Home / Global Initiatives / Falling Walls Science Breakthroughs of the Year Award

Falling Walls Science Breakthroughs of the Year Award

Falling Walls Science Breakthroughs of the Year Award

The Falling Walls Science Breakthroughs of the Year Award, initiated by the Berlin-based Falling Walls Foundation, showcases and celebrates the most recent breakthroughs in science and society from all around the world. Awardees are selected by a jury comprising globally recognised experts in the fields.

The Falling Walls Foundation, a charity supported by the German government and numerous acclaimed academic institutions, foundations, companies, and NGOs, has been organizing the Science Breakthroughs of the Year Award to foster dialogue on research and innovation globally and promote the latest scientific findings. The event brings together the latest breakthroughs, outstanding science projects and bright minds behind them in 10 scientific, innovation, and humanistic categories.

Falling Walls Science Breakthroughs of the Year 2022
Finalists

Four CUHK researchers were shortlisted as finalists in four categories, including:

Prof. Li Zhang - Finalist of Falling Walls Science Breakthroughs of the Year Award 2022 Prof. Stuart McManus - Finalist of Falling Walls Science Breakthroughs of the Year Award 2022
Engineering and Technology | Prof. Li Zhang – Microrobot swarms: Fundamentals and clinical use Social Sciences and Humanities | Prof. Stuart M. McManus – The Global Renaissance
Prof. Li Zhang of the Faculty of Engineering is selected as a finalist in the category of Engineering and Technology. Prof. Zhang is a world leading pioneer in the development of microrobot collectives, from the fundamental understanding on their collective behaviors to in vivo tracking and intelligent delivery for clinical applications. His breakthroughs in microrobot swarm have high potential to revolutionise targeted therapy in tiny-and-tortuous lumens deep inside the body. Prof. Stuart M. McManus of the Faculty of Arts is selected as a finalist in the category of Social Sciences and Humanities. His project examined how global reach of the Spanish and Portuguese empires prompted a remarkable flourishing of Renaissance culture in various parts of the early modern world.
Prof. Michael Pittman - Finalist of Falling Walls Science Breakthroughs of the Year Award 2022 Prof. Maggie Wang - Finalist of Falling Walls Science Breakthroughs of the Year Award 2022
Life Science | Prof. Michael Pittman – Laser technology shows how dinosaurs took flight Science Start-ups | Prof. Maggie Haitian Wang – Computational biology solution to enhance vaccine design and effectiveness
Prof. Michael Pittman of the Faculty of Science is selected as a finalist in the category of Life Science. His laser technique tells us how dinosaurs took flight long ago by revealing soft tissue flying structures that no one has ever seen. These details show that ancestors of birds adopted diverse flight strategies and evolved flight more than once. Prof. Maggie Haitian Wang of the Faculty of Medicine is selected as a finalist in the category of Science Start-ups. Her start-up, Beth Bioinformatics, provides a bioinformatics and computational solution to predict virus evolution and enhance vaccine design. Her team has developed a platform using genome analysis to predict the effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccines with 95% accuracy.

 

Introduction to Prof. Maggie Wang's work.Introduction to Prof. Maggie Wang’s work

Finalist

Prof. Weitian Chen – Illuminatio Medical Technology: Non-invasive Technology to Diagnose Liver Fibrosis


Science Start-ups | Prof. Weitian Chen – Illuminatio Medical Technology: Non-invasive technology to diagnose liver fibrosis

In 2021, Prof. Weitian Chen and his team from the Faculty of Medicine was selected as one of the Finalists in the Falling Walls Science Breakthroughs of the Year Award in the category of Science Start-ups.

Chronic liver disease (CLD) is a global health problem. The current gold standard for the diagnosis of liver fibrosis, a key CLD feature, is invasive biopsy. Current non-invasive methods still have limitations. The start-up develops a non-invasive MRI technology to directly measure relative collagen content in the liver to detect fibrosis. It does not need extra hardware or any contrast agent. It is convenient for routine clinical use, and for screening and treatment monitoring of liver fibrosis.

Top 10 Scientists 


Video Introduction to Prof. Yi-Chun Lu’s work

Video Prof. Yi-Chun Lu’s interview with the Falling Walls


Engineering and Technology | Prof. Yi-Chun Lu – Breaking the wall of safe energy storage

In 2020, Prof. Yi-Chun Lu from the Faculty of Engineering was selected as one of the top 10 scientists in the Falling Walls Science Breakthroughs of the Year Award in the category of Engineering and Technology. Being the only female Asian scientist in the top 10 of this category, Prof. Lu was recognised for her ground-breaking invention of a safe, high energy, low cost, and environmentally friendly battery that serves as a substitute for commercial lithium-ion batteries which are ubiquitous in our daily lives.

 


Finalists

Four other CUHK scientists were shortlisted as finalists in other categories, including:

Vice-Chancellor Prof. Rocky S. Tuan – Breaking the wall of international education through virtual student exchange

 

Digital Education | Vice-Chancellor Prof. Rocky S. Tuan – Breaking the wall of international education through virtual student exchange

Taking advantage of digital technology in higher education, the Virtual Student Exchange (VSE) program provides students within the Association of Pacific Rim Universities network an innovative, immersive virtual exchange experience through digital platforms. The VSE program includes academic courses and co-curricular cultural and social community activities.

Video

Prof. Lin Liu – Breaking the wall to cryosphere monitoring

 

Physical Sciences | Prof. Lin Liu – Breaking the wall to cryosphere monitoring

The cryosphere, the planet’s frozen parts, has undergone rapid warming in recent decades, posing profound threats to people and the earth systems. With innovative use of AI, computer vision, deep learning, and remote sensing for detecting, characterising, and monitoring changes of the glaciers and the frozen ground from big earth observation data, Prof. Liu’s project transforms our understanding of the polar changes and their global impacts.

Video

 

Prof. Siew Chien Ng – GenieBiome Ltd: Breaking the wall of cancer using novel microbes

 

Science Start-ups | Prof. Siew Chien Ng – GenieBiome Ltd: Breaking the wall of cancer using novel microbes

Growing evidence indicates that gut microbiome plays a central role in health and disease. With rapid expansion of global microbiome investment, GenieBiome has positioned itself to be a pioneer in the development of microbiome-based diagnostics and therapeutics in Asia. It has developed a non-invasive disruptive technology for detecting colon cancer. With this novel diagnostic stool test, regular screening colonoscopy will no longer be necessary.

Video

Prof. Siew Chien Ng – GenieBiome Ltd: Breaking the wall of cancer using novel microbes

 

Social Sciences and Humanities | Prof. Mee Kam Ng – Breaking the wall to ecological and humane urbanism

Hong Kong has been facing many challenges including socio-economic and spatial inequities, and political changes since its return to the Chinese rule in 1997. Working with other professionals, NGOs, district councilors and place champions, this project encourages community members to collaborate in place-making endeavors that restore the ecosystem and provide socio-petal spaces for convivial bottom-up community developments.

Video

 

 

Please check out the videos for the breakthroughs.