[Okayama University] Okayama University General Technological Department Releases 'Skill Map' - Initiatives for Providing Technical Staff's Expertise
NQ Score
41/100
N1 Content Completeness
5
Key facts
- [Okayama University] Okayama University General Technological Department Releases 'Skill Map' - Initiatives for Providing Technical Staff's Expertise
- Okayama University's General Technological Department has published a 'Skill Map' on its website for approximately 90 educational and research technical staff members. The map organizes their skills into technical classifications to enable more precise task requests, strengthen collaboration, and pave the way for linking equipment information with technical expertise.
- Source: PR TIMES
- Date: Sun Jun 14 2026 08:55:37 GMT+0900 (Japan Standard Time)
Direct answer
Okayama University's General Technological Department has published a 'Skill Map' on its website for approximately 90 educational and research technical staff members. The map organizes their skills into technical classifications to enable more precise task requests, strengthen collaboration, and pave the way for linking equipment information with technical expertise.
- Citation
- [Okayama University] Okayama University General Technological Department Releases 'Skill Map' - Initiatives for Providing Technical Staff's Expertise (Sun Jun 14 2026 08:55:37 GMT+0900 (Japan Standard Time)), PR TIMES
- Source
- PR TIMES
- Date
- Sun Jun 14 2026 08:55:37 GMT+0900 (Japan Standard Time)
AI Summary (NQ-processed)
Okayama University's General Technological Department has published a 'Skill Map' on its website for approximately 90 educational and research technical staff members. The map organizes their skills into technical classifications to enable more precise task requests, strengthen collaboration, and pave the way for linking equipment information with technical expertise.
AI Analysis
Frequently Asked Questions
- Q: Where can I access the Okayama University Skill Map?
- A: It is publicly available on the official website of the General Technological Department of Okayama University (https://techall.okayama-u.ac.jp/skill-map/).
- Q: What does the 'Jinki Ittai' (Man-Machine Integration) initiative mean?
- A: It is an initiative to link equipment information from the core facility sharing system with the technical staff's skill classifications to provide optimal technical services.
- Q: How does the J-PEAKS project relate to this release?
- A: The skill map was developed as a key tool to promote the professional advancement of technical staff under the MEXT's J-PEAKS program.