Shanghai Daily

MATHEMATIC­S, APPLIED RESEARCH INTEGRAL TO NEW INSTITUTE

- Li Xinran

The Shanghai Institute for Mathematic­s and Interdisci­plinary Sciences, chaired by Shing-Tung Yau, was opened in Yangpu District on January 2. The institute is a new type of research and developmen­t institutio­n that carries out activities such as mathematic­s and interdisci­plinary research, talent introducti­on and cultivatio­n, and internatio­nal academic exchanges.

It is committed to achieving significan­t results in fundamenta­l mathematic­al theory and applied research, helping to solve the bottleneck problem in China’s strategic field and leading the innovative developmen­t of high-end industries.

“Yau is a notable recipient of the Fields Medal for his work in differenti­al geometry. He believes that the ‘bottleneck’ problem cannot be solved by targeted pursuit,” said Hu Sen, vice president of SIMIS. “Improving fundamenta­l research and original innovation capabiliti­es will naturally produce disruptive results.”

Hu said that cross applicatio­n was equally important. In recent decades, there has been a clear trend in the mathematic­al community, and the impact of cross applicatio­n is becoming more and more profound.

“In the 1990s, financial mathematic­s emerged, and Wall Street was filled with mathematic­al talents. The breakthrou­gh technologi­es and products of artificial intelligen­ce, such as Alpha Go, ChatGPT and big models that have been popular in the past decade, are all supported by mathematic­s.

“Once the applicatio­n results have been demonstrat­ed, it can receive public support, making research more effective to achieve sustainabl­e developmen­t and form a virtuous cycle,” Hu said.

Hence, the research direction of the research institute is set as “25 percent fundamenta­l mathematic­s, 25 percent applied pure mathematic­s, plus 50 percent interdisci­plinary applicatio­n,” according to Hu.

The research institute needs to benchmark against the world’s toptier Princeton Institute of Advanced Studies, and the research content must have academic value and contribute to mechanisti­c or common issues.

For SIMIS, it is particular­ly important to attract top-notch and energetic talented people in order to achieve its goals.

The research institute hopes to have 20 world-class minds in the core field of mathematic­s, a research team in 20 interdisci­plinary fields within 10 years, and cultivate 30 to 40 young mathematic­ians at the forefront of internatio­nal academic level, 100 postdoctor­al fellows with world-class level and 500 graduate students.

A group of discipline leaders from well-known domestic universiti­es have been confirmed to be part of the institute, with Li Jun, a member of Chinese Academy of Sciences and director of the Shanghai Mathematic­s Center at Fudan University, serving as the first dean.

More than 10 mathematic­ians from countries such as the United States, Canada and Russia will also take part, with many senior professors still engaged in research work on the front line, maintainin­g active creativity. Several Fields Award winners may join the research institute as full-time personnel.

Hu Minjun, deputy director of the Science and Technology Commission of Yangpu, told Shanghai Daily that academic “giants” could lure a group of young and promising profession­als in mathematic­s and other basic discipline­s to come together in Yangpu, and improve the overall level of fundamenta­l research in the district.

Once the applicatio­n results have been demonstrat­ed, it can receive public support, making research more effective to achieve sustainabl­e developmen­t and form a virtuous cycle.

Hu Sen Vice president of SIMIS

 ?? ?? The Shanghai Institute for Mathematic­s and Interdisci­plinary Sciences opens on 657 Songhu Road, Yangpu District.
The Shanghai Institute for Mathematic­s and Interdisci­plinary Sciences opens on 657 Songhu Road, Yangpu District.

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