 My name is Chiung Liu from China CDC. My research focuses on two areas. The first is vector and vector bone disease. The second is clumped-chain health risk assessment and adaptation strategies. I was involved in several important events such as the Southeast Asia tsunami. My responsibility was to make assessment in the tsunami-affected area if there's a risk for some specific vector bone disease such as malaria, dinghy, and also the other vector bone diseases. It's really a challenge. We have the responsibility to go and to help. I promote the research in this area in China and the world. So we have a lot of interactions between China and Australia, especially from China CDC and the Griffith University. Almost every year, Griffith University sends a team to China, to Beijing, to Guangzhou, Shanghai to see the alumnus and to communicate with them. It's really a very good model. It makes us to link together and help each other. This is the character, I think, the Griffith University character. I'm very interested in biology and medicine. I think I'm getting to love this. And when you love something, you can contribute a lot. As postgraduate students for a master's degree and for PhD, I learned a lot. I think I have the responsibility to teach what I have learned here to empower the young scientists to work together more effectively and efficiently.