Laureates of 2025 L'Oreal-UNESCO For Women in Science Awards selected


  • World
  • Tuesday, 27 May 2025

PARIS, May 26 (Xinhua) -- The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) announced on Monday that Chinese scientist Wang Xiaoyun is among the five international laureates of the 2025 L'Oreal-UNESCO For Women in Science International Awards.

UNESCO noted that Professor Wang Xiaoyun from Tsinghua University has been recognized for her significant contributions to cryptography and cryptographic mathematics, which are critical for secure data communication and storage.

"Her breakthrough work showed essential flaws on hash functions, which are widely used in communication protocols and led to the invention of the new hash function standards," UNESCO said in a press release.

"The visibility of her revolutionary work has encouraged many female students to pursue a research career in mathematics and network security," it added.

Along with Professor Wang, Professor Priscilla Baker from South Africa, Professor Claudia Felser from Germany, Professor Maria Teresa Dova from Argentina, and Professor Barbara Finlayson-Pitts from the United States, have been chosen to receive the award for their contributions in their respective fields and inspiration brought for girls and women.

According to UNESCO, for this year's edition, the Laureates were selected from a pool of 466 nominees through a rigorous evaluation process conducted by an independent jury.

The award ceremony is scheduled for June 12 at UNESCO Headquarters in Paris.

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In World

Syria detains prominent American Islamist journalist, sources say
Jared Kushner's withdrawal from Serbia will hurt investment, official says
Zelenskiy says several draft documents prepared after 'productive' U.S. talks
US Justice Department releases new tranche of Epstein files
Greenland's PM 'sad' about Trump's renewed interest in acquiring island
Sinkholes in Turkey's agricultural heartland fuel farmers' concerns
US seeks to cancel thousands of asylum cases, CBS News reports
Trump's anti-corporate DEI campaign faces high legal hurdles
WhatsApp complains about restrictions in Russia after reported slowdown
Now in their 50s, trans Latinas reclaim a youthful rite of passage

Others Also Read