Building a Bridge to the Far East
Photo/Angus McColl
The aim was to build bridges of collaboration between Tsinghua and USC faculty, establish a strategic partnership for future collaboration in research and education, and facilitate exchanges between student and faculty.
The Tsinghua computer science and electrical engineering faculty affiliated with the multidisciplinary Future Internet Technologies Research Center hosted the event.
At the workshop, Tsinghua and USC Viterbi School faculty showcased their relative strengths through briefings by the faculty members. USC Viterbi faculty met Tsinghua students interested in graduate studies at a reception held the second day.
The Chinese government recently announced an initiative that will send up to 1,000 fully funded top students each year to graduate programs at prestigious foreign universities.
“We learned firsthand that Tsinghua students are enthusiastic to study abroad,” Yortsos said. “Many of them have very positive views of doing so at USC if the opportunity becomes available to them through the new Chinese Government initiative.”
The large contingent of USC faculty included:
• Solomon Golomb, University Professor, Ming Hsieh Department of Electrical Engineering (Golomb reads, writes and speaks Chinese.)
• Dan Dapkus, professor and electrophysics chair, Ming Hsieh Deptartment
• Alexander Sawchuk, professor and systems chair, Ming Hsieh Department
• John O’Brien, professor of electrical engineering and senior associate dean, academic affairs
• Cauligi “Raghu” Raghavendra, professor of electrical engineering and senior associate dean, special projects
• Shri Narayanan, professor of electrical engineering
• Chongwu Zhou, professor of electrical engineering
• Todd Brun, associate professor of electrical engineering
• Jay Kuo, professor of electrical engineering
• Jia Grace Lu, associate professor of physics and astronomy
• Gerard Medioni, professor and chair of computer science
• Ramesh Govindan, professor of computer science
• Michael Waterman, University Professor of computational and molecular biology
• Ted Berger, professor of biomedical engineering
• Kirk Shung, professor of biomedical engineering
• Ellis Meng, assistant professor of biomedical engineering
• Joe Qin, a newly appointed professor of chemical engineering and materials science, and of electrical engineering, who is a Tsinghua graduate, arrived at the workshop from his former post at the University of Texas, Austin, meeting many of his USC colleagues for the first time.
The workshop was organized by Raghavendra and Jun Li, executive vice dean at Tsinghua.
Jiguang Sun, dean of Tsinghua’s School of Information Sciences and Technology, and Yortsos signed a Memorandum of Understanding calling for future exchanges of students and faculty as well as collaboration on research and education topics of mutual interest. They agreed that the partnership would be mutually beneficial, and both expressed optimism and excitement over the opportunities for future cooperation.
The Tsinghua-USC partnership was initiated by Feng Deng MS ’93, a respected engineer, entrepreneur and venture capitalist who is an alumnus of both USC and Tsinghua. Deng worked in the Silicon Valley at Intel and Juniper Networks before co-founding Netscreen Technologies with two friends. He received the 2002 Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year Award for the Northern California region and is listed in the company’s Entrepreneur’s Hall of Fame.
Deng returned to China to co-found Northern Light Venture Capital with three other Chinese entrepreneurs. The company quickly has become one of China’s top venture capital companies, and Deng maintains close ties to the electronics industry in Silicon Valley.
“Tsinghua produces the very best undergraduate engineering students in China, while USC produces some of the very best graduate engineers in the world. I owe so much of my success to the combination of these two opportunities. I want to expand this possibility to many other Tsinghua graduates while also developing faculty cooperation,” Deng said at the memorandum signing. “I am so happy to see this partnership come together.”
In addition to the fast-paced workshop, participants bridged cultures through visits to the Great Wall of China, the Summer Palace, the Forbidden City and Tiananmen Square. The travelers returned home with bulging bags of goods from Beijing’s world-famous Knock-Off Alley.
The trip had some additional bridge building:
• Dapkus went to dinner at the famous Peking Duck restaurant with a former Ph.D. student who traveled from Shanghai;
• Kuo met with three graduating Tsinghua students slated to begin research at USC under his direction this fall, courtesy of the new Chinese Government initiative;
• Qin golfed with former colleagues from Beijing; and
• Dean Yortsos made calls on key officials of the Research Institute for Petroleum Exploration and Development and the China National Offshore Oil Corp. to explore possible research and education collaboration with USC.
“The workshop was a big success, but it was just a starting point,” Yortsos said. “The bridges started at Tsinghua will be very useful for the envisioned traffic in collaboration and exchanges.”
During the summer, the USC Viterbi School hosted eight undergraduate students from Tsinghua who worked as research interns.
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USC in the News
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The Chronicle of Higher Education mentioned USC’s $6 billion fundraising campaign. The story noted that USC had already raised $1 billion in a “quiet phase,” including the $200 million naming gift from USC Trustee and alumnus David Dornsife and wife Dana Dornsife to the USC Dornsife College.
The Guardian (U.K.) highlighted two major gifts to USC in a list of the 10 biggest philanthropic benefactors in America. The list included the $200 million naming gift from USC Trustee and alumnus David Dornsife and wife Dana Dornsife to the USC Dornsife College, and the $110 million gift from USC Trustee and USC Viterbi School alumnus John Mork and wife Julie to create the USC Mork Family Scholars Program.
The New York Times featured the USC U.S.-China Institute documentary “Assignment: China — The Week that Changed the World.” The documentary, part of a series, examines media coverage of the 1972 Nixon trip that reshaped U.S.-China relations after a quarter century of isolation and hostility. “People look back now and take it for granted that the outcome was preordained,” said the institute’s Mike Chinoy, who produced the documentary. Voice of America also featured the story.
Los Angeles Times featured the Oscar Senti-meter, a tool developed by the USC Annenberg School, Los Angeles Times and IBM that analyzes thousands of tweets about the Academy Awards nominees. The story noted that Mexican actor Demian Bechir received an enormous boost on Twitter the day of the nominations, with a total of 6,893 tweets mentioning him, a 47-fold increase from the day before. The story noted the tool uses language-recognition technology developed in collaboration with USC Viterbi School’s Signal Analysis and Interpretation Lab.
The Times of India (India) featured a three-day medical emergency training workshop organized in association with USC. At the workshop, held at GCS Medical College in India, 50 doctors and more than 100 paramedics learned how to improve emergency support systems. William Mallon of the Keck School of USC said that discussion topics included the use of portable ultrasonic devices to scan patients. “The ultrasound applications help physicians make accurate and timely decisions,” he noted. Daily News & Analysis (India) also featured the workshop.
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