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KAIST Welcomes Freshmen at the 2015 Convocation Ceremony
Around 1,600 freshmen and their parents gathered on March 12, 2015 at the main auditorium on campus for the KAIST convocation ceremony. A total of 796 freshmen joined the convocation ceremony. The ceremony proceeded with the freshmen oath, administered by freshmen representatives Ja-Young Ryu (a graduate of the Korea Science Academy) and Yun-Min Song (a graduate of Changwon Science High School). Vice Minister Jae-Yoo Choi of Science, ICT and Future Planning, the Republic of Korea, and President Steve Kang of KAIST delivered congratulatory messages, respectively. Members of KAIST student clubs performed a music concert to celebrate the event. In his message, Vice Minister Choi said, “Scientists should not be afraid of failure but have a challenging spirit. As always, the Korean government will provide students with generous support by creating an environment for education and research, in which students can reach their potential and realize imagination into reality.” President Kang urged students to be respectful and thankful to others, to master their expertise in depth, to take social responsibilities, and to improve on global communication skills. He continued, “With all the best intellectuals you will meet at KAIST, you will face a much more challenging environment compared to high school. Even if it gets too difficult and you fail, do not be discouraged but please have the heart to get back up and try again.” Freshmen representatives, Ja-Young Ryu (a female student) and Yun-Min Song (a male student), are administering the student oath in front of President Sung-Mo Kang in the picture below.
2015.03.02
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Dr. Dong-Hee Chung Honored with OYRA by Korean Physicists in America
Dr. Dong-Hee Chung, a KAIST alumnus (class of 2002) who is currently a professor of the Physics Department at the Pennsylvania State University (Penn State), received the 2015 Outstanding Young Researcher Award (OYRA) by the Association of Korean Physicists in America (AKPA). The award ceremony was held on March 3, 2015 at AKPA’s annual conference. According to AKPA, Dr. Chung was recognized for his research achievements in the fields of the early universe, dark energy, and galaxy formation. Dr. Chung finished both his undergraduate and graduate degrees at KAIST and received his doctorate in 2004 from the University of Texas at Austin. He was appointed a professor at Penn State in 2014.
2015.02.27
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KAIST Team Wins International Hacking Competition, "SECCON CTF 2014"
KAIST’s white hacker team, “TOFEL Beginner,” secured the first place in an international hacking competition, SECCON CTF 2014. SECCON is an international hacking competition which has operated for more than 20 years. It uses the Capture the Flag (CTF) method. Last year’s competition was held in Tokyo on December 7, 2014. The TOFEL Beginner team consisted of two KAIST graduate students and two researchers from a private security company based in Korea: In-Soo Yoon of Computer Science, Eun-Soo Kim of the Graduate School of Information Security (GSIS), and Jong-Ho Lee and Jung-Hoon Lee of Raon Secure. Of 4,186 competitors, 24 teams made it to the finals. The TOFEL Beginner took the lead with 4,506 points compared with HITCON (3,112 points) of Taiwan and PPP (2,858 points) of the USA. With this victory, the KAIST team qualified to participate in the most renowned international hacking competition, the DEF CON Hacking Conference in 2015. Professor Yongdae Kim of the Electrical Engineering Department at KAIST, who advised the TOEFL Beginner team, said, “Our members have achieved an outstanding result. By taking advantage of this opportunity, KAIST will continue to offer the best programs in information security in Korea and hopefully beyond.”
