席(行為及政策科學)兼公共政策學系公共管理講座教授華樂勤教授聯同公共政策學系副教授鄭煒博士和媒體與傳播系副教授沈菲博士則以混合主題建模與社會網路分析進行了香港遊行大數據分析。

        ● 能源及環境學院副院長兼副教授李鈞瀚博士和電子工程學系副教授孫燕妮博士應用現代測序技術對不同樣品中的所有遺傳物質進行測序,從大量基因組數據中研究微生物群落中的暗物質。

        ● 翻譯及語言學系系主任劉美君教授和翻譯及語言學系副教授李思源博士提出了一個基於水準標注的漢語教材語料庫,並報告了一個不僅考慮詞彙複雜度,而且考慮句法和語義複雜性的可讀性評估系統的文本可讀性評估。

        ● 電腦科學系助理教授黃家駿博士則介紹了他們正在研究的從血液中檢測早期癌症的數據分析方法,能夠在99%的置信水準將現有的早期癌症檢測(即1期)的靈敏度從38%提高到77%。

        ● 數據科學學院兼媒體與傳播系計算社會科學講座教授祝建華教授分享了運用網路分析探索基於商品、資本和資訊跨國流動的全球政治經濟生態系統的持續重構。

在為期一天的知識分享和鼓舞人心的講座結束後,數據科學學院和香港數據科學研究院對與會領導、專家、嘉賓和代表的共同努力表示衷心感謝。 

        香港城市大学数据科学学院与香港数据科学研究院庆祝成立两周年的庆典于2020年8月7日成功举行,共吸引有逾180名参会者。本次活动在城市大学校长暨大学杰出教授郭位校长致辞中拉开帷幕。世界著名人工智能学者、企业家李开复博士随之发表了关于人工智能(AI)前沿发展及未来探索方向的主题演讲。本次活动亦举行了两个专题研讨会,展示由城大学者所作的数据科学项目介绍,同时一个关于数据科学的跨学科研究和教育的圆桌论坛在上午举行,为数据科学的多彩应用提供了独特视角解读,成为本次活动又一亮点。

        郭位校长与学务副校长任广禹教授和副校长 (研究及科技)吕坚教授一同出席了本次庆典。郭校长在开幕致辞中强调,数据科学学院成立的初衷是考虑到日益增长的对专业数据分析的需求。“在人工智能迅速发展的背景下,如何更有针对性且高效地从数据中挖掘信息,将数据科学作为一门新的学科开辟出来是非常有必要的。我们研究的数据集从过去纯粹的数字拓展到了文字、图像及声音等复杂的形式,为此而诞生的自然语言处理和计算机视觉等前沿的课题亦是数据科学学院在未来的研究方向”,郭校长表示,“与数据科学学院一同成立的香港数据科学研究院则致力于以数据科学作为基础,为不同学科提供全新的分析工具,进行跨学科探索。”

        秦泗钊教授作为数据科学学院院长兼香港数据科学研究院院长分享了数据科学学院和香港数据科学研究院目前的成就和发展。目前数据科学学院已毕业了第一批授课型硕士和博士研究生,学士课程在去年录取了第一届学生之后又完成了2020年招生,分为数据科学学士和数据与系统工程学士两个学位。精心设计的交叉学科课程在未来将为学生在全球化的工作环境中提供专业的训练。数据科学学院成立至今资源丰富,为学生提供了许多来自不同行业的许多知名企业的合作机会,如蚂蚁集团(前称:蚂蚁金服)、京东数科和腾讯等。在未来数据科学学院和香港数据科学研究院将继续致力于为香港和世界输送数据分析和人工智能方向的优秀人才。

