科学网

 找回密码
  注册

tag 标签: 天津大学

相关帖子

版块 作者 回复/查看 最后发表

没有相关内容

相关日志

再次被XX大学的博士放了鸽子
热度 1 tang64 2012-1-13 18:35
我们再次被放了鸽子. 希望以后应聘者三思,不要进入正常审批程序后,反而把事情当儿戏看待,也不讲实话. 你不仅欺骗了善良的我们,也欺骗了关心你的师叔. 我们没有嫌弃你的第一学历--大专,即使应聘你母校(一个不如我们单位的同城学校),你也不够基本条件啊. 其实想来我单位的人很多,我们并不会因为你不来,有什么遗憾,尊重个人选择吗. 你的前途重要,我们的时间也宝贵. 通过此事,不但影响我们对你原有工作成绩的肯定(听介绍,动手能力强),今后会也影响你们学校学生再次求职我学校的难度. 天津大学的博士,已经正式报道,也算欣慰. 通过招聘,我们对西安交通大学,山东大学,天津大学,北京航空航天大学学生的诚实守信非常满意. 本事大小是次要的,诚实守信是为人的基本准则. 希望你今后前途无量!再见了,北钢的博士,虽然你也是一个山东人.
149 次阅读|4 个评论
贺本所贺老师家的小贺成功保送北京大学---2011-1-8
热度 1 tang64 2012-1-2 00:21
身边的人,身边的事. 昨天得知,小贺已经外语保送北大,学校年级保送考试12名,4名北大考生分数垫底,但只有他最后冲关成功. 其中小家伙的一些想法,令我们都佩服. 曾经旧楼对门邻居的刘佳,孩子的二胡小师姐,当年中考状元,北京大学光华学院. 楼下小李星,当年10中普通班学生,踏线考入上交,毕业已经年级第一,现考入哈佛大学研究生. 楼下同学张毅,去年考入帝国理工. 博士生小姚的孩子,天津大学大三,GRE1300多分. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 前些天,张和雷从澳大利亚回来探亲,来家里做客. 2口子84年分别考入清北,是比我高一年级的中学同学. 知其女儿张晨已经从墨尔本大学国际精算专业毕业,3年就毕业,还是个优等生,将来可以随时免试读博. 从其父口得知,当年初二从太原市37中考入华东师范大学二附中,曾经的尖子生立马变成中下流,压力何其大. 但她奋起直追,高二又变成尖子,雅思已经6.5分,并出国前往墨尔本大学求学. 一个优秀的女孩,90年出生. 对孩子说:服气不服输! 没事的,慢慢来,不要泄气啊! 劳逸结合是王道.
2649 次阅读|1 个评论
天津大学管理与经济学部招聘启事
talentblog 2011-10-28 10:42
天津大学管理与经济学部招聘启事   天津大学管理与经济学部现面向国内外招聘讲师及以上教学科研职位,欢迎符合条件的应聘者加入天津大学管理与经济学部工作团队。 一.招聘方向 1. 管理科学与工程方向(含信息管理、系统工程、工业工程、物流工程、工程管理等方向) 2. 工商管理方向(含创业学、市场营销、人力资源能等方向) 3. 公共管理方向(含能源经济与能源政策等方向) 4. 经济学方向(含金融学、经济学等方向) 5. 财务、会计方向(含会计学、财务管理等方向) 二.招聘条件和要求: 1. 具有国际知名大学或国内一流大学(指“985”、“211”学校)博士学位,有海外留学经历的优先考虑。 2. 具有较强的科研能力。 3. 有较好语言表达能力和沟通能力,能够胜任教学工作。 4. 能够全职在天津大学工作。 5. 良好的外语写作及语言交流能力。 6. 身心健康,五官端正。 三.薪酬待遇 按照天津大学薪酬体系执行。 四.报名方式 1.通过“天津大学招聘系统”应聘。新用户请先注册,并填写个人相关信息,信息提交成功后,即可进行岗位申请。 链接网址: http://hr.tju.edu.cn/new/rsc/ 2.联系方式: 联系人:安明成、袁婷 电 话:(+)86-022-27403423 (+)86-022-27403422 邮 箱:hr14@tju.edu.cn 地 址:天津市南开区卫津路92号天津大学管理与经济学部(300072)
6114 次阅读|0 个评论
水利工程仿真与安全
kejidaobao 2011-10-26 09:18
钟登华,江西赣县人,水利水电工程专家,中国工程院院士。现任天津大学副校长兼研究生院院长、教授,水利工程国家重点学科学术带头人,国家创新研究群体学术带头人。曾获国家科技进步奖二等奖、国家杰出青年基金资助、中国青年科技奖、光华工程科技奖等。 2011年“中央一号文件”《关于加快水利改革发展的决定》第一句话开宗明义地指出,“水是生命之源、生产之要、生态之基。”水问题长期以来一直受到人类社会的广泛关注,尤其是进入21世纪,全世界面临着水问题的空前挑战。2010年9月30日英国Nature发表封面文章指出,全球水资源危机极为严峻。同样地,受人类活动与气候变化影响,我国面临着水资源短缺、水环境恶化、水灾害频繁、水土流失加剧等一系列问题,涉及资源、环境、能源、农业和公共安全等重点领域,是影响国家可持续发展的重大战略性问题,是我国迫切需要解决的重大瓶颈。兴水利、除水害,历来是治国安邦的大事,水利工程的战略地位已经不言自明。备受瞩目的中央一号文件已得到众多部门和专家的分析解读,提出了许多有指导意义的意见和建议。可以说,已取得的共识是:水利改革发展的聚焦点实际就是水利工程建设。 中国已成为世界水利工程建设的中心,许多世界水平的巨型水利工程落户中国。水利工程建设复杂艰巨,建设难度大、规模大、投资大,效益也很大;然而一旦失事,其威胁大、危害大、影响大、次生灾害损失大,后果极其严重。因此,在水利工程安全领域,有两个基础研究问题必须加强:一是水利工程从设计、建设、运行、退役的全寿命周期性能问题,二是水利工程的运行规律、性态演变和破坏机理问题。 由于水利工程全寿命周期是一个极其复杂的随机动态过程,水利工程安全分析与控制是一个多因素耦合问题,工程仿真是解决这类问题的有效途径。工程仿真综合考虑边界复杂、过程复杂、随机动态性强、不确定性强等工程特征,通过仿真建模、仿真计算、仿真控制、系统集成等理论和方法,解决复杂工程科学问题,在水利工程安全性基础研究方面具有不可替代的作用。