Okay, I'll try. I'll speak slowly and loudly so that the interpreter can catch it.
I was discussing the science and the database, the partnership. The scholars in Korea and in Canada have worked together in the past several months to model [Technical difficulty—Editor] of COVID-19 and then predict the actual course of this COVID-19 so that we can plan our policy-making accordingly in advance. That is the point. When you have this certain data and you know the pattern of this COVID-19 for the rest of its [Technical difficulty—Editor] life-course, then you can plan things better. That is the sort of partnership that we have together, and we've actually been very successful in predicting the life-course of this COVID-19 in Korea. We've had about eight modellings so far together to put this life-course at a very reasonable level of certainty.
In this process, there are a few things I'd like to share. Once we know the life-course of this COVID-19, one of the things—