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・ Hwang Soon-min
・ Hwang Sun-ai
・ Hwang Sun-hee
・ Hwang Sun-hong
・ Hwang Sun-il
・ Hwang Sun-mi
・ Hwang Sun-pil
・ Hwang Sun-won
・ Hwang Sung-min
・ Hwang Te-song
・ Hwang Tong-gyu
・ Hwang Ui-jo
・ Hwang Wang-hsiang
・ Hwang Woo-jin
・ Hwang Woo-seul-hye
Hwang Woo-suk
・ Hwang Woo-yea
・ Hwang Yau-tai
・ Hwang Ye-sul
・ Hwang Yea-baang
・ Hwang Yeon-seok
・ Hwang Youn-joo
・ Hwang Young-cho
・ Hwang Yu-mi
・ Hwang Yun-gil
・ Hwangab
・ Hwangaksan
・ Hwangbo
・ Hwangbo (Korean surname)
・ Hwangbo In


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Hwang Woo-suk : ウィキペディア英語版
Hwang Woo-suk

Hwang Woo-suk ((朝鮮語:황우석), born January 29, 1953)〔Sources disagree on the birthdate due to confusion between different calendar systems. Hwang was born on January 29, 1953 in the Gregorian calendar. However, older Koreans often list their birthdate in the lunisolar Korean calendar, which in this case is December 15, 1952. This date is sometimes repeated in English-language media without specifying that it is in the Korean calendar, causing further confusion when the Gregorian year and Korean calendar month and day are used together to produce an incorrect birthdate of December 15, 1953. Sources specifying a December 15, 1952 birthdate include the (Los Angeles Times ) and (Channel News Asia ). The (Encyclopædia Britannica (via New York Times) ) and cite the December 15, 1953 date. (The Korea Times ) states the birthdate is January 29, 1953.〕 is a South Korean veterinarian and researcher. He was a professor of theriogenology and biotechnology at Seoul National University (dismissed on March 20, 2006) who became infamous for fabricating a series of experiments, which appeared in high-profile journals, in the field of stem cell research. Until November 2005, he was considered one of the pioneering experts in the field, best known for two articles published in the journal ''Science'' in 2004 and 2005 where he reported to have succeeded in creating human embryonic stem cells by cloning. He was called the "Pride of Korea" in South Korea.
Soon after the first paper was released, however, an article in the journal ''Nature'' charged Hwang with having committed ethical violations by using eggs from his graduate students and from the black market. Although he denied the charges at first, Hwang admitted the allegations were true in November 2005. Shortly after that his human cloning experiments were revealed to be fraudulent.
On May 12, 2006, Hwang was charged with embezzlement and bioethics law violations after it emerged much of his stem cell research had been faked. The ''Korea Times'' reported on June 10, 2007, that Seoul National University fired him, and the South Korean government canceled his financial support and barred him from engaging in stem cell research. While being charged with fraud and embezzlement, he has kept a relatively low profile at the Sooam Bioengineering Research Institute in Yongin, Gyeonggi Province, where he currently leads research efforts on creating cloned pig embryos and using them to make embryonic stem-cell lines.
Since the controversy subsided, despite the history and his lost credibility as a scientist, Hwang's lab has been actively publishing manuscripts, many of which have appeared on PubMed, the online database for biomedical research. In February 2011, Hwang visited Libya as part of a $133 million project in the North African country to build a stem cell research center and transfer relevant technology. However, the project was canceled when civil war started there.
Hwang was sentenced to a two years suspended prison sentence at the Seoul Central District Court on 26 October 2009, after being found guilty of embezzlement and bioethical violations but cleared of fraud.〔Normile, Denis (30 October 2009) (Hwang Convicted But Dodges Jail; Stem Cell Research Has Moved On ) Science Vol. 326. no. 5953, pp. 650 - 651 〕 On this same day, CNN reported that the scientist in 2006 admitted faking his findings, after questions of impropriety had emerged. He had his conviction upheld on 15 December 2010 by an appeals court in South Korea, which knocked 6 months off Hwang’s suspended sentence. In 2014 the South Korean Supreme Court upheld its 2010 ruling.
== Life ==
Hwang Woo Suk grew up in the central Korean province of South Chungcheong. He worked at a farm to finance his studies when his widowed mother could not earn enough to provide for him and five other siblings. Hwang matriculated at Seoul National University after graduating from Daejeon high school. It was later revealed that despite his professors urging that he become a medical doctor, Hwang chose to be a veterinarian after earning his doctorate degree.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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