Success Story: Mathematical Modeling for Smart Infrastructure Reliability, NIW Approval Secured

 

Client’s Testimonial:

“Your cordial support has impressed me a lot!”


On January 13th, 2026, we received another EB-2 NIW (National Interest Waiver) approval for a Graduate Research Assistant in the field of Mathematics (Approval Notice).


General Field: Mathematics

Position at the Time of Case Filing: Graduate Research Assistant

Country of Origin: Bangladesh

State of Residence at the Time of Filing: Texas

Approval Notice Date: January 13th, 2026

Processing Time: 4 months, 19 days (Premium Processing Requested)


Case Summary:  

When AI is put in charge of real systems, such as energy optimization, autonomous robots, or smart infrastructure monitoring, the math becomes the safety net. This NIW case centered on a mathematician from Bangladesh whose work focuses on one of the most difficult parts of real-world technology: dynamic systems that exhibit complex behaviors, do not respond instantly, and do not always follow the assumptions built into standard models.

Crucially, the case was grounded in a record of tangible results rather than speculative promises. The petition documented a peer-reviewed publication history that included 4 journal articles and 1 book chapter, supported by 24 citations. One publication in particular was cited at a rate above the category average for its year and was documented as ranking among the top 20% most cited Mathematics articles for 2019.

The case also highlighted a quality highly valued in scientific inquiry: methodological discipline. The client’s work was described as careful and repeatable, with results checked and rechecked. One expert summarized the practical value of this approach in a way that translated mathematics into outcomes: “By designing experiments, interpreting both mathematical and visual results, and confirming accuracy through repeated trials, he demonstrated how foundational mathematics directly enhances intelligent system performance.”

Finally, the petition connected the client’s next steps to a credible pathway forward. The proposed plan focused on continuing original mathematical research while extending those models into AI-based control and energy optimization contexts. We argued that stronger modeling improves the quality of the decisions AI systems make, and that improvement scales across technologies that the United States increasingly depends on. USCIS approved the NIW petition on January 13, 2026. North America Immigration Law Group (NAILG) was honored to support this case and to present a clear story of how rigorous mathematics, when paired with real-world validation, strengthens the reliability of AI-integrated systems that power modern clean energy, robotics, and smart infrastructure.