例如,工程地质条件是水利工程建设的基础,工程地质问题是工程建设的关键,世界上遭受严重破坏的水工建筑物,有50%以上是由于对地质问题的认识不够造成的。工程地质分析是一项艰巨的任务,传统的二维、静态处理方式,难以反映复杂的工程地质条件。针对复杂地质体(断层、岩层等)的建模问题、耦合多源数据的精细建模问题、水工建筑物与地质构造三维统一建模分析问题等难题,通过水利工程地质精细建模与分析技术实现三维地质模型的建立,能够直观、方便地分析复杂的地质条件和地质问题。 水利工程建设千年大计、质量第一。高标准水利工程建设的关键是在工程设计中制定和论证合理的建设方案,在建设过程中要求保证施工安全,实时动态调整与控制建设进度,保证水利工程的建设质量、实现建设过程的全天候实时监控,并且能实时采集分析建设动态信息,为工程的长期安全运行提供数字分析平台。因此,复杂约束条件下的工程进度控制分析问题、高标准要求下的工程质量监控问题,是水利工程设计与建设中备受关注、但难以进行物理实验模拟分析的关键科学技术问题,水利工程建设仿真理论与施工质量监控方法为解决这些问题已经并将继续发挥重要的作用。 保障水利工程安全必须要从单一过程安全研究向全寿命周期安全研究发展。水利工程结构复杂,要承受各类复杂的水动力荷载(波浪、流、沙、冰等)作用,面临恶劣的地质条件和水下基础,过去一般只限于在设计、建设质量的单一层面上分析结构的可靠性和安全性,往往出现设计安全系数较高的工程结构存在安全问题。水利工程通常在设计、建设、运行维护等各个阶段都存在大量的不确定性因素,应从水利工程的全寿命观点出发,开展基于全寿命周期的水利工程质量、安全与风险控制方面的基础理论研究,这是保障水利工程建设和长期运行安全的重点发展方向。 总的来说,“中央一号文件”的出台为水利改革发展与水利工程建设提供了重要的战略机遇期。但是,我们不能孤立地从某个局部对待水利工程建设中遇到的各种问题,而应从水利工程的全寿命周期角度出发,需要开展水利工程性能演变方面的基础研究,探索和发展新的理论,能够多学科综合、全过程一体化地分析复杂的工程科学问题和工程技术难题,为水利工程建设与长期安全运行提供理论基础和技术支撑。
个人分类: 栏目:卷首语|5067 次阅读|0 个评论
天津大学化工学院合成微生物学创新实验室招聘博士后
talentblog 2011-9-27 10:01
天津大学化工学院合成微生物学创新实验室招聘博士后   天津大学化工学院 “合成微生物学创新实验室”成立于2010年,由多名海外回国的中青年学者组建而成。实验室现有教授一名,副教授两名,在读研究生多名。实验室拥有从事微生物系统生物学和合成生物学所需的全套现代实验设备,主要从事工业微生物的合成生物学和系统生物学方向的创新性研究。博士后招聘的具体要求如下: 一、招收博士后研究方向及专业要求 研究方向及专业要求:微生物学,分子生物学和系统生物学,有以下研究经历者优先: 1)光合微生物生理和分子生物学 (具备光合蓝藻研究经验更佳) 2)转录组学,蛋白组学,代谢组学,系统生物学 3)工业微生物学(具备大型发酵研究经验更佳) 4)厌氧微生物的分子生物学 研究课题:实验室现主持和参与两项科技部“973”重大项目的研究, 从事光合蓝细菌的分子生物学和合成生物学研究。实验室还承担一项国家基金研究项目,从事脱硫微生物和甲烷生产菌生理和遗传学研究。此外,实验室还有多项研究申请正在评审中。博士后将作为主要研究人员参与以上课题的研究,发表高水平研究论文。博士后工作期间还将有机会参与其他课题的申请和研究工作,并协助合作导师以及实验室其他老师指导在读的研究生。 合作导师:张卫文教授。 二、申请者基本条件 1、已获得或即将获得研究方向相关专业的博士学位,有志于科学研究和技术开发。 2、在相关SCI刊物上发表(或接收)论文1-2篇以上。 3、基础扎实,学风严谨,有独立工作能力。 4、身体健康,吃苦耐劳,有团队合作精神。 三、待遇 根据国家及学校博士后管理的相关政策,并根据个人具体情况进行协商。 四、申请及联系方式 申报者请将本人电子简历(Microsoft Word 或PDF文本)发送到天津大学化工学院张卫文教授邮箱。简历材料内容除介绍学习和工作经历外,还应包括专业课程、发表论文目录及发明专利等科研成果。提供 2-3份同行专家推荐信,其中一名推荐人为博士学位导师。 联系人:张卫文教授, 电子信箱: wwzhang8@tju.edu.cn 地址:天津市南开区卫津路92号,天津大学化工学院,邮编300072
3742 次阅读|0 个评论
[转载]转载:16个世界生物材料委员会会士(Fellow)
热度 1 郑玉峰 2011-7-28 22:03
引自 http://www.soudoc.com/bbs/viewthread.php?tid=8772140 ,并略微修正: 李恒德 (院士)清华大学 卓仁禧(院士)武汉大学 俞耀庭 南开大学 张兴栋 (院士)四川大学 曹谊林 上海第九人民医院 朱鹤荪 北京理工大学 卢世璧 (院士)北京301医院 王身国 中科院化学所 姚康德 天津大学 周廉 西北有色金属研究院 顾忠伟 四川大学 郑振耀 The Chinese University of Hong Kong 冷扬 The Hong Kong University of Science Technology 王迎军 华南理工大学 崔福斋 清华大学 黄楠 西南交通大学
2572 次阅读|2 个评论
与模范寿星杨恩泽教授合影
热度 7 zlyang 2011-7-18 22:00
与模范寿星杨恩泽教授合影