2015.02.24
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The Number of KAIST Doctoral Graduates to Reach Over Ten Thousands
The ten-thousandth doctoral graduate received her degree in the commencement ceremony on February 13, 2015. KAIST has contributed to the development of science, technology, and industry in Korea by fostering talents in advanced science and engineering. Since its establishment forty-four years ago, more than ten-thousand KAIST alumni have received their doctorates. This year’s graduation ceremony took place on February 13, 2015, at the Sports Complex on campus, awarding the ten-thousandth doctoral degree. Dr. Sun-Mi Cho of the Department of Biological Sciences received the ten-thousandth doctoral degree. A graduate of Jeon-Nam Science High School, Dr. Cho also received her Bachelor of Science degree from KAIST. Dr. Cho wrote a dissertation entitled “GABA from reactive astrocytes impairs learning and memory in Alzheimer disease.” Her dissertation adviser was Professor Daesoo Kim of the Department of Biological Sciences. Dr. Cho, who will be a post-doctorate researcher at the Biological Sciences Department, said, “It was my childhood dream to receive a doctorate from KAIST. I cannot believe that I’m the ten-thousandth doctoral graduate, for which I’m very grateful.” She continued, “I hope to become a neuroscientist where I can be of help to the sick.” In 1978, KAIST only had two doctoral graduates, but since 1987 there have been more than one hundred graduates each year, two hundred since 1994, and four hundred since 2000. In 2015, 522 doctoral students graduated. One of the first doctoral graduates, Dong-Yol Yang (class of 1978 in the Mechanical Engineering Department), became a professor at the same department of KAIST. Professor Yang expressed his thoughts on the news, “There was a trend in Korea to go overseas for Ph.D. degrees in the early 1970s, but it changed when KAIST began to select candidates for Master’s degrees in 1973 and Doctoral degrees in 1975. Talented Korean students came to KAIST laboratories, and its graduates were known for their knowledge and skills. Now, we see that the talent is coming from overseas.” At the 2015 Commencement, KAIST conferred 522 Doctoral, 1,241 Master’s, and 915 Bachelor of Science (B.S.) degrees. Since its inception in 1971, KAIST has granted 10,403 doctor's, 26,402 master's, and 51,412 bachelor's degrees. In the picture below, Professor Dong-Yol Yang (left) seats next to Dr. Sun-Mi Cho (right), the recipient of 10,000th doctoral degree.
2015.02.16
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The 2015 KAIST Commencement
A total of 2,678 students (522 for Doctor's, 1,241 for Master’s, and 915 for Bachelor's) graduated. Twin brothers received their Ph.D. degrees together. KAIST held its commencement ceremony on February 13, 2015. Approximately 8,000 people including the graduating class, their families, faculty, staff, and friends attended the ceremony and celebrated this milestone. President Steve Kang of KAIST congratulated the graduating students and stressed the importance of their “contribution to social growth with a compassionate heart and expertise” in his commencement address. He also mentioned that all graduates would be recognized as a “Very Important Person (VIP)” and laid out the essential characteristics of what constitutes a “true VIP”: vision, innovation, and perseverance. Among the graduates were twin brothers, Dae-Ok Kim of the Energy, Environment, Water, and Sustainability (EEWS) Graduate School and Dae-Woo Kim of the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, who received their doctorates on the same day. The older brother, Dr. Dae-Ok Kim received both his Bachelor of Science (B.S.) and Master’s degrees from KAIST’s Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering and later was admitted to the EEWS Graduate School for his doctorate. His dissertation was an “Investigation on the behaviors of gas molecules in water-filled nanopores: Applications to energy and environmental technology.” Professor Huen Lee of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering was his faculty adviser. Dr. Dae-Ok Kim said, “It was a great advantage to conduct cooperative research with my brother by sharing information and discussing each other’s fields.” After graduating, Dr. Kim plans to research gas hydrates and porous materials at KAIST’s Energy and Environmental Systems Lab for a year and to continue his research on applications in the United States. The younger brother, Dr. Dae-Woo Kim received his B.S. from KAIST’s Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering and was admitted to the Master of Science-Ph.D. Integrated Degree Program in the same department. His doctoral thesis was on “Direct visualization of large-area domains of two dimensional materials by using optical birefringency.” His faculty adviser was Professor Hee Tae Jung of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering. Dr. Dae-Woo Kim said, “During my time at the graduate school, I could overcome my difficulties by talking frankly to my brother. Our relationship deepened as we reached our academic goals together at KAIST.” Dr. Dae-Woo Kim, who published more than 25 papers in international journals such as Nature and Nanotechnology, received the Silver Prize in the Human Tech Paper Awards sponsored by Samsung Electronics Corp. in 2011. After graduating, Dr. Kim will research graphene and 2D material structure control at KAIST’s Organic Opto-Electronic Materials Lab for a year and take up further research on their applications in the United States. KAIST Commencement 2015 In the picture below, the twins pose together at the 2015 commencement. At the left is Dae-Ok Kim (elder brother) and the right is Dae-Woo Kim.
