Communication - Event

Presentation of the Inria 2024 Prizes

Date:
Changed on 28/11/2024
Created in 2011, the Inria Prizes highlight the innovations, major advances and successes of those who are driving digital science and technology forward. By highlighting exemplary individual and collective achievements, as well as first-rate results, these Awards emphasize the importance of digital sciences and their interdisciplinarity for our society.
© Cassanas Simon - Académie des sciences

 

Every year, Inria awards Scientific Prizes for its scientific work to researchers and research teams. The three prizes are presented in partnership with the French Academy of Sciences and Dassault Systèmes.

  • The Inria - French Academy of Sciences Grand Prize. This award is given to a scientist, working in a French institution or emeritus of a French institution, who has made an exceptional contribution to the field of computer and mathematical sciences. 
  • The Inria - French Academy of Sciences - Dassault Systèmes Innovation Prize. This award is given to a scientist or a team of scientists (maximum 6 people), working in a French institution or emeritus of a French institution, who have been particularly active in the field of transfer and innovation in the field of computer and mathematical sciences. 
  • The Inria - French Academy of Sciences Young Researchers Prize. This prize is awarded to a scientist under forty years of age, working in a French institution, who has made a major contribution to the field of computer and mathematical sciences through his or her research, transfer or innovation activities. 

Discover the Inria 2024 Prize winners

George Drettakis

Inria - French Academy of Sciences Grand Prize. In recent years, creating and manipulating immersive 3D visualization environments using AI has enabled it to make spectacular progress.

Brice Goglin and Samuel Thibault

Inria - French Academy of Sciences - Dassault Systèmes Innovation Prize. Their hwloc open source software models all the resources of a supercomputer, enabling highly complex computer programs to be run efficiently.

Julie Josse

Inria - French Academy of Sciences Young Researchers Prize. Julie Josse uses medical data to help caregivers and researchers better manage certain emergencies and predict the evolution of diseases.

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Watch the ceremony in replay