与模范寿星 杨恩泽 教授合影 真傻 今天运气好,有幸与模范寿星 杨恩泽 教授合影。 转载:《图文:天大教授杨恩泽 淡泊名利寿能致远》 http://www.022net.com/2010/10-15/481534253184477.html 2010-10-15 15:02:17 简要内容:每天都能打1个小时网球,坚持散步几公里,还能在实验室聚精会神忙活一下午,如果你以为这是某位研究生的大学生活,那可就大错特错了。”杨恩泽教授说,从那之后,他就将“名利”二字从自己的字典中完全删除,潜心研究学问。   人民网·天津视窗 2010年 10月15日电:每天都能打1个小时网球,坚持散步几公里,还能在实验室聚精会神忙活一下午,如果你以为这是某位研究生的大学生活,那可就大错特错了。天津大学里, 92岁 高龄的杨恩泽教授也有如此强健的体魄,他的头脑灵活程度,也丝毫不亚于年轻人。恐怕很多人都不敢相信,这位老人曾经得过两次绝症,其中一次是5年前刚刚确诊的癌症。    体能头脑 每项都得“苦练”   和杨恩泽老人约采访不算容易,并不是因为这位老教授有多么“大牌”,而是因为他的业余时间很少。和其他老人不大一样,这位92岁高龄的教授,依然将自己日程安排得满满当当。吐字清晰,口齿伶俐,杨老说话时,依然很有逻辑性,和年轻人说话时,脑筋也可以跟随年轻人一起跳跃到任何领域。   “我可以不戴花镜看报纸,不带助听器和别人说话,穿衣洗漱等都能够自理,不过家务几乎做不来了。有这样好的体魄,是长时间保持运动的结果。我说的运动不仅是身体运动,还包括头脑运动。”   他所说的头脑运动,除了保持良好的读书、看报、上网浏览新闻之外,还包括每天动脑研究实验课题。虽然从20多年前就已经不再带领课题组,可杨恩泽教授几乎每天都要去实验室,不是帮助研究生完成课题研究,就是自己钻研点儿什么,总之,实验室可是每天必须去的地方。   2005年,他被确诊为膀胱癌,经过家人和学校劝说,他嘴上答应不再去实验室,委托学生帮他安装了实验软件,坚持在家钻研科学技术。不过这样的日子持续了仅仅几个月,待他自认为身体恢复健康,便重返实验室。虽然不再专职带研究生,可杨恩泽还是实验室里最忙碌的人。哪个研究生遇到难题,他见到都会去帮一把,谁的理论知识准备不足,他就去指导准备资料……   杨教授每天可以保持至少1个小时运动量,打网球、徒步“上下班”,一口气上个三四楼都没有问题。他手中有一张晨练卡,每天有10多个同伴和他一起打网球,这些健身爱好者中,年龄最小的只有40出头,多数人的年龄集中在60岁至80岁,杨教授是这支队伍中“辈分”最高的。虽然他并不能像费德勒、德约科维奇那样连续奔跑四五个小时,但老人依然可以双手握拍击球,甚至可以“抢”几个关键球。在这方面,杨教授有一个“偶像”——开国将军吕正操,“不过,我现在几乎超过他了,我92岁还可以打网球,我要把纪录延续下去。”   淡泊名利 悟出生命真理   杨恩泽教授从新中国成立前夕就从事教育工作,直到20多年前退休,培养出数不清的本科生、硕士生,很多人已是国家栋梁之才,或是某个领域的知名学者,甚至还有举足轻重的院士。而他本人,却还是一个“很平常的教授”。   在杨老看来,学生强过自己,是作为老师最大的荣幸,他希望所有学生的名声超过自己。“我觉得长寿还有个秘诀,就是淡泊名利。就是不追逐,不争夺,但是别人给你的,该拿还是要拿,不然你怎么生活呀!”说到这里,老人笑了笑。   出生在上世纪20年代的杨恩泽,在人生中最美好的时光,经历了8年抗日战争,以及后来的解放战争。1943年,他在武汉大学完成硕士研究生学业后,留在学校任教,当时只是一名助教,按照当时当权者的政策,任助教职务两年,就可以申请为讲师。但就在他准备申请时,新任的当权者又颁布新的政策,在任职两年的基础上,还要求助教必须发表有价值的论文才能晋级。“当时那个年代整天打仗,连静下心来读书的地方都没有,哪有可能翻资料、写论文呢!”由于没能如愿,年轻气盛的他,一气之下申请调至中山大学教书,并终于当上了讲师。   虽然愿望实现了,但他怎么也兴奋不起来。“或许是我们那个年代的人经历生死太多,我还不到30岁就想通了,原来名利追逐到手,也不过如此,既然名利不会给我带来什么,我又何必为了‘名利’,去虚度年华呢?”杨恩泽教授说,从那之后,他就将“名利”二字从自己的字典中完全删除,潜心研究学问。   这一人生感悟,伴随他走完从工作起至退休的30多年。即便是1978年,全国大规模“调级”时,已经晋升为“总工程师”的他,也没在打算享受优厚政策“升级”,而是选择平淡地钻研学术。要知道,在那个年代调级之后,他和家人的生活当时就会有质的飞跃。如果到了今天,他完全可以享受更高规格的待遇……    树人生观 目标才是动力   “也许是年轻时候经历事情太多,我很早就给自己树立了人生观和目标,并为之奋斗了60多年。”杨恩泽说,在那个动荡的年代,1949年他还不幸染上肺病,这在当年已经是不治之症,好在他后来幸运地得到当时的特效药,捡回了一条命。   “新中国成立之前,国事家事,很多原因压得我喘不过气来。我总觉得不知道哪天‘命就保不住’了,但报效祖国的决心,驱使我努力活下去。身体康复后,我接触了很多新思想,并加入了共产党。经过历练和学习,我逐渐意识到‘弱国无外交’,‘弱国无生存’的道理,于是立志科学救国,回报党和人民。不开玩笑地说,自从那场大病之后,我觉得此后的时间,都是‘赚’来的,能多工作一天并为党和国家做点儿事,就是我生命的最大意义。”   其实,让他树立这个目标的动力不仅仅是自己的感悟,还是他从自己学生身上学到的道理。1952年,他教过的一名学生当上了他所在党支部的书记,每天下班后,他们都要向支部书记作思想汇报。有一天聊天时,他曾经教过的学生说过一句话,让他一辈子记忆犹新:“你考虑的总是你个人利益、得失,其实,你更应该多考虑如何干好本职工作,如何教好学生。”   从那之后,杨恩泽将全部的精力和心血扑在实验室。1978年,他主持研制的“准毫米波空间通信设备”在首届全国科学大会上获得了全国科学大会奖。当光纤通信技术研究在国际上刚刚起步时,我国在这一领域也是一片空白,杨恩泽率领科研团队攻克了一个个难关,成功开通了“武昌―汉口市话中继光缆通信实用化系统”。这是我国第一条通过国家鉴定验收的实用光通信线路。后来,他应邀到天津大学任教,白手起家建起了天津第一个光通信实验室,主持多项国家自然科学基金攻关项目。   潜心学术研究之余,杨恩泽也不忘救助困难学生。多年前,杨教授得知家乡基础教育还很落后,便决定个人出资购买电脑,并资助家乡学校30万元,帮助镇里的学校建起一座科学楼。直到今年,杨教授还坚持每年拿出2万元的生活费,资助贫困学生完成学业……   在他看来,给自己树立正确的人生观,是长寿的一个必要因素,如果生活没有目标,那就失去了生活的意义和乐趣,而他一生的乐趣,就在他每天去的实验室。(周白石 通讯员 靳莹)
5999 次阅读|14 个评论
牛顿牌苹果,你们去了哪里?
