Success Story: NIW Approved After RFE for an Indian Operations Research Scientist Advancing Learning-Enhanced Math Optimization Algorithms for Critical Systems

 

Client’s Testimonial:

“Thank you for the great news. It's been great working with you as well!”


On December 1st, 2025, we received another EB-2 NIW (National Interest Waiver) approval for an Operations Research Scientist in the field of Mathematical Optimization (Approval Notice).


General Field: Mathematical Optimization

Position at the Time of Case Filing: Operations Research Scientist

Country of Origin: India

Approval Notice Date: December 1st, 2025

Processing Time: 5 months, 19 days (Premium Processing Upgrade Requested)


Case Summary:  

Large-scale optimization sits behind many systems the U.S. depends on, from supply chains and energy planning to autonomous operations and complex industrial processes. For an operations research scientist from India working in mathematical optimization, the challenge was the computational bottlenecks that prevent powerful optimization models from scaling to real-world size and speed. His proposed endeavor focuses on developing advanced algorithms that leverage learning-based techniques to improve efficiency and scalability. The NIW was approved after NAILG (North America Immigration Law Group) presented