Kyoto University – University of Zurich Strategic Partnership Joint Symposium 2023
Date:
Basic Info
Date
2023/3/7 9:30~15:15 (JA/JST)
2023/3/8 9:30~17:10 (JA/JST)
Registration opens at 9:00.
Place
Shiran Kaikan,
Faculty of Medicine Campus,
Kyoto University
( in-person only )
Language
English
Audience
Anyone is welcome to attend.
However, advance registration is required.
Cost
Free of charge
申込先
Must be registerd in advance using the online registration form. (URL below) → Registration closed。
Deadline: Friday 24 February 2023 17:00(JA/JST)
Objective
To advance its development as a university that generates world-class knowledge, Kyoto University collaborates with other leading universities around the world. In 2013, the university concluded an agreement for academic cooperation and exchange with the University of Zurich, followed by a student exchange agreement in 2014. The conclusion of those agreements led to a deepening of exchange and collaboration between the two institutions, particularly in the fields of medicine, life science, and plant science. Based on the achievements made, a strategic partnership agreement was concluded by the two universities in July 2020. The strategic partnership, which is conducted under the leadership of the university presidents, seeks to promote the cross-disciplinary development of existing research and joint research in new fields, cultivate early-career researchers, and build a long-term collaborative relationship between the two universities through educational exchange.
Through its partnership with the University of Zurich, Kyoto University is promoting joint research and the exchange of early-career researchers. Joint research is being actively undertaken in the fields of medicine, plant science, and law, and collaboration on new research themes is also being initiated.
The Kyoto University-University of Zurich Strategic Partnership Joint Symposium 2023 will enable collaborating researchers to share their experiences and review the achievements of the strategic partnership to date. Also, under the theme of “Data Science and Social Impact,” the symposium will present joint research in the social and natural sciences on the ways that data science and AI can impact research and society as a whole, as well as aspects that should be considered for the future. It will also serve as a platform for the discussion of those topics.
Each session will endeavor to take a cross-disciplinary approach based on data science, in alignment with the aims of the strategic partnership.
Program
Day 1 (Tuesday, Mar.7 , 2023)
Time (JST) | Session |
---|---|
9:30-10:05 |
Opening Ceremony
|
10:05-10:15 |
Break
|
10:15-11:45 |
Opening Presentation: The Trajectory and Future of the Strategic Partnership
|
11:45-13:15 |
Lunch Break
|
13:15-15:15 |
Data Science and Social Science
|
Day 2 (Wednesday, Mar.8 , 2023)
Time (JST) | Session |
---|---|
9:30-12:30 |
Early Career Researchers’ Forum
For participants, please refer to page 22 of Abstracts e-book.
|
12:30-14:00 |
Lunch Break
|
14:00-16:30 |
Data Science and Natural Science
|
16:30-16:45 |
Break
|
16:45-17:10 |
Clsoing Ceremony
|
Report
Kyoto University-University of Zurich Strategic Partnership Joint Symposium 2023: Data Science and Social Impact (March 7– 8, Kyoto University)
The Kyoto University-University of Zurich Strategic Partnership Joint Symposium 2023 was held at Kyoto University on March 7–8. The two universities have been actively promoting academic exchange and collaboration since concluding an institutional cooperation agreement in 2013, and the collaboration was greatly bolstered by a Strategic Partnership Agreement in July 2020. The strategic partnership aims to develop cross-disciplinary research collaboration, pioneer joint research in new academic fields, and promote researcher mobility.
The symposium featured a wide range of presentations and cross-disciplinary discussions on the collaborative research and educational exchange pursued by the two institutions in the fields of regenerative medicine, law, plant science, and medical data, as well as wide-ranging discussions on future collaboration and practices for fostering the next generation of researchers. The symposium was the first such event in several years to be held “in person,” as most events have been held online since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic. Approximately 100 people participated in the two-day event, including participants from Kyoto University, the University of Zurich, and other institutions.
The symposium opened with a welcome address by President Nagahiro Minato, a video message from President Michael Schaepman of the University of Zurich, and greetings from Vice-President Christian Schwarzenegger of the University of Zurich. Those addresses were followed by remarks by guest of honor H.E. Dr. Andreas Baum, the ambassador of Switzerland to Japan. In the opening presentation, Prof. Yasuyuki Kono, Kyoto University’s vice-president for international strategy, provided a review of the strategic partnership, including its initiatives and achievements. The presentation included a concrete example of collaboration conducted through the partnership, provided by Prof. Hirohide Saito (Center for iPS Cell Research and Application (CiRA)) and others. Together with Vice-President Kono, the three researchers discussed the achievements of their collaboration, and the challenges entailed in fostering next-generation researchers through laboratory exchanges.
The main sessions on “Data Science and Social Science” and “Data Science and Natural Science” were held in the afternoon of the first and second days. On the first day, legal practitioners and law researchers from both universities, which included Prof. Hiroki Habuka (Center for Interdisciplinary Studies of Law and Policy (CISLP)), Prof. Tatsuhiko Inatani (Faculty and Graduate School of Law) and Prof. Yasuyuki Echi (Faculty and Graduate School of Law), discussed AI and legal regulations, providing examples from Japan, Switzerland, and the EU. On the second day, researchers, which included Prof. Shuhei Nasuda (Faculty and Graduate School of Agriculture) and Associate Prof. Koji Fujimoto (Faculty and Graduate School of Medicine), in medicine, plant science, agriculture, and law described how their research relates to data and AI, and then shared ideas and experiences regarding the possibilities created by AI and data, as well as matters that must be given due attention with regards to their application and utilization.
An Early-Career Researchers’ Forum was held in the morning of the symposium’s second day, which provided a platform for early-career researchers (ECRs) to deliver short “pitch talks” on their research. The forum was opened by a presentation on Swiss innovation by Dr. Felix Moesner, consul and head of post of the Consulate of Switzerland in Osaka and CEO of Swissnex in Japan. Vice-President Schwarzenegger then served as MC for the forum, during which 16 researchers delivered “pitch talks” on their research and responded to questions from the audience. The forum served as an example of the ways in which the strategic partnership can contribute to fostering the next generation of researchers—one of its key objectives, and also provided a matching opportunity for potential new research collaboration.
The symposium was concluded with closing remarks by Prof. Kyoko Inagaki, Kyoto University’s executive vice-president for gender equality, international affairs, and external affairs, who expressed her pleasure at seeing the opportunities for further research exchange that the symposium provided to so many researchers, including young and female researchers, and her great hopes that collaboration between the two universities would continue to deepen in the future.
Opening address by President Minato and Vice-President Schwarzenegger(UZH)
The opening presentation, hosted by Vice-President Yasuyuki Kono
The main sessions’ presentations and panel discussions