热度 5 zlyang 2011-6-29 08:52
牛顿牌苹果,你们去了哪里? 刚才前去观赏,发现 10余枚牛顿牌苹果已不知去向 ,苹果树枝也被折断。 打油以感叹。 “牛顿苹果树”来了, 牛顿去了那里? 555 “牛顿苹果树”来了, 牛顿牌苹果 , 你们去了哪里? 还没有成熟, 就过早消失 在茫茫渺渺里。 青色的青春, 来不及长成, 就这样匆匆地别离? 相关链接 : 《 苹果树在天津大学 》 http://bbs.sciencenet.cn/home.php?mod=spaceuid=107667do=blogid=385835 《摄影:牛顿牌苹果》 http://bbs.sciencenet.cn/home.php?mod=spaceuid=107667do=blogid=460094 《 2011暑假傻拍(10):苹果树、吃饭与干活》 http://bbs.sciencenet.cn/home.php?mod=spaceuid=107667do=blogid=471571 《牛顿苹果花:2013傻拍(13)》 http://blog.sciencenet.cn/home.php?mod=spaceuid=107667do=blogid=685087
4522 次阅读|10 个评论
摄影:牛顿牌苹果
热度 14 zlyang 2011-6-28 19:30
摄影:牛顿牌苹果
摄影: 牛顿 牌苹果 天津大学的牛顿苹果树首次结果,已经挂果20多枚。2011-06-15照片如下。 苹果落下, 砸出了牛顿, 万有引力呈现。 将来, 苹果依旧落下, 引力磁却与之无关。 苹果落下, 还会砸出什么? 请您评说! (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) 相关链接 : 《 苹果树在天津大学 》 http://bbs.sciencenet.cn/home.php?mod=spaceuid=107667do=blogid=385835 《 牛顿牌苹果,你们去了哪里? 》 http://bbs.sciencenet.cn/home.php?mod=spaceuid=107667do=blogid=460248 《2011暑假傻拍(10):苹果树、吃饭与干活》 http://bbs.sciencenet.cn/home.php?mod=spaceuid=107667do=blogid=471571 《牛顿苹果花:2013傻拍(13)》 http://blog.sciencenet.cn/home.php?mod=spaceuid=107667do=blogid=685087
8215 次阅读|36 个评论
[转载]“四交管理模式”:防范小额信贷风险的有益探索
brbaba 2011-4-13 14:37
“四交管理模式”:防范小额信贷风险的有益探索 ——关于海南农村信用社发放小额贷款实践的调查 天津大学 陈奎明 陈 通 满足农民方便快捷地获得小额贷款的需求,帮助其增收致富,国家采取了放宽农村金融机构准入条件以及鼓励成立村镇银行、小额贷款公司和农村资金互助社等新型农村金融机构的措施,取得了明显成效。但在实践中,由于缺乏小额贷款风险防控的有效办法,农民获得的小额贷款支持仍然不够充分。例如,在2007年海南农村信用社改革之前,农户小额贷款不良率高达71%以上,形成了“金融机构难贷款、农民贷款难”的两难局面。近3年来,海南农村信用社构建并实施了农村小额信贷“四交管理模式”,探索出一条防范小额信贷风险的有效途径。到2010年底,海南农村信用社累计发放小额贷款39.5亿元,惠及41万农户,不良率仅为1.2%。农村小额信贷“四交管理模式”的主要内容是:  把贷款“审批权”交给农民。由于层层审批、手续繁琐、时间漫长,很多贷款农户按时还息却不愿意按期归还本金,因为他们担心本金归还后下次贷款又需要半个月以上的时间。而无法快速了解借款农户的资产状况、信用情况、不良嗜好等,则是金融机构贷款手续繁琐的主要成因。解决这个问题,根本途径是重构“两个信心”,即重构金融机构对农民信用的信心和农民对金融机构服务的信心,而其中的关键是重构金融机构对农民信用的信心。金融机构应确立“农民讲诚信”的理念,通过有效机制把贷款“审批权”交给农民。这是防控小额信贷风险的根本。海南农村信用社在实践中的做法是:只要农民自愿组成5户联保小组(联保能把有不良嗜好的农民自动排除在外)、贷款2万元以内的,在接受7天培训后(经培训,明晰借贷意愿和消除信息不对称问题)首次贷款放款到位,无正当理由金融机构不得拒绝发放贷款;对首次还款记录良好的,二次贷款无需审批,申请当日即放款到位。   把贷款利率“定价权”交给农民。通过利益引导机制让借款农户拥有利率定价的主动权,既是金融制度的创新,又是尊重和信任农民的体现。海南农村信用社创立“诚信奖励金”制度,贷款的协议利率由实际利率和诚信奖励金率两部分构成,根据农户的还款记录确定不同的诚信奖励金率。如果农户每月按时还息、到期还本,诚信奖励金率就高,实际利率就低。小额贷款的协议利率均为每月12%。,而诚信奖励金率最高可达每月6%。,最低为每月0%。,即还款信用越好,诚信奖励金率就越高,实际利率就越低,贷款的额度也越高。这种机制不仅减轻了借款农户的利息负担,而且有利于培育借款人的信用意识,为小额信贷持续健康发展营造良好的社会信用环境。   把贷款风险“控制权”交给小额信贷技术员和网络。金融机构信贷员在服务过程中“吃拿卡要”等不良风气,是造成农民难贷款和小额贷款不良率居高不下的重要原因之一。同时,小额贷款金额小、笔数多、还款频次高、管理不到位等因素,也是部分借款农民忘记还款的原因。海南农村信用社在简化农民贷款手续的同时实施小额信贷技术员之间的联保制度,建立“鱼咬尾”风险监控机制。在3名以上小额信贷技术员之间建立“鱼咬尾”机制,每发放一笔贷款,除了发放该笔贷款的小额信贷技术员,至少有1名直接监督人和1名间接监督人参与贷款管理,分别按照70%、20%、10%的比例与其绩效和责任挂钩。监督人员的主要职责是在防止假名、借名贷款和垒大户贷款的同时相互监督,杜绝“吃拿卡要”。同时,海南农村信用社特别注重网络建设,通过网络手段控制小额贷款风险、提高小额贷款效率。   把工资“发放权”交给小额信贷技术员。防范小额信贷风险,需要强化小额信贷技术员的责任意识、道德意识和成就意识,而这就需要创新与之密切相关的企业薪酬制度。如果实行平均主义,不能体现多劳多得,小额信贷技术员就没有发放小额贷款的积极性;如果制度设计不合理,不能通过正规途径获得合理薪酬,小额信贷技术员就有可能走入歧途;如果没有延期支付制度并加重小额信贷技术员贷款回收的责任,他们就有可能出现“短期行为”,并把贷款收不回归咎于自然风险。海南农村信用社着力创新小额信贷技术员薪酬制度,使小额信贷技术员的工资收入由自己业务的发展状况及风险大小来决定。这种机制既能有效地调动小额信贷技术员发展业务的积极性,又能增强其管理贷款的责任感。   实践证明,做好小额信贷,不能与正规金融程序完全一样,就像不能穿着皮鞋到稻田里劳作。海南农村信用社建立的小额信贷“四交管理模式”,把相信农民的信用放在首位,从尊重农民的主体地位入手,打破了过去金融机构层层审批的贷款管理制度,通过体制机制创新,有效防范小额信贷外部借款人和内部责任人的道德风险,促进了农户个体理性与集体理性的协同,达到了控制小额信贷风险的目的,及时满足了农民群众发展生产、增加收入的需要。 转自:人民日报 http://paper.people.com.cn/rmrb/html/2011-03/01/nw.D110000renmrb_20110301_1-07.htm?div=-1
个人分类: 社会观察|1624 次阅读|0 个评论
[转载]美议员称天津大学科研能力强,Googles未来不在MIT/Stanfor
热度 1 yhy188 2011-3-5 19:48
[转载]美议员称天津大学科研能力强,Googles未来不在MIT/Stanfor
the Googles of the future will be founded by students from Tianjin University, rather than MIT or Stanford. Tianjin University MIT stanford大学 标志建筑 John Kerry (D-Mass.)议员的原话的报道 Gridlock and GlobalizationIn Wake of Tragedy in Arizona, Kerry Calls for Civility, Bipartisan Leadership in Washington For Immediate Release : Tuesday, January 11, 2011 site: http://kerry.senate.gov/press/release/?id=9d653832-358e-4ade-8c90-5adde41c516d WASHINGTON, D.C. – Senator John Kerry (D-Mass.), Chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, delivered an address this morning at the Center for American Progress in Washington on political gridlock, the urgent need to restore a sense of purpose and civility to the U.S. political process, and the global economic consequences of the breakdown in Washington. At the top of his remarks, Kerry addressed the tragedy this weekend in Tucson and the discussion that’s ensued about the state of our political discourse. The full text of his speech, as prepared, is below : Someone might ask why, with our country in mourning, we are here this morning continuing to talk about the business of the country. But the truth is that is what Gabrielle Giffords was doing – talking about the business of the country. And the truth is, talking about the business of our country is more urgent than ever. John and I considered postponing this speech, which had been planned for some time. But serious times call for serious discussions. And after some reflection, both of us felt that not only should this speech not be postponed, but that, in fact, it was imperative to give it. So obviously, as we gather here this morning, last weekend’s unspeakable tragedy is at the forefront of all of our minds. Our thoughts are with Congresswoman Giffords and the families of all the victims. We pray for her full recovery, even as a nation mourns the loss of innocent life in such a senseless act. All of us struggle to understand this horrific event. There is much we still don’t know about what happened and why. But here’s what we do know without any question: on Saturday, a public servant went to meet with her constituents in the best tradition of our democracy, and while out, just doing her job, Congresswoman Giffords was shot down. Today she's fighting for her life, and six people lost their lives in this senseless assault not just on them, but, in its calculated planning for assassination, an assault on our democracy itself. Eerily, I heard this weekend’s news while in Sudan, representing our country in our collective effort to help a people who have endured unspeakable violence and who are trying to make a fresh start through their democracy. Yet as I stood beside those Africans who have lost loved ones in pursuit of the democratic values we Americans so proudly export to the world, there was an unavoidable clash with the events unfolding in Tucson – a dramatic underscoring of the work that must be done to revitalize our own democracy here at home. Many observers have already reduced this tragedy to simple questions of whether overheated rhetoric is to blame, or one partisan group or another. And surely today many pundits and politicians are measuring their words a little more carefully and thinking a little more about what they’re saying. But in the weeks and months ahead, the real issue we need to confront isn’t just what role divisive political rhetoric may have played on Saturday – but it’s the violence divisive, overly simplistic dialogue does to our democracy every day. In the wake of this weekend’s tragedy, Speaker Boehner was right to suspend the House’s usual business; the question now is whether we’re all going to suspend and then end business as usual in the United States Capitol. Because even before this event shook us out of our partisan routine, it should have been clear that on bedrock questions of civility and consensus– discourse and democracy – the whole endeavor of building a politics of national purpose – the big question wasn’t whose rhetoric was right or wrong, but whether