http://chineseinput.net/에서 pinyin(병음)방식으로 중국어를 변환할 수 있습니다.
변환된 중국어를 복사하여 사용하시면 됩니다.
FINE DYING : EXPERIMENTING PRACTICAL INTELLECTUAL
Denny Ho Kwok-leung,Yanki Lee,Albert Tsang Siu-Yin 한국디자인학회 2015 한국디자인학회 학술발표대회 논문집 Vol.2015 No.10
This paper draws on the important implications of Aristotle’s understanding of techne to design making, and on the other, to show how we attempt to apply our practical intellect and imagination to design. These two tasks are to establish the proper role of designers in design process about our everyday lives. Fine Dying is the first “possible design study”, which aims to encourage public to investigate our own dying matters through designing. Three tactics in this project were identified to manifest our imagination of the possibility of having happiness through designing our afterlife: a) the actualization of the ethics of recognition; b) allowing the matter of concerns visible and present in public; and c) the continuation of dialogue between designers/younger citizens, design partners/older people and the audience/on-lookers.
Prenatal ultrasonography of craniofacial abnormalities
Annisa Shui Lam Mak,Kwok Yin Leung 대한초음파의학회 2019 ULTRASONOGRAPHY Vol.38 No.1
Craniofacial abnormalities are common. It is important to examine the fetal face and skull during prenatal ultrasound examinations because abnormalities of these structures may indicate the presence of other, more subtle anomalies, syndromes, chromosomal abnormalities, or even rarer conditions, such as infections or metabolic disorders. The prenatal diagnosis of craniofacial abnormalities remains difficult, especially in the first trimester. A systematic approach to the fetal skull and face can increase the detection rate. When an abnormality is found, it is important to perform a detailed scan to determine its severity and search for additional abnormalities. The use of 3-/4-dimensional ultrasound may be useful in the assessment of cleft palate and craniosynostosis. Fetal magnetic resonance imaging can facilitate the evaluation of the palate, micrognathia, cranial sutures, brain, and other fetal structures. Invasive prenatal diagnostic techniques are indicated to exclude chromosomal abnormalities. Molecular analysis for some syndromes is feasible if the family history is suggestive.