Success Story: NIW Approval in 27 Days for a Turkish Neuroscience Research Fellow Advancing Early-Stage Neurodegeneration Research
Client’s Testimonial:
“It was a great experience working with you for my I-140 preparation. The client package was comprehensive and helpful. All my questions were answered promptly with great professionalism.”
On January 16th, 2025, we received another EB-2 NIW (National Interest Waiver) approval for a Research Fellow in the Field of Neuroscience (Approval Notice).
General Field: Neuroscience
Position at the Time of Case Filing: Research Fellow
Country of Origin: Turkey
State of Residence at the Time of Filing: Massachusetts
Approval Notice Date: January 16th, 2025
Processing Time: 27 days (Premium Processing Requested)
Case Summary:
In this NIW case, the petitioner, a neuroscience researcher from Turkey, presented a forward-looking endeavor focused on identifying early mechanisms and pathobiological pathways in disorders such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease to help uncover novel drug candidates and support more effective therapeutics. With North America Immigration Law Group (Chen Immigration Law Associates) guiding the case strategy and evidence presentation, the petition was approved in 27 days under Premium Processing, with an approval notice dated January 16, 2025.
Client Background and Proposed Endeavor
The client’s proposed endeavor centered on clarifying what goes wrong at the earliest disease stages, before widespread neuronal loss and irreversible decline. By mapping disrupted mechanisms and causative pathways early, the work aimed to strengthen the foundation for drug discovery and therapeutic development, including approaches that improve disease modeling and enable more targeted intervention.
National Significance and Government Support
The petition emphasized that neurodegenerative diseases represent a large and growing burden, and that earlier, mechanism-driven intervention is essential for shifting outcomes. Importantly, the client’s research had already received support from the National Institutes of Health, which served as an objective indicator that the work aligned with U.S. biomedical priorities and national interest goals.
Evidence of Independent Reliance and Peer Trust
NAILG highlighted a set of objective indicators that translate well for NIW adjudication, showing both productivity and independent reliance within the field.
Key evidence included:
- 5 peer-reviewed journal articles, including 3 first-authored
- 1 additional journal article
- 1 first-authored abstract
- 103 total citations
- At least 1 completed peer review invitation, reflecting peer trust in the client’s judgment as a subject-matter expert

