KAIST ranked 40th in the 2018 QS World University Rankings, one place higher than last year. According to the QS (Quacquarelli Symonds) World’s Top 100 universities released on June 7, KAIST is the second highest ranked Korean university among the five Korean universities listed, following Seoul National University which ranked 36th.
KAIST displayed outstanding performance by ranking 16th in citations per faculty. In the 2018 rankings, universities that are strong in science, technology, and engineering claimed some of the highest positions. MIT topped the list and Caltech took fourth, ETH Zurich seventh, followed by Imperial College London which took eighth.
According to the analysis compiled by QS, universities focusing on science and technology are dominating the global universities rankings. This tendency comes from the fact that engineering schools have an advantage when evaluating the quality of research according to the number of citations per faculty member.
Provost O Ok Park predicts that science and technology will be key players in the Fourth Industrial Revolution era. “In the coming years, universities that excel in multi and interdisciplinary research will lead future growth. KAIST also continues to focus on transdisciplinary education and research,” he said.
<(From left) Ph. D Candidate Ju Yeon Chung, Prof.Hyun Jung Chung, Ph.D candidate Seungju Yang, Ph.D candidate Ayoung Park, Dr. Yoon-Kyoung Hong from Asan Medical Center, Prof. Yong Pil Chong, Dr. Eunhee Jeon> Candida, a type of fungus, which can spread throughout the body via the bloodstream, leading to organ damage and sepsis. Recently, the incidence of candidiasis has surged due to the increase in immunosuppressive therapies, medical implants, and transplantation. Korean researc
2025-07-08<(From the left) Prof. Hyun Uk Kim, Ph.D candiate Hae Deok Jung, Ph.D candidate Jina Lim, Prof.Yoosik Kim from the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering> One of the biggest obstacles in cancer treatment is drug resistance in cancer cells. Conventional efforts have focused on identifying new drug targets to eliminate these resistant cells, but such approaches can often lead to even stronger resistance. Now, researchers at KAIST have developed a computational framework to pr
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2025-07-07<(From left)Professor Kyung Cheol Choi, Hyunjoo J. Lee, Somin Lee from the School of Electrical Engineering> Optogenetics is a technique that controls neural activity by stimulating neurons expressing light-sensitive proteins with specific wavelengths of light. It has opened new possibilities for identifying causes of brain disorders and developing treatments for intractable neurological diseases. Because this technology requires precise stimulation inside the human brain with minimal
2025-07-07