        李开复博士随后发表了以“科技大国分析”及“人工智能未来”为中心的主题演讲,强调了中国AI市场的独特优势,其他前沿技术领域的最新进展及人工智能发展的下一阶段。李开复博士首先通过对比美国和中国之间的技术发展历史来分析两国如何形成当今技术超级大国的地位。“中国过去十年在人工智能方面的发展堪称是一个奇迹”,博士认为,“中国的AI发展得益于几个独特优势:其一是海量的用户基础和数据,数据就是新时代的石油,中国以全球最多的用户数创造了庞大的数据库。以世界领先的智能医疗为例,AI使得信息分享和病毒追踪的实现成为可能,这帮助中国更好的应对新冠病毒;其二是技术功利主义政策,中国以政府中心驱动为主导模式,在牺牲一部分用户隐私的情况下,能够达到最大的数据使用率;其三是勤奋努力的企业和创业者,使得一个技术能够以最快的速度进入到工业界并且实现项目落地。除了业界的高速发展,在学界AI的前沿研究领域,中国也迎头直上,2019年顶级会议论文占比仅次于美国。”同时,李开复博士介绍了以虚拟货币、基因编码和量子计算机等为代表的其他领域技术应用。对于下一阶段的AI发展,博士强调如今的AI研究正从以概念驱动的第一阶段逐渐过渡到以认识驱动的第二阶段,并分别介绍了在NLP、CV和强化学习三个领域的前沿研究。当然,诚如博士所言,如今的AI应用仍然存在着诸多限制和挑战,例如:监督学习中人工标注数据的繁琐、对计算机算力的昂贵要求和在实际应用中可能产生的安全性和稳定性问题等,但我们依然有理由相信,人工智能的发展充满了无限的可能。

        之后的跨学科研究的圆桌论坛,秦泗钊教授和其他几位院长分享了他们对于数据分析交叉学科研究与应用的独特看法。参与讨论的学者包括创意媒体学院院长艾朗宏(Richard ALLEN)教授,能源与环境学院院长陈泽强教授,科学学院院长陈汉夫教授,工程学院院长郭大维教授,赛马会动物医学及生命科学院院长Nikolaus OSTERRIEDER教授及人文社会科学院院长华乐勤(Richard WALKER)教授。本次的研讨会聚焦于两个问题:如何丰富各个学院的学生学习数据分析的通识课程以及对本学科与数据科学交叉研究。小组成员们分享了他们领域中最新的研究项目应用了许多数据科学的内容已应对日益复杂的数据。

        另外,数据科学学院副院长兼讲座教授周定轩教授及香港数据科学学院教授兼香港数据科学研究院助理院长陈名华教授主持了两个专题研讨会,由报告人分享了来自香港数据科学研究院的六个领域中令人激动的数据分析研究项目。主要内容有:

        ● 电子工程讲座教授严洪教授和系统工程及工程管理兼数据科学学院讲座教授谢旻教授做了以“大数据驱动的智能工厂性能分析、预测与控制”为题的演讲,旨在研究对工厂智能化的应用。

        ● 人文社会科学院院长、陈汉斌教授席(行为及政策科学)兼公共政策学系公共管理讲座教授华乐勤教授联同公共政策学系副教授郑炜博士和媒体与传播系副教授沈菲博士则以混合主题建模与社会网络分析进行了香港游行大数据分析。

        ● 能源及环境学院副院长兼副教授李钧瀚博士和电子工程学系副教授孙燕妮博士应用现代测序技术对不同样品中的所有遗传物质进行测序,从大量基因组数据中研究微生物群落中的暗物质。

        ● 翻译及语言学系系主任刘美君教授和翻译及语言学系副教授李思源博士提出了一个基于水平标注的汉语教材语料库,并报告了一个不仅考虑词汇复杂度,而且考虑句法和语义复杂性的可读性评估系统的文本可读性评估。

        ● 电脑科学系助理教授黄家骏博士则介绍了他们正在研究的从血液中检测早期癌症的数据分析方法,能够在99%的置信水平将现有的早期癌症检测(即1期)的灵敏度从38%提高到77%。

        ● 数据科学学院兼媒体与传播系计算社会科学讲座教授祝建华教授分享了运用网络分析探索基于商品、资本和信息跨国流动的全球政治经济生态系统的持续重构。

        在为期一天的知识分享和鼓舞人心的讲座结束后,数据科学学院和香港数据科学研究院对与会领导、专家、嘉宾和代表的共同努力表示衷心感谢。

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