2015.02.16
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Dr. Hak-Min Kim Appointed New KAIST Auditor
KAIST’s Board of Trustees appointed Dr. Hak-Min Kim the new auditor for the university on January 30, 2015 at the K Hotel in Seoul. Dr. Kim will serve from January 30, 2015 to January 29, 2018. A bachelor's graduate of the Metallurgical Engineering Department at Seoul National University, Dr. Kim received his master’s and doctoral degrees from Carnegie Mellon University in the United States. He returned to Korea in the early 1980s and worked for the Korea Institute of Machinery and Materials (KIMM), the Korea Institute of Science and Technology Evaluation and Planning, and the Ministry of Science, ICT and Future Planning, the Republic of Korea. Since 2012, Dr. Kim has been serving the Research Committee at the Korea Institute of Materials Science, an affiliation of KIMM.
2015.02.06
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"Software Welcomes Girls" Camp at KAIST
KAIST’s Department of Computer Science organized a software (SW) training camp from January 25-29, 2015 in the Creative Learning Building on campus to promote talented women for the field of information technology (IT). Hosted by the National Information Society Agency in Korea and the Korea Foundation for the Advancement of Science and Creativity, the training camp was comprised of a junior program to educate primary and secondary school students along with teachers and parents, while university students, software developers, and female professionals who had interrupted their careers participated in a senior camp. In the junior camp, participants learned how to employ Scratch and App Inventor as well as microprocessors by using Arduino and Raspberry Pi. During the camp, students including those from multicultural families attended lectures from professors and software designers and received a career consulting session from them. The conference organizers will provide long-term mentoring for the primary and secondary school students by graduate student participants and other volunteer experts. The senior camp consisted of a program entitled “More Women, Better SW!” and a special lecture on “Women in SOS (Software Optimization Services)” took place at Google Korea. University students, teachers, and SW developers had an opportunity to design applications intended to improve daily living. At the “Women in SOS” program, Professor Alice Oh of KAIST and other industry experts gave talks about successful women IT personnel and digital literacy. One of the organizers, Professor Yoon-Joon Lee from the Computer Science Department said, “Software-centered societies in the future will demand delicate intuition and cooperative leadership, which are characteristics of women.” He added that “I hope more women become interested in this field through this event.”
2015.02.02
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Singaporean Minister for Education Visits KAIST
Heng Swee Keat, the Minister for Education of Singapore, and his delegation visited KAIST on January 26, 2015, to discuss innovative education models being implemented by KAIST and future cooperation with Singaporean universities. The visit included 21 key personnel responsible for higher and gifted educational programs in the Singaporean government. Minister Heng showed great interest in KASIT's learner-focused teaching method, "Education 3.0," and graduate school-centered education. He said, "Singapore is in the process of making innovations in university education, for example, by offering more opportunities for global education such as joint programs with leading universities like MIT and Yale University in the US." In the picture, Vice President for Planning and Budget Seung Bin Park (sixth from the left), KAIST, and Minister Heng Swee Keat (right next to Park) posed together.
2015.01.28
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KAIST Students Volunteer in Cambodia
To provide science education for Cambodian high school students and to share Korean art and culture. Cambodia was one of the 60 nations that joined the United Nations’ efforts to help South Korea during the Korean War in the 1950s. Now, a group of KAIST students starts a journey to return what that nation gave to Koreans so generously over six decades ago. Initiated and planned by students, the volunteering project “KAIST Dream Tree Global Volunteering in Cambodia” offers science and math education to high school students in Cambodia for 11 days. The volunteer team is consisted of 15 undergraduate students and one faculty advisor, and they will work at Hosanna High School in Phnom Penh, Cambodia from January 24 to February 3, 2015. With around 150 student participants from Hosanna High School, KAIST students will teach math, physics, chemistry, and biology. They will also provide an opportunity to learn about Korean art and culture, including Taekwondo, a Korean traditional martial art, mural painting, and Korean language. As K-Pop (Korean pop music) and Korean movies and television dramas have become popular in Cambodia, KAIST students will perform musicals and host a singing contest together with Cambodian students for fun and enjoyment. In addition, students from both countries plan to create flower beds around the high school campus. Prior to the KAIST team’s departure to Cambodia, the university held a small ceremony to support the students’ volunteer work. Attending the ceremony with other senior faculty members, President Steve Kang thanked the students. He said, “KAIST students have been receiving tremendous support from Korean citizens, and it’s great to see how our students are repaying their generosity by helping young people who are less privileged. I’m really proud of our students and hope that this tradition of sharing science knowledge and passion for science with the global community continues.” The ceremony took place on January 19, 2015 at the Guesthouse on campus.
