Success Story: NAILG Secures EB-1A Approval for an Electrical and Computer Engineering Researcher by Framing Field-Wide Reliance Signals

 

Client’s Testimonial:

“I am so happy to share that my EB1A petition has been approved with no RFE! I want to thank the team at Chen Immigration for their amazing work. As a cybersecurity researcher, I was worried about finding a law firm that could explain my work into a clear story for USCIS. The Chen team did a great job identifying exactly what made my profile strong. If you are a researcher or professional in cybersecurity looking for a law firm that truly understands technical cases, I highly recommend their services.”


On January 26th, 2026, we received another EB-1A (Alien of Extraordinary Ability) approval for a Research Assistant in the Field of Electrical and Computer Engineering (Approval Notice).


General Field: Electrical and Computer Engineering

Position at the Time of Case Filing: Research Assistant and PhD Student

Country of Origin: Bangladesh

State of Residence at the Time of Filing: Massachusetts

Approval Notice Date: January 26th, 2026

Processing Time: 14 months, 5 days (Premium Processing Upgrade Requested)


Case Summary:  

Some EB-1A cases rise or fall on whether the record can be shown as a sustained pattern of field recognition, not just isolated technical results. For this case, North America Immigration Law Group (Chen Immigration Law Associates) built a clear narrative around how the client’s work is repeatedly validated by selective publication, independent citation use, and professional trust signals that are difficult to manufacture.

The client is an established expert in electrical and computer engineering, with specialized work spanning sensing and communications, autonomous vehicles, Internet of Things, cybersecurity, and privacy-preserving technologies. A central theme of the client’s research is strengthening cyber-physical systems, including developing advanced sensing, communications, and cybersecurity techniques for autonomous vehicles. This work incorporates a variety of technologies and practices to protect against cyber threats, ensure passenger safety, and facilitate the widespread adoption and successful integration of autonomous vehicles into future transportation systems. The client is currently focused on research in this area and plans to continue the work in the United States in a research role at a U.S.-based institute, with an emphasis on advancing the design of safe, intelligent, and resilient transportation systems by bridging reliable connectivity with strengthened security mechanisms for cyber-physical systems.

To align this technical record with the EB-1A standard, we organized the filing around three credibility anchors:

  • A specialized technical foundation: M.S. in Computer Science, supporting that the client has the training needed to produce original work at the intersection of computing systems, security, and autonomous technologies.
  • A track record of peer-validated output: 5 first-authored peer-reviewed journal articles, 2 first-authored peer-reviewed conference articles, and 1 first-authored book chapter. The record was presented as a cohesive body of work in a consistent technical direction, rather than a broad list of unrelated projects.
  • Independent reliance and trust signals: 1,149 citations and at least 70 instances of peer-review service at the time of filing. The petition emphasized why these indicators matter to adjudicators. Citations are valuable because they reflect other researchers building on the client’s work outside any immediate collaborator circle. Peer-review invitations are meaningful because they show journals and comparable venues treat the client as a reliable evaluator of scientific quality. The record was further strengthened by evidence of major research funding from prestigious organizations, including the U.S. National Science Foundation and the Singapore National Research Foundation.
These metrics were not treated as self-explanatory. The petition tied them to how the research community functions: repeated publication in selective venues indicates consistent success under rigorous review; citations show independent uptake and ongoing reliance; and extensive peer-review activity reflects professional trust in the client’s judgment, not just productivity.

To corroborate the objective record, the petition included three letters of recommendation from established experts. Strategically, these letters were used to connect the client’s technical contributions to broader significance, explaining why the client’s methods have become useful reference points for other researchers working on cyber-physical security, autonomous systems, and related computing applications.

USCIS approved the EB-1A I-140 petition, reflecting that the case presentation successfully framed the client’s achievements as evidence of sustained acclaim and field-recognized impact. We congratulate the client on this important milestone and look forward to the client’s continued contributions to advancing secure, resilient cyber-physical systems and safer autonomous technologies in the United States.