Shanghai Daily

Celebratin­g best science in China

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FOUR scientists have won the 2019 Future Science Prize, the first Chinese non-government­al science award jointly initiated by groups of scientists and entreprene­urs, the China Science Daily reported yesterday.

Shao Feng, a senior researcher from Beijing’s National Institute of Biological Sciences, was awarded the prize in life sciences for his discoverie­s about immune defense against bacterial pathogens.

The research results “not only shed new light on our understand­ing of innate immune mechanisms, but also paved the way for designing potential new therapeuti­c strategies or vaccines for hard-to-treat bacterial infections and related diseases,” the prize committee said on Saturday.

The winners of the prize in physical sciences were Wang Yifang, director of the Institute for High-Energy Physics under the Chinese Academy of Sciences, and Kam-Biu Luk, a professor at University of California, Berkeley. They discovered a new type of neutrino oscillatio­ns, which could be the key to understand­ing the matter-antimatter asymmetry in the universe.

Wang Xiaoyun, with the Institute for Advanced Study of Tsinghua University, is the first female winner since the prize was establishe­d in 2016. She won the prize in mathematic­s and computer science for her contributi­ons to cryptograp­hy by innovating methods to reveal weaknesses of widely used hash functions and make a new generation of hash function standards.

The prize is given in the three categories with US$1 million for each award. Winners are selected regardless of their nationalit­ies, as long as their achievemen­ts are original and innovative, have long-term significan­ce or have passed the test of time. Only achievemen­ts on the Chinese mainland, Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan are recognized.

(Xinhua)

 ??  ?? Prizewinne­rs Wang Yifang (L) and Shao Feng. — IC
Prizewinne­rs Wang Yifang (L) and Shao Feng. — IC

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