Food science - interesting facts
14:00-17:00
Talk & Lecture
1
2914855
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2024-05-13
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Speaker: Hosahalli S.Ramaswamy, professor, McGill UniversityTime: 14:00-17:00, May 16Venue: D416, College of Biosystems Engineering and Food Science (BEFS), Zijingang Campus
Dr. Ramaswamy is recognized Nationally and Internationally for his research contributions in the area of food science.
Hosahalli S.Ramaswamy
2024-05-16 11:38:58
Zijingang Campus
Likely intersections for forward orbits of curves
15:00-16:00
Talk & Lecture
2
2914846
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2024-05-13
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Speaker: Jit Wu Yap, graduate student, Harvard UniversityTime: 15:00-16:00, May 16Venue: Room 102, School of Mathematical Sciences, Zijingang CampusAbstract: Let $f,g$ be two polynomials of degree $d > 1$ and let $\varphi = (f,g)$ be the endomorphism acting on $P^1 x P^1$. Given two curves $C$ and $C'$, we expect that the forward iterates of $C$, given by $\varphi^n(C)$, to intersect $C'$ at many distinct points. We show that outside of some exceptional cases, this is true under a technical assumption of the Julia sets of $f$ and $g$. This is joint work with Sina Saleh.
We show that outside of some exceptional cases, this is true under a technical assumption of the Julia sets of $f$ and $g$.
Jit Wu Yap
2024-05-16 11:16:12
Zijingang Campus
How to integrate Chinese and Western perspectives on managerial paradoxes?
9:30-11:00
Talk & Lecture
3
2911664
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2024-05-07
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Speaker: Josh Keller, associate professor, University of New South WalesTime: 9:30-11:00, May 15Venue: A723, School of Management, Zijingang CampusAbstract: A growing number of scholars and practitioners around the world now recognize that management is rife with paradoxes, where contradictory forces pull managers into opposing directions. The literature has become very vast, covering a range of topics from negotiations to leadership to innovation and entrepreneurship to strategic management. Unlike most areas of management research, research on managerial paradoxes borrows considerably from ancient Chinese philosophy for insights. Integrating ancient Chinese philosophy with modern Western management theory is not a simple task. Dr. Keller will discuss some of the key challenges and provide insights into how Chinese and Western scholars can work together to advance the study of managerial paradoxes in China and all around the world.
Dr. Keller will discuss some of the key challenges and provide insights into how Chinese and Western scholars can work together to advance the study of managerial paradoxes in China and all around the world.
Josh Keller
2024-05-15 09:20:45
Zijingang Campus
Knowledge spillovers, competition, and individual careers
10:00
Talk & Lecture
4
2911660
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2024-05-07
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Speaker: Christian Dustmann, professor, University College LondonTime: 10:00, May 16Venue: Room120, School of Economics, Zijingang Campus
Christian Dustmann, FBA, is a German economist who currently serves as Professor of Economics at the Department of Economics of University College London.
Christian Dustmann
2024-05-16 09:13:59
Zijingang Campus
Intertextuality in T. S. Eliot’s poetry
8:00-10:00
Talk & Lecture
5
2911644
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2024-05-07
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Speaker: William Baker, professor, Hangzhou Normal University/ Zhejiang University/ Northern Illinois UniversityTime: 8:00-10:00, May 11Venue: online (Tencent: 488-286-920)Abstract: The presentation will apply the concept of “intertextuality” to various poems by T. S. Eliot (1888-1965) and explain why it illuminates Eliot’s work. An explanation of “intertexuality” is a term used in recent literary discourse to indicate how a text, in this instance individual poems by one poet draw upon other literary texts by other authors. Extracts from early poems by Eliot, such as “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock,” and portions of “The Waste Land” will be followed also by readings and discussion of Eliot’s use of intertextuality in the opening section of “Burnt Norton” from his late great poetic sequence “The Four Quartets.” If time allows there will be an illustration of Eliot using “intertextuality” for humorous purposes in one of the poems “Macavity: The Mystery Cat” and to also discuss how “intertextuality” relates in literary theory to ideas relating to “modernism” and “postmodernism.”
The presentation will apply the concept of “intertextuality” to various poems by T. S. Eliot (1888-1965) and explain why it illuminates Eliot’s work.
William Baker
2024-05-11 09:03:44
Online
Stress management and the real health benefits of nature in the prevention of burn-out and depression
14:00-16:00
Talk & Lecture
6
2905540
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2024-04-22
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Speaker: Alain LANCELOT, Forest therapy guide and president of the French branch of INFOMTime: 14:00-16:00, April 26Venue: Room537, No. 3 Hainayuan Building, Zijingang Campus
During this lecture, Alain Lancelot will present to you the real benefits of the forest on the physical and mental health of Man.
Alain LANCELOT
2024-04-26 10:15:26
Zijingang Campus
Reduced stress between inclusions with biological bonding
16:00
Talk & Lecture
7
2905483
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2024-04-22
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Speaker: Hyeonbae Kang, professor, Inha UniversityTime: 16:00, April 23Venue: Room210, No. 2 Hainayuan Building, Zijingang Campus
If two conducting or insulating inclusions are closely located, the gradient of the solution may become arbitrarily large as the distance between inclusions tends to zero, resulting in high concentration of stress in between two inclusions.
Hyeonbae Kang
2024-04-23 10:07:19
Zijingang Campus
The isometric embedding of abstract surfaces in the Euclidean space
16:00
Talk & Lecture
8
2905464
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2024-04-22
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Speaker: HAN Qing, professor, University of Notre DameTime: 16:00, April 26Venue: Room210, No. 2 Hainayuan Building, Zijingang Campus
A surface in the 3-dimensional Euclidean space can be viewed as the image of a map from a planar domain to the 3-dimensional Euclidean space, at least locally.
HAN Qing
2024-04-26 10:00:46
Zijingang Campus
The Arnold Arboretum's collections: woody plants for research, conservation, and joy
10:00
Talk & Lecture
9
2902142
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2024-04-16
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Speaker: Dr. Michael S. DosmannTime: 10:00, April 18Venue: East 1A-201, Zijingang Campus
Dr. Michael S. Dosmann is the keeper of the Living Collections, The Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University. He is also the key scholar of one of Earth's premier woody plant collections.
Michael S. Dosmann
2024-04-18 16:18:46
Zijingang Campus