our political conversation was worthy of the confidence and trust of the American people. Millions of Americans know we can do better than we’ve done these last bitter years – because our history has proven it time and again. When the Soviets sent the first satellite in history into orbit half a century ago, leaders from both parties rose with a sense of common purpose and resolved that never again would the United States fall behind anyone, anywhere. President Kennedy summoned our nation to reach the great and audacious goal "before (the) decade is out, of landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to earth." There were no partisan divisions that blocked the way. With daring and unflagging determination we moved immediately to unprecedented levels of investment in science and technology, engineering and RD – and only twelve years after Sputnik, two Americans humbly took mankind's first steps on the moon. Back then – just as today - our leaders, Democrat and Republican, had deep disagreements on many issues, but back then, they shared an even deeper commitment to stand together for the strength and success of our country. For them, at that turning point, politics stopped not just at the ocean’s edge, but at the edge of the atmosphere. For them, American Exceptionalism wasn’t just a slogan; they knew that America is exceptional not because we say we are, but because we do exceptional things. As I first said last month, we as a people face another Sputnik moment today. And the great question is whether we will meet this moment as Americans did so boldly five decades ago. The decisions we make – or fail to make – in this decade on new energy sources, on education, infrastructure, technology, and research , all of which are going to produce the jobs of the future, and our decisions on deficits and entitlements will without doubt determine whether the United States will continue to lead the world – or be left to follow in the wake of others, on the way to decline, less prosperous in our own land and less secure in the world. Some will question how in the world this could be possible – America less prosperous? America on the decline? They forget that exceptionalism for America has never been an automatic fact – a birthright on autopilot – but an inheritance of opportunity to be renewed and revitalized by each generation. So, let me share some facts with you. Right now, other developed and developing countries are making far-reaching choices to reshape their economies and move forward in a new and very different global era. But instead of us responding as Americans have in the past, the frustrating reality is that our American political system is increasingly paralyzed and Balkanized into a patchwork of narrow interests that have driven the larger “national good” far from the national dialogue altogether. Increasingly, overheated ideology and partisan infighting leave us less able to address or even comprehend the decisive nature and scale of the challenges that will decide our whole future. The fact is – our strength at home determines our strength in the world. And other countries are constantly taking our measure, sizing us up, watching our politics, measuring our gridlock. On issue after issue, enduring consensus has been frayed or shredded by lust for power cloaked in partisan games. Health care’s individual mandate? Guess what -- it started as a Republican idea-- a pro-business idea-- because rising insurance costs leave big holes in profits. Cap and trade? Guess again -- another Republican idea based on market principles and, with bipartisanship, successfully implemented by President George Herbert Walker Bush, now denounced as ideological heresy. And energy independence? For forty years, every President since Richard Nixon has recognized that foreign oil imports are America’s Achilles heel. But whenever we’ve had a chance to act, we’ve been blocked by entrenched influence and the siren call of short-term interest instead of achieving long-term success. Even as we were clawing our way to the ratification of START Treaty last month, I noted that far more ambitious treaties had previously been ratified by votes of 90 or 95 to zero. I joked that in this Senate, in this hyper-partisan Washington, 67 might be the new 95. I’m proud that in the end we sent a signal to the world that in American foreign policy, however uphill the slog and improbable the victory, partisan politics can still stop at the water’s edge. But the fact remains that it was closer than it ever should have been. All of this underscores the current danger to our country in ways that go far beyond that single debate and highlight a host of other issues that demand and deserve common resolve, not constant suspicion and division. If treaties ratified almost unanimously yesterday get just 71 votes today, what’s the forecast for other decisive endeavors that once would have commanded 79 votes in the Senate? We can’t afford for the old 79 to become the new 49, dooming our national will to unbreakable gridlock. Because in the 21st century where choices and consequences come at us so much faster than ever before, the price of Senate inaction isn’t just that we will stand still; it isn't just that America will fall behind; it's that we will stay behind as we cede the best possibilities of this young century to others who are more disciplined. Just think about an issue as simple and fundamental as building and investing in America – an issue that was once so clearly bi-partisan. The Republican Mayor of New York City Fiorello LaGuardia famously said: “There’s no Republican or Democratic way to clean the streets.” Well, for decades there was no Democratic or Republican way to build roads and bridges and airports. The building of America was every American’s job. This wasn’t narrow pork; it was a national priority. But today, we’re still living off and wearing out the infrastructure put in place by Republicans and Democrats together, starting with President Eisenhower’s interstate highway system. We didn’t build it; our parents and grandparents did. Now partisan paralysis has kept us from renewing that inheritance even as it decays from neglect. And the question is – what are we building for our children and our future generations? Reliable, modern infrastructure isn’t a luxury. It’s the lifeblood of our economy-- the key to connecting our markets, moving products and people, generating and sustaining millions of jobs for American workers, to not wasting hundreds of thousands of hours and millions of gallons of gas on clogged highways. In the face of global competition, our growth and exports are directly tied to the modernity of our infrastructure. As we invest too little and our competitors invest more and more, the harder and harder it will be to catch up – and the more and more attractive those countries will be for future investments. In 2009 China spent an estimated $350 billion on infrastructure-- 9 percent of its GDP. Europe’s infrastructure bank financed $350 billion in projects across the continent from 2005 to 2009, modernizing seaports, expanding airports and high speed rail lines, and reconfiguring city centers. Brazil invested over $240 billion in infrastructure in the past three years alone, with an additional $340 billion planned over the next three years. And what about us? Well, we know that Americans have always