WLA Prize 2025 winners unveiled in Lin-gang
The winners of the 2025 World Laureates Association (WLA) Prize were announced on Sept 10 at the Lingang Center in Shanghai's Lin-gang Special Area, with three US scientists honored for groundbreaking achievements in mathematical sciences, life science and medicine.
The WLA Prize in Computer Science or Mathematics was conferred upon Richard Schoen, professor emeritus at Stanford University's School of Humanities and Sciences.
His groundbreaking work in geometric analysis and differential geometry, particularly in conformal partial differential equations, minimal surfaces, general relativity, harmonic maps, and the Yamabe problem, was lauded as pioneering.
Scott D. Emr, professor emeritus of molecular biology and genetics at Cornell University, and Wesley I. Sundquist, distinguished professor and chair of the Department of Biochemistry at the University of Utah, shared the WLA Prize in Life Science or Medicine for their breakthrough discoveries in the cellular machinery for receptor membrane protein trafficking and degradation, crucial for virus budding, infection processes, and HIV drug interventions.
Established in Shanghai in 2021, the WLA Prize is a globally recognized science award, featuring two categories: Computer Science or Mathematics and Life Science or Medicine.
Each category carries a cash prize of 10 million yuan ($1.4 million), shared among up to four laureates, making it one of the most generous science awards worldwide.
Since its inception, the WLA Prize has honored 12 scientists.
The 2025 award ceremony, coinciding with the opening of the World Laureates Forum, will take place in the Lin-gang Special Area on Oct 24, with the laureates in attendance.
Source: People's Daily