COURSE DETAIL
The brain can be better understood via the neuroimaging modalities, and its applications to medical engineering can also be enabled by neuroimaging modalities. Thus, this course is intends to provide an overview of neuroimaging systems such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI); electroencephalography (EEG), and magnetoencephalography (MEG) systems and their analytical methods.
COURSE DETAIL
This seminar provides an overview on the various national responses to the COVID-19 pandemic from public health measures (masking, social distancing, lockdown restrictions, vaccines, medicines) to recurring national and global dilemmas and controversies.
COURSE DETAIL
The international human resource manager is faced with a diverse, complex and dynamic environment. Differences from nationally-oriented human resource management (HRM) can be seen in the complexities that result from managing employees of various national origins working in different countries. People who work in internationally operating companies, operate in different cultural and institutional environments compared to where a firms headquarter is located. Hence, locally aligned HR approaches are often needed for a firm to be successful abroad. This course discusses these topics in an international HRM context by explicitly considering the context of the Korean Business Environment. It focuses on the cultural context and the organizational context of International HRM in Korea, as well as on staffing, recruitment, and selection in an international and Korean context.
COURSE DETAIL
This course provides students with an understanding of important issues that have shaped contemporary Korean culture and society since the late 20th century. Students examine the country's historical background before attempting to get an overall picture of everyday life in contemporary Korea. The course discusses Korean life as diversely manifest in literature, movies, television, newspapers, magazines, advertising, sports, shopping centers, theme parks, and other forms of popular culture. It emphasizes discovering the ways in which Koreans have responded and adapted to the rapidly changing world. As a part of the course, students visit cultural sites and events relevant to the course content.
COURSE DETAIL
This course provides an in-depth introduction to the major conceptual frameworks of social determinants of health as well as empirical research examining social factors that influence individuals’ health and illness. It also considers how social scientists, epidemiologists, public health experts, and doctors address the social causes of health, illness, death, longevity and health care; and how they use theory to understand them and make causal inferences based on observational or experimental data.
COURSE DETAIL
This course is about Nanomedicine and its practical applications. Topics include Future medicine-nanomedicine, Nanomedicine, Nanomedicine in diagnostics, Nanomedicine in drug delivery, Nanomedicine in medical device, and Safety issues in nanomedicne.
Assessment: Reports (10%), Mid-term (40%), Final (50%)
Prerequisite: Nanobiotechnology
COURSE DETAIL
This course provides the basic knowledge on the vocabulary and the grammar of Korean Language. Students learn Korean alphabet, words, and basic grammars, and engage in a variety of activities in speaking, listening, writing, and reading to improve their communication skills in Korean.
COURSE DETAIL
In this course, we attempt to understand humans and their surroundings specifically the culture and the society. The concepts in this course help students to change their usual perceptions of cultural situations newly through the "reading the culture" method. Furthermore, this course aims to provide exposure to different kinds of research methods and traits of anthropology, and by applying these observations, it helps students to learn how to perceive various aspects of modern society and how the contexts of these relate to each other.
COURSE DETAIL
COURSE DETAIL
This course provides students with an analytical framework and empirics to think about a wide variety of issues in international finance: the current account and balance of payments accounting; inter-temporal trade; the determination of exchange rates; monetary and fiscal policy under fixed and flexible exchange rates; a number of major puzzles in international finance. When time permits, this course also covers a number of relevant current issues: sovereign default, international financial crisis, and monetary unions.
Prerequisites: Intermediate Microeconomics, Intermediate Macroeconomics, Mathematics for Economists. Please note that you must have working knowledge of calculus and statistics, because this class mainly deals with mathematical economic models.
Pagination
- Previous page
- Page 124
- Next page