been builders. We built a transcontinental railroad. We built an interstate highway system. We built the rockets that let us explore the farthest edge of the solar system and beyond. But as a result of our political gridlock and attention to the short-term, that’s not what we’re doing today. For too long we’ve underbuilt and underinvested, and too much of what we have done has been uninformed by any long-term strategic plan. In 2008, it was estimated that we had to make an annual investment of $250 billion for the next 50 years to legitimately meet our transportation needs. Right now, we aren’t even close to that. Right now, we are as many miles away from it as we ought to be building to get there. Other countries are doing what we ought to do. They’re racing ahead because they created infrastructure banks to build a new future ; but we’ve yet to build a new consensus for our own national infrastructure bank to make Americans the world’s builders again-- and to keep our country the leader in the new world economy. Imagine the possibilities that would come from this endeavor - financing projects from high-speed rail to air and sea ports, all with the expectation of being repaid, lending directly to economically viable initiatives of both national and regional significance, without political influence, run in an open and transparent manner by experienced professionals with meaningful Congressional oversight. That is an indispensable strategy for prosperity and a legitimate vision that Americans could embrace. And if we offer America the leadership it deserves, it ought to be an undoubted opportunity and necessity for bi-partisanship. It’s not just infrastructure where we must rebuild our sense of great national purpose: virtually every measure shows that we’re falling behind. Today the United States is ranked 10th in global competitiveness among the G20 countries.America is now 12th worldwide in the percentage of 25-to-34-year-olds with a college degree, trailing, among others, Russia, New Zealand, South Korea, and Israel. This year investors have pulled $74 billion out of domestic stock funds and put $42 billion into foreign stock funds. High-profile multinational companies including Applied Materials and IBM are already opening major RD centers in China . And as we look to the Googles of the future, it is increasingly possible that they will be founded by students from Tianjin University, rather than MIT or Stanford. We need to face up these new challenges-- not just as individuals or separate interests, but as a nation with a national purpose. The world of the next generation will change too rapidly for political parties to focus too narrowly on the next election. And the 21st Century can be another American century-- but only if we restore a larger sense of responsibility and replace the clattering cacophony of the perpetual campaign with a wider discussion of what is best for our country. For the last months we’ve watched the news and read the campaign literature and heard a lot the soundbites. We've heard politicians say they won't become a part of Washington. That say they're for small government, lower taxes, and more freedom. But what do they really mean? Do they want a government too limited to have invented the Internet, now a vital part of our commerce and communications? A government too small to give America’s auto industry and all its workers a second chance to fight for their survival? Taxes too low to invest in the research that creates jobs and industries and fills the Treasury with the revenue that educates our children, cures disease, and defends our country? We have to get past slogans and soundbites, reason together, and talk in real terms about how America can do its best. If we are going to balance the budget and create jobs, we can’t pretend that we can do it by just eliminating earmarks and government waste. We have to look at the plain facts of how we did it before, and by the way, you don't have to look far. In the early 1990's, our economy was faltering because deficits and debt were freezing capital. We had to send a signal to the market that we were capable of being fiscally responsible. We did just that and as result we saw the longest economic expansion in history, created over 22 million jobs, and generated unprecedented wealth in America, with every income bracket rising. But we did it by making tough choices. The Clinton economic plan committed the country to a path of discipline that helped unleash the productive potential of the American people. We invested in the workforce, in research, in development. We helped new industries. Then, working with Republicans, we came up with a budget framework that put our nation on track to be debt free by 2012 for the first time since Andrew Jackson's administration. How we got off track is a story that doesn’t require retelling. But the truth of how we generated the 1990’s economic boom does need to be told. We didn’t just cut our way to a balanced budget; we grew our way there. And nothing played a more important role than the fact that we developed a one trillion dollar technology market with one billion users. Today we’re staring another economic opportunity of extraordinary proportions right in the face – and so far we’re doing precious little about it. The current energy economy is a $6 trillion market with 4 billion users (and the possibility of growing to 9 billion in the next 30 years) – and the fastest growing segment of that is green energy – projected at $2.3 trillion in 2020. Yet, as of today, without different policy decisions by us, most of this investment will be in Asia, and not the United States. Two years ago, China accounted for just 5 percent of the world’s solar panel production. Now it boasts the world’s largest solar panel manufacturing industry, exporting about 95 percent of its production to countries including the United States. We invented the technology but China is reaping the rewards. China's government is poised to outspend the U.S. 3 to 1 on public clean-energy projects over the next several years. They have installed 36 percent of the global market share in wind energy in 2009 and surpassed the United States as the fastest growing market. Deutsche Bank's Kevin Parker, who manages $7 billion in climate change-related investments, calls the US “asleep at the wheel on climate change... on the industrial revolution taking place in the energy industry." Because of political uncertainty and inaction in this country, he’s now focusing Deutsche Bank’s “green” investment dollars more and more on opportunities in China and Western Europe, where governments provide a more positive environment. Today only $45 million of the $7 billion green investmentsfund that Deutsche Bank manages is from the United States. Simply put, because we are asleep, the investments are going elsewhere. Now is the moment for America to reach for the brass energy ring – to go for the moon here on earth by building our new energy future-- and, in doing so, create millions of steady, higher paying jobs at every level of the economy. Make no mistake - jobs that produce energy in America are jobs that stay in America. The amount of work to be done here is just stunning. It is the work of many lifetimes. And it must begin now. This shouldn’t be a partisan issue; but instead of coming together to meet the defining test of a new energy