Inria Prize

Inria Awards Ceremony 2025

Date:

Changed on 26/11/2025

Created in 2011, the Inria Awards recognize women and men who advance digital science and technology each year. These awards highlight outstanding careers, leading research work, and achievements in innovation and knowledge transfer. Discover the winners of the 2025 edition.
© Académie des sciences / Photo M.Baumer

Three awards to celebrate scientific excellence and digital innovation

Every year, Inria, in partnership with the French Academy of Sciences and Dassault Systèmes, awards three major distinctions to researchers or research teams working in French institutions.

By celebrating those who push the boundaries of knowledge and promote innovation, they affirm the essential role of public research in responding to the major scientific, economic, and societal challenges of our time:

  • The Inria – French Academy of Sciences Grand Prize
    This prize is awarded to a scientist whose exceptional career has had a profound impact on the field of computer science and mathematics.
     
  • The Inria – Académie des sciences – Dassault Systèmes Innovation Prize
    This prize honors a scientist or research team (up to six people) who have played a decisive role in technology transfer, research promotion, and innovation in the digital field.
     
  • The Inria – Académie des sciences Young Researchers Award
    Aimed at talented individuals under the age of 40, this award recognizes a major contribution to research, transfer, or innovation in computer science and mathematics.

Discover the winners of the Inria 2025 Awards

Jean-Michel Muller

Inria Grand Prize – Academy of Sciences. His research on the representation of numbers on computers and the reliability of numerical calculation methods is particularly innovative for the design of computer circuits and software.

Teddy Furon

Inria – Académie des sciences – Dassault Systèmes Innovation Award. His work on digital watermarking makes it possible to protect images, videos, audio files, etc.

Clémentine Maurice

Inria Prize – Academy of Sciences Young researchers. Her work on the principle of microarchitectural attacks has helped to establish cybersecurity as a scientific field in its own right.