2015.01.27
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Hierarchically-Porous Polymers with Fast Absorption
KAIST's Professor Myungeun Seo and his research team from the Graduate School of Nanoscience and Technology has developed a method to form micropores of less than 2 nanometers within porous polymers where 10 nanometers long mesopores connect like a net. The advantage of the porous polymers is fast absorption of molecules. Porous polymers with micropores of less than 2 nanometers, like a zeolite, have a large surface area. They are used as a means to store hydrogen-based molecules or as a catalytic support that can be used as a surface to convert a material into a desired form. However, because the size of the pores in its path was too small for the molecules, it took a long time to spread into the pores and reach the surface. To reach the surface efficiently, a lung cell or the vein of a leaf has a structure wherein the pores are subdivided into different sizes so that the molecule can spread throughout the organ. A technology that can create not only micropores but also bigger pores was necessary in order to create such structure. The research team solved the issue by implementing a "self-assembly" of block polymers to easily form a net-like nanostructure from mesopores of 10 nanometers. The team created hierarchically-porous polymers consisting of two different types of pores by using a hypercrosslinking reaction along with the "self-assembly" method. The reaction creates micropores within the chain after the polymer chain is confined by a chemical bond. This porous polymer has micropores that are smaller than 2 nanometers on the walls of mesopores while 10 nanometers long mesopores forming 3-dimensional net structures. Because of the "self-assembly" method, the size of mesopores can be adjusted within the range of 6 to 15 nanometers. This is the first case where a porous polymer has both well-defined mesopores and micropores. The research team verified the effect of hierarchically-porous structures on absorption of molecules by confirming that the porous polymer had faster absorption speeds than a polymer consisting only of micropores. Professor Seo said, “The study has found a simple way to create different sizes of pores within a polymer.” He expected that the hierarchically-porous polymers can be used as a catalytic support in which fast diffusion of molecules is essential, or for molecule collection. The research was sponsored by National Research Foundation of Korea and published online in the Journal of the American Chemical Society. Figure 1 – Net-like Structure of Hierarchically-Porous Polymers with Mesopores and Micropores on the walls of Mesopores. Figure 2 - Hierarchically-Porous Polymers Figure 3 – Comparison of Porous-Polymers consisting of Mesopores only (left), and Mesopores and Micropores (right)
2015.01.13
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The Graduate School of Green Growth at KAIST Holds a Student Conference
The Graduate School of Green Growth at KAIST hosted a student conference on December 22, 2014 at the Seoul campus of the College of Business. About 100 master’s and doctoral students joined the conference held under the theme of “Green Knowledge Hub” and presented their research papers. At the conference, three students received awards. The author of a paper entitled “Development and Analysis of Climate Change Vulnerability Index Applicable to Developing Countries” received the grand prize. The authors of “Green IT and Its Case Study on the Reduction of Greenhouse Gas Emissions by Industry” and “Analysis of Correlation between Consumers’ Subjective Happiness and Their Green Purchasing” were selected for runner-up prizes, respectively. Dean Jae-Kyu Lee of the Green Growth Graduate School said, “We offered the conference to our students to engage with their peers and share ideas and knowledge in their majors. I hope students become more motivated, and we will continue holding this event in the future.”
2015.01.05
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The KAIST Graduate School of Future Strategy Publishes a Book on the Future Strategy for the Development of Korea
As science and technology play an integral role in shaping the future of a nation, a group of scientists at KAIST recently published a book entitled “The National Future Strategy 2015.” The book is available in Korean only. In the book, the writers propose strategic thinking and plans for Korea to become one of the leading nations on the global stage in the next 30 years. It also suggests a strategic vision for the development of Korea by 2045, the centenary of Korea’s independence from Japan, and recommends specific approaches to address some of the important issues facing Korea: social conflict from the unequal distribution of wealth, low birthrates, an aging population, climate change, the reunification of the Korean peninsula, sustainability, and protection of democracy. In addition to writings contributed by KAIST professors, the book contains the results of public hearings on major social issues, as well as insights offered by one hundred experts including politicians, government officials, and business representatives.
2014.12.27
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