economy and our future, we’re now leaving a political season in which too many candidates promised not to work with the other party. And this in the wake of a Senate session that started for Republicans with a power point presentation pronouncing - and I quote - "the purpose of the majority is to pass their agenda, the purpose of the minority is to become the majority." It’s no secret that I’m a convinced Democrat. And I know it’s better to be in the majority than in the minority. And I don't want anyone to come to the Senate, check their beliefs at the door, and "go Washington." Neither did the Founding Fathers. And certainly no one's elected to the Senate promising to join an exclusive club-- or to forget where they came from. But the truth is some of the most fiercely independent, plain-talking, direct, and determined partisans I've ever known in the Senate have also been the ones who tackled the toughest issues, finding common ground with people they disagreed with on damn near everything else. Daniel Patrick Moynihan was a New York liberal. Alan Simpson was a Wyoming conservative. But they could sit down and talk and debate and disagree about deficits, debts, and entitlements and somehow someway they could shape a way forward. And they did it in a way that enlisted liberals like Bill Bradley, moderates like Jack Heinz, and conservatives like John Danforth because they knew that certain issues were just too important to be lost in partisan squabbling. And you couldn't find three more proudly partisan and ideologically distinct politicians than Ronald Reagan, Tip O’Neill, and Bob Dole. But they found a way to put politics aside and save Social Security for a generation rather than saving it for misuse as a cudgel in the next campaign. They didn't capitulate - they compromised. And, speaking of backroom deals, they agreed NOT to let either party demagogue the issue against the incumbents who cast the tough votes to pass the bill. Now, if you’ve got to have a backroom deal, that’s the kind to have. Folks, you won't find a Republican today who would dare criticize Ronald Reagan. Last week, when the candidates for chairman of the Republican National Committee had their debate, Grover Norquist asked each of them to name their favorite Republican other than Ronald Reagan. He said he had to add that caveat so everyone didn't give the same answer. But we'd all be better off if some of these Republicans remembered that Ronald Reagan worked across the aisle to solve big problems. And we'd all be better off if Grover Norquist thought of THAT Ronald Reagan before he announced that "bipartisanship is just another word for date rape." That's the difference today. Ideology isn't new to the American political arena and ideology isn't unhealthy. The biggest breakthroughs in American politics have been brokered not by a mushy middle or by splitting the difference but by people who had a pretty healthy sense of ideology. Ted Kennedy and Orrin Hatch were a powerful team precisely because they didn't agree on that much and they spent a lot of time fighting each other --and so the Senate leaned in and listened on those occasions when somehow this ultimate odd couple found things they were willing to fight for together. Sometimes, as John Kennedy once said, “party asks too much.” Sometimes, party leaders also ask too much, especially if they exploit the rules of the United States Senate for the sole purpose of denying a President a second term. But that is what we have witnessed the last two years; Republicans nearly unanimous in opposition to almost every proposal by the President and almost every proposal by Democratic colleagues. The extraordinary measure of a filibuster has become an ordinary expedient. Today it’s possible for 41 Senators representing only about one tenth of the American population to bring the Senate to a standstill. Certainly, I believe the filibuster has its rightful place. I used it to stop drilling for oil in the Arctic Wildlife Refuge because I believed that was in our national interest --and 60 or more Senators should be required to speak up on such an irrevocable decision. But we have reached the point where the filibuster is being invoked by the minority not necessarily because of a difference over policy, but as a political tool to undermine the Presidency. Consider this: in the entire 19th century, including the struggle against slavery, fewer than two dozen filibusters were mounted. Between 1933 and the coming of World War II, it was attempted only twice. During the Eisenhower administration, twice. During John Kennedy’s presidency, four times-- and then eight during Lyndon Johnson’s push for civil rights and voting rights bills. By the time Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan occupied the White House, there were about 20 filibusters a year. But in the 110th Congress of 2007-2008, there were a record 112 cloture votes. And in the 111th Congress, there were 136, one of which even delayed a vote to authorize funding for the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine Corps during a time of war. That’s not how the Founders intended the Senate to work-- and that's not how our country can afford the Senate not to work. Chris Dodd said it best in his farewell address just a few weeks ago – a speech the Republican Leader called one of the most important in the history of the chamber. Chris sounded a warning: “What will determine whether this institution works or not, what has always determined whether we will fulfill the Framers’ highest hopes or justify the cynics’ worst fears, is not the Senate rules, the calendar, or the media. It is whether each of the one hundred Senators can work together.” That was a speech that needed to be heard. But the question nowisn’t whether it was heard; it’s whether we really listened to it. Because when it comes to the economy, our country really does need 100 Senators who face the facts and find a way to work not just on their side, but side by side. No one runs for the Senate arguing that the United States should have one fifth of its foreign debt held by China. No winning candidate has ever suggested that the United States should trail Poland in education. Or that Germany should invent the next Google or develop the cutting edge new clean energy industries. No one has ever gone into a debate pledging that Indian workers should hold the jobs of the future not American workers. There’s a bi-partisan consensus just waiting to lift our country and our future if Senators are willing to sit down and forge it and make it real. If we're willing to stop talking past each other, to stop substituting soundbites for substance. If we're willing finally to pull ourselves out of an ideological cement of our own mixing. We will no doubt continue to be frustrated and angry from time to time, but I believe that more often than not, we can rise to the common ground of great national purpose. Surely we can agree and act to realize the goal set by the President who called his fellow citizens to meet that earlier Sputnik moment-- an America " that is not first if, not first but, but first period." So, in this time of crisis and mourning, in this time of challenge and opportunity, we need to commit to reaching across the aisle, as colleagues did before us, to unite to do the exceptional things that will keep America exceptional for generations to come.
