Chen Youhua Frank
Associate Professor
Management Services
City University of Hong Kong
Hong Kong
Biography
Youhua (Frank) Chen [陳å‹è¯] is Chair Professor and Head of Management Sciences at City University of Hong Kong. He holds a bachelor degree in Engineering, master degree in Economics, and doctoral degree in Management from Tsinghua University (Beijing), the University of Waterloo, and the University of Toronto, respectively. After finishing his PhD, he went to Northwestern University as a post-doc fellow (9/1996-6/1997). Prior to joining City University of Hong Kong, Prof. Chen was on the faculty of NUS Business School, National University of Singapore (7/1997-6/2001) and the Department of Systems Engineering and Engineering Management, the Chinese University of Hong Kong (2001-2012), respectively. Courses which Prof. Chen taught in NUS include Operations Management and Supply Chain Management, at both undergraduate and MBA levels. He was also actively involved in executive teaching (EDP and EMBA). At CUHK, he taught Logistics and Supply Chain Management, and served as the deputy director and director for the Executive Master of Science Program (EMSc) in Logistics and Supply Chain Management, a joint program with Tsinghua University (Shenzhen). Prof. Chen has also been involved in consulting projects in the area of supply chain management and logistics. His current research projects span from logistics/supply chains, weather risk management to healthcare operations management.
Research Interest
Emerging Issues in supply chains
Publications
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L. Jeff Hong, Xiaowei Xu, and Shenghao Zhang (2015), "Capacity reservation for time-sensitive service providers: An application in seaport management", European Journal of Operational Research, 245, 490-490.
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Weiwei Fan, L. Jeff Hong, and Barry L. Nelson (2016), "Indifference-zone-free selection of the best", Operations Research, 64, 1499-1514.
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L. Jeff Hong, SandeepJuneja, and Guangwu Liu. (2017), "Kernel smoothing for nested estimation with application to portfolio risk measurement", Operations Research, 65, 3, 657-673.