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1 Microsoft Research Asia A Partner in the Academic Community Overview of University Collaboration Programs John Warren Manager, University Relations South East Asia December 2005

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Microsoft Research Asia A Partner in the Academic Community Overview of University Collaboration Programs John Warren Manager, University Relations South East Asia December 2005. Contents. Overview of MSRA University Relations (UR) Role of UR Organization structure - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Microsoft Research Asia

A Partner in the Academic Community

Overview of University Collaboration Programs

John WarrenManager, University Relations

South East AsiaDecember 2005

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Contents

• Overview of MSRA University Relations (UR)– Role of UR– Organization structure

• Key Initiatives & Programs– Outline– Some local examples

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University Relations (UR)– the Regional Bridge

Build long-term in-depth mutually beneficial relations

Bridge between MSRA & universities:– Research collaboration– Curriculum innovation– Talent development– Academic exchange

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University Relations (UR)– the local Bridge

• Team with the Microsoft subsidiaries to help facilitate opportunities for faculty members and students.

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MSRA UR StructureMSR Asia

University Relations

Project & Program Owners

Subsidiary-based UR Managers

China

Japan

Taiwan/Hong Kong

Korea

Aus/NZ/Southeast Asia

Research Collaborations

Academic Exchanges

“Host” Director

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Collaboration Programs

• Research Collaboration• Curriculum Innovation• Talent Development• Academic Exchange• Academic Round

Tables

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Research Collaboration• MSRA and MSR Requests for Proposals (RFPs) (Curriculum or Re

search)• Recent Research awards resulting from MSRA RFPs

- Dr. Frederic Maire – QUT- Dr. Greg Wadley, University of Melbourne

• ARC linkage Grants• UNSW

• “Peer-to-Peer Computing” (will finish in 2006/7)• Monash

• “Context rich mobile agent technology.” (completed)• Macquarie

• “Trustworthy Computing” (will finish in 2006)• +2/3 more during CY2006

• Enterprise Information Infrastructure (EII)• Significant investment including academic exchange

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Collaboration Programs

• Research Collaboration• Curriculum Innovation• Talent Development• Academic Exchange• Academic Round Tables

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Curriculum Innovation• Requests for Proposals (RFPs) (Curriculum or Research)

- Curriculum awards resulting from RFPs- Dr. Ross Brown – QUT- Assoc. Prof. Paul Roe - QUT- Prof Vijay Varadharajan – Macquarie- Assoc. Prof. Francois Ladouceur – UNSW- Prof. Christine Mingins – Monash- Prof. Arkady Zaslavsky – Monash- David Jones – RMIT

• Two RFPs out now (close December 24)• Trustworthy Computing• Gaming & Graphics

• Facilitate faculty community• Microsoft Research Asia Theme workshops (March 2004 and 2005)• Faculty Summit

• Other• Sponsorship of .NET lab in Department of Computer Science at University of Melbourne

• Offering a Masters in Distributed Computing (incorporating .NET) – a world first.

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Collaboration Programs

• Research Collaboration• Curriculum Innovation• Talent Development• Academic Exchange• Academic Round Tables

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Talent Development• Microsoft Fellowship

– Winners at University of Sydney, University of New South Wales and Monash University 2004

– Winners at University of Sydney and RMIT University 2005

– 2006 program will be announced in March 2006– “Selected” Universities only at this stage

• “Stars of Tomorrow” Internship Program – e.g., Ying Zhang – RMIT University– (space, competitive, willing and able to work for a period

of time in Beijing)– WHAT AN OPPORTUNITY !!!!!!

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Case Study: “Stars of Tomorrow”

- Microsoft Research Asia Internship Program Mission:

Nurture young research talent for both MSRA and the world research community.

• More than 2000 students from around 100 universities worldwide participated in the internship program in the past 6 years

• Work with top-notch researchers to learn methodology and skill of doing world-class research

• Learn MSRA culture and values

• Make an impact on the academic world

• Build personal academic network by communicating with researchers worldwide

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Collaboration Programs

• Research Collaboration• Curriculum Innovation• Talent Development• Academic Exchange• Academic Round Tables

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Academic Exchange• Why and How?• Faculty summit and 21st Century Computing Conference

– 9 Australian academics attended in 2003– 8 Australian academics attended in 2004– 8 Australian academics attended in 2005

• Regional Faculty Workshops (in Beijing)– For curriculum and research RFP winners and others– Build a “community”– Meet with MSR/A researchers

• Enterprise Information Infrastructure (EII) - comprises 48 leading researchers from 20 research institutions in Australia

– visiting academic to MSRA in Aug/Sept 2005 - Dr. Xuemin Lin (University of NSW)– Dr. Harry Shum - member of EII International Advisory Board– Dr. Wei-Ying Ma – Research Manager at MSRA – member of EII

• Dr. Harry Shum member of QUT Scientific Advisory Board for Australasian CRC for Interaction Design

• Hosted visits to MSRA

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Case study:21st Century Computing Conference

• Annual 21st Century Computing Conference– 2003: 2 cities, 14 talks, 368 faculties, 6,500 students– 2004: 2 cities, 26 talks, 400 faculties, 6,900 students– Nobel Laureate, Turing, Fields, Draper award winners

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Collaboration Programs

• Research Collaboration• Curriculum Innovation• Talent Development• Academic Exchange• Academic Round Tables

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Academic Round Tables• What?

• opportunity for senior academics e.g., Deans/HODs/HoS to meet with MS Australia and MSRA in an informal environment

• Format• 2 Hours only - 1200 to 1400• 1200 – round table discussion, no presentations, no handouts• 1300 – lunch, discussion continues

• Sydney - Sept 2004 and Sept 2005• Melbourne – Feb 2005• NZ – March and Sept 2005• Singapore - October 2005

• Why?• stay in touch, inform each other, build relationships

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Concluding comments

• Is Microsoft Research Asia too China centric?

• Is it changing?

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Is Microsoft Research Asia too China centric? (cont)Summary of 2005 Faculty Summit delegates

Data of Attendees

Subs Attendees in 2005

Attendees in 2004

Attendees in 2003

# of attendees from China 100 105 102

# of China universities 30 30 40

# of attendees from Region 104 75 34

# of regional universities 49 44 25

Japan 21 12 0

Korea 20 13 5

Australia 8 8 9

Taiwan 20 13 11

Hong Kong 15 15 3

Singapore 4 3 2

Malaysia 2 3 3

Philippines 0 3 0

Thailand 2 3 0

New Zealand 4 0 1

US, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, Vietnam 1, 2, 3, 2

MSRA UR or sub DPE, Public Sector

25 (12 from UR, 11 from DPE, 2 from PS)

20 10

# of Total Attendees 229 200 146

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Is Microsoft Research Asia too China centric? (cont)

Gaming and Graphics RFP awards in 2005

• 4 of the top 10 awards were to Universities outside of China

• 3 of the 4 were to Australian Universities

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Is Microsoft Research Asia too China centric? (cont)

Trustworthy Computing RFP awards in 2005

• 6 responses in total were determined worthy of an award

• 5 of the 6 were to non-Chinese Asia Pacific Universities

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Concluding comments

• Is Microsoft Research Asia too China centric?• In some areas – yes• In other areas – definitely NOT

• Is it changing?• YES

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More information?

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Faculty Summit Nov 2004

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For more information

Microsoft Research Asia (MSRA): http://research.microsoft.com/asia

MSRA University Relations (UR): http://research.microsoft.com/ur/asia

Email:- [email protected]

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Coffee break time