高清福利片

高清福利片_

Free flow of ideas - students and industry meet

27 October 2015
Our students will share their ideas for future technologies

How soil affects the safety of our cities and the similarities between machine-to-machine communication and children's netball are among the ideas to be presented to industry at today's聽Research Conversazione at the Seymour Centre.

聽provides postgraduate and undergraduate students in the聽聽with an opportunity to share their visions for the future with CEOs and executives from some of Australia鈥檚 leading engineering and IT companies.

To participate, a student鈥檚 research must be innovative, focus on applied research, and respond to national and international needs in areas such as biomedical, civil, mechanical engineering or mechatronics and information technologies.

Amongst the five presenters is first year PhD candidate Shengzne Wang, a civil engineering student whose research on grains will help us plan and build safer cities.

Shengzne believes the safety of cities could rely on a few grains of soil and how they interact and behave under extreme conditions:

鈥淢y research will help engineers better assess the vulnerability of certain sites to the phenomenon of liquefaction. So when we plan our cities and suburbs in the future, we will know exactly where and where not to construct our houses and place our most critical infrastructure,鈥 he says.

Fellow presenter Rana Abbas will discuss her ideas on how we can improve machine-to-machine (M2M) communication, comparing the random nature of M2M to a children鈥檚 netball game.

Following the presentations, industry guests have the opportunity to peruse the poster-presentations of the faculty鈥檚 top students.

鈥淭he students who present and discuss their work will lead the engineering and technology industries in the future,鈥 says Keiran Passmore, Executive Director of Engineering Sydney.

鈥淭his type of forum allows for the free flowing of ideas between current industry leaders and our future leaders and vice-versa. For industry, it punctuates the contributions the University of Sydney is making to engineering and scientific knowledge.

鈥淎mong the projects on display are innovations that could quite literally change the way we live our lives,鈥 Mr Passmore says.

鈥淲ith interactive displays and bite-sized student research presentations,聽Research Conversazioneprovides a unique forum for industry representatives to engage with talented minds, meet our experts and forge linkages for future collaboration.鈥 聽

Victoria Hollick

Media and Public Relations Adviser
Address
  • Level 5 School of Information Technologies Building J12