Thomson Reuters ranked KAIST first among Asia’s top most innovative universities in a list that it released on August 30, 2016. Seventy-five Asian universities received this distinction.
Thomson Reuters created the list to identify those educational institutions that are “doing the most to advance science, invent new technologies, and help drive the global economy.”
The rankings were based on data drawn from each academic institution's research papers and patent filing information as evaluated by the Intellectual Property & Science division of Thomson Reuters.
Thomson Reuters described KAIST as producing "original and influential research" and noted that other organizations cited its patent portfolios as "significant prior art in their own patent applications, a strong indicator that the university has an outsized impact on global research and development."
For details, please go to the link below:
Asia’s Most Innovative Universities
Reuters
August 30, 2016
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-asiapac-reuters-ranking-innovative-un-idUSKCN1152B7#listing
< Photo 1. (From left) Professor Hyunwoo Kim and students Donghun Kim and Gyeongseon Choi in the Integrated M.S./Ph.D. program of the Department of Chemistry > Thalidomide, a drug once used to alleviate morning sickness in pregnant women, exhibits distinct properties due to its optical isomers* in the body: one isomer has a sedative effect, while the other causes severe side effects like birth defects. As this example illustrates, precise organic synthesis techniques, which selectivel
2025-06-16KAIST held a ceremony to declare their renewed "Commitment for Ethical Management" to raise awareness and solidify the commitment its members to faithfully fulfill ethical responsibilities and duties. Last March, the university established the 'Special Committee for Ethical Management,' chaired by the Provost, and under the leadership of this committee, a new 'Code of Ethics' and 'Code of Conduct' were prepared, containing ethical standards that members must adhere to across all areas of educ
2025-06-16A groundbreaking new method developed by researchers at KAIST and Chungnam National University could drastically streamline drug interaction testing — replacing dozens of traditional experiments with just one. The research, led by Professor Jae Kyoung Kim of KAIST Department of Mathematical Sciences & IBS Biomedical Mathematics Group and Professor Sang Kyum Kim of Chungnam National University's College of Pharmacy, introduces a novel analysis technique called 50-BOA, published in Natu
2025-06-16- Professor Mooseok Jang's research team at the Department of Bio and Brain Engineering develops an ultra-compact, high-resolution spectrometer using 'double-layer disordered metasurfaces' that generate unique random patterns depending on light's color. - Unlike conventional dispersion-based spectrometers that were difficult to apply to portable devices, this new concept spectrometer technology achieves 1nm-level high resolution in a device smaller than 1cm, comparable in size to a fingernail
2025-06-13- KAIST-KRIBB Develops ‘FiNi-seq’ Technology to Capture Characteristics of Fibrotic Microenvironments Accumulated in Liver Tissue and Dynamic Changes of Early Aging Cells - Elucidation of the Spatial Ecosystem of Aged Liver Tissue, where Reprogramming of Senescent Cells and Immune Exhaustion Progresses, at the Single-Cell Genome and Epigenome Levels < (From left) Professor Jong-Eun Park of KAIST Graduate School of Medical Science and Engineering (GSMSE), Dr. Chuna Kim of K
2025-06-12