
Why China is becoming more attractive to top mathematicians: Mok Ngaiming
In the third instalment of a series to mark the 10th anniversary of the Future Science Prize, Victoria Bela and Holly Chik look at Professor Mok Ngaiming's fundamental contributions to the field of complex differential geometry, which earned him the 2022 award in mathematics and computer science. The second part of the series can be found
here
Advertisement
China's investment in STEM is attracting top international mathematicians and helping to foster original research, according to
Mok Ngaiming , chair of mathematics at the University of Hong Kong.
He said a shift from rote learning to encouraging innovation, coupled with growing international collaborations, could lead to significant mathematical advances in China, which has already lured well-known mathematicians to move from countries including Australia, France and the United States.
Many of these, as well as Chinese-born academics returning home from the West, cited talented students, better work opportunities, and China's growing strength and investment in the field as some of the reasons for moving.
'The help from mathematicians with international experience is increasing,' he said. 'The coming back of haigui [overseas-trained talent] is important – these people are very enthusiastic in training future generations. They add to the development in that respect.
Advertisement
'But finally how things will work still has to do with how the country educates its people. The most important thing is to develop people who are educated in the country because that should still form the bulk of the community.
'When you try to absorb advanced knowledge from outside, this can be from anyone. It is irrespective of nationality and so on.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
12 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Microplastics from biodegradable material may be linked to diabetes, study finds
Microplastics from a widely used biodegradable material can enter the metabolic cycle of bacteria and cells in the gut after being ingested, a new study has found. Researchers in China and the United States said the microplastics – from polylactic acid – were found to alter the gut metabolism and damage the gut barrier of mice. They said this could potentially contribute to conditions like inflammatory bowel disease and diabetes 'This is the first time in the world that microplastics have been found to enter the body's metabolic cycle,' the study's corresponding author Cui Xuejing, an associate researcher with the Chinese Academy of Sciences' National Centre for Nanoscience and Technology, said on Friday. In their paper published in the peer-reviewed journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on May 5, the team wrote: 'Biodegradable polylactic acid (PLA) plastics have been praised as an effective solution to the global pollution caused by petroleum-based plastics. 'Their widespread use in food packaging and disposable tableware has resulted in increased oral exposure to PLA microplastics'.


South China Morning Post
16 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
China's rare mineral tellurium gives blind animals ‘super vision', offers hope for humans
Researchers have used a rare mineral produced mostly in China to create an artificial retina that not only restored sight in blind animals, but also gave them 'super vision' – the extraordinary ability to see infrared light. The advance offers significant promise for treating human blindness, according to scientists. The study, led by Wang Shuiyuan, a researcher at the College of Integrated Circuits and Micro-Nano Electronics at Fudan University in Shanghai, was published in the journal Science on May 5. The study showed how researchers harnessed the mineral tellurium to create nanowire implants used in a biocompatible device that restored vision in genetically blind mice as well as a monkey, while giving them the ability to see 'invisible' light. Tellurium, a silver-white element as rare as platinum, is a by-product of copper refining. It has excellent photoelectric properties, enabling it to convert visible light and infrared radiation into electrical energy without the need for auxiliary equipment. Tellurium is a solid chemical element, usually produced as a byproduct of copper refining. Photo: Shutterstock Scientists can use tellurium as a replacement for the photoreceptor cells in the retina and send electrical signals converted from light signals to the brain.


South China Morning Post
17 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
China's demographic crisis could ease with male childcare subsidies, new research suggests
Subsidising men's participation in household chores and childcare could help reverse declining global birth rates, according to a new study, offering a fresh approach to deepening demographic challenges in countries like China. The study, co-authored by researchers from Fudan University and the University of Hong Kong (HKU), argued that subsidies for fathers produce significantly higher long-term fertility gains than solely subsidising mothers. The findings came as the world's second-largest economy faces a rapidly ageing population, shrinking workforce and strained social welfare system – before reaching high-income status. The researchers said the drastic decline in fertility rates was especially urgent in countries 'getting old before getting rich', as low fertility threatens economic stability and the ability to catch up to developed nations. The innovative policy proposal, published last month in a journal run by a joint institute between HKU and The Hong Kong Jockey Club, came as Chinese authorities have struggled to boost birth rates in recent years. The interest in having children has continued to decline in most areas, pushing China's overall fertility rate to an estimated 1.1 children per woman – well below the 2.1 level needed for a population to sustain itself, at the same level, from one generation to the next. The study, which analysed data from 23 countries, also found that traditional expectations that place the burden on women to perform most childcare duties persist in China and other East Asian countries, clashing with rapid economic changes.