个人分类: 生活点滴|3582 次阅读|0 个评论
苹果树在天津大学
热度 1 zlyang 2010-11-20 19:58
苹果树在天津大学 1.“牛顿苹果树” 2007年2月 ,由天津大学校长龚克率领的代表团到牛顿的家乡伍尔斯索普庄园,亲手剪下“牛顿苹果树”的枝条带回国内,经过天津大学专家学者的精心护理,目前这株苹果树在天大 生根发芽 ,茁壮成长。 进一步介绍请看: 新华网《天津大学引进充满传奇色彩的“牛顿苹果树”》 http://news.xinhuanet.com/edu/2009-09/12/content_12035744.htm 人民网《牛顿苹果树扎根天津大学》 http://edu.people.com.cn/GB/10048516.html 天津大学《我国首次直接引进“牛顿苹果树”天大授牌》 http://www.tju.edu.cn/newscenter/headline/200909/t20090924_28113.htm 前天梅博士(Dr. MEI JQ)给它拍摄的照片。 “牛顿苹果树”来了, 牛顿去了那里? 不知道它结不结果? 如果结苹果, 则是贵重的礼品, 建议校方将第一个牛顿苹果制作成标本保存! 以后的苹果,作为馈赠的珍贵礼品。 还有,该树苹果落下的时候, 真傻 的傻头是否会被砸晕? 2.坚守岗位的苹果(梅博士拍摄) 在科学图书馆南面。 树叶都落了,可是这一对苹果仍然坚守自己的岗位。 从不同角度的特写。 下令保护伍尔斯索普庄园“牛顿苹果树”的伊利莎白女王二世。 The original tree, under the protective decree of Queen Elizabeth II, is cared for by the National Trust, an organization which protects special places in the U.K. Elizabeth II and George W. Bush share a toast during a state dinner at the White House, 7 May 2007 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:George_W._Bush_toasts_Elizabeth_II_2007.jpg 相关链接: 《女王伊丽莎白二世:爱才不爱财? 》 http://www.sciencenet.cn/m/user_content.aspx?id=387650 《摄影:牛顿牌苹果》 http://bbs.sciencenet.cn/home.php?mod=spaceuid=107667do=blogid=460094 《2011暑假傻拍(10):苹果树、吃饭与干活》 http://bbs.sciencenet.cn/home.php?mod=spaceuid=107667do=blogid=471571 《 牛顿牌苹果,你们去了哪里? 》 http://bbs.sciencenet.cn/home.php?mod=spaceuid=107667do=blogid=460248 《牛顿苹果花:2013傻拍(13)》 http://blog.sciencenet.cn/home.php?mod=spaceuid=107667do=blogid=685087
个人分类: 未分类|17397 次阅读|6 个评论
欢迎报考 天津大学 控制科学与工程学科“模式识别与智能系统”专业硕士研究生
热度 6 zlyang 2010-3-10 13:33
欢迎报考 天津大学 2010 年 控制科学与工程 学科 模式识别与智能系统 方向 的硕士研究生(工学、工程两类) 凡 第一志愿 报考者,入学后评定 奖学金等级优先 。 我们 模式识别与智能系统 方向(专业)的师资力量 优良 。招收本方向的 工学 学术型、 工程 专业型硕士研究生。 在研国家自然科学基金、国家行业基金、天津市科技支撑计划重点项目、天津市重点自然科学基金、天津市自然科学基金等纵向研究型项目多项。 在研横向研发型、应用型项目多项。 研究生可以获得研发、研究、应用等多方面能力的充分训练和提高。 近年本学科发表在 2 区 SCI 论文若干,各类 SCI 、 EI 论文多篇。 硕士生 就业 形势优良,绝大多数(几乎所有)同学毕业后对就业状况 很满意 、 满意 。 我们的模式识别与智能系统方向属于 IT 专业,交叉 控制 专业。 目前结合智能交通、医学影象诊断、天气预报等具体领域 / 方向。 本方向部分教师,还 招 收 软件工程 专业工程硕士! 各 导师介绍 请看: http://www2.tju.edu.cn/colleges/automate/faculty.php 我们欢迎塌实的同学来共同提高,教学相长! 部分在研纵向项目: 多源异构智能控制系统的机理与方法研究; 基于压缩域的数字动态图象的维吾尔文信息检索; 基于计算机视觉的台风识别、定位与跟踪; 基于计算机视觉的智能交通监视系统; 公路短时交通流预测的若干关键基础问题研究; 基于计算机视觉的冰雹临近预警研究。
个人分类: 本科-研究生教学|10245 次阅读|12 个评论
请指点《基于电工学课程内容的创新素材》
zlyang 2010-2-24 09:49
请指点《基于电工学课程内容的创新素材》 真傻 给天津大学本科生上《电工学》课程。 我们“电工学课程教学团队”是 2009 年天津市级团队, http://tdyw.tju.edu.cn/jwc/detail.php?type=1id=306 。 我们的课程是 2006 年国家精品课程(负责人: 王萍 教授), http://202.113.13.85/automate/index.htm 。 其中我负责“基于电工学课程内容的创新素材”编制, http://202.113.13.85/automate/index.htm 。该内容于 2006 年 1 月获得“天津市高校深化教学改革,提高教学质量系列活动”二等奖(杨正瓴,王萍,张军,薛俊韬,路志英,刘正光,林孔元 . 《电工学》课程教学中学生创新素质的培养)。 因此真傻在“创新知识”方面是有一定的基础的。 请您指教“基于电工学课程内容的创新素材”: http://202.113.13.85/automate/index.htm 。 谢谢! 2005 杨正瓴 天津市(最后更改).rar
个人分类: 本科-研究生教学|6406 次阅读|2 个评论

Archiver|手机版|科学网 ( 京ICP备07017567号-12 )

GMT+8, 2024-6-7 15:53

Powered by ScienceNet.cn

Copyright © 2007- 中国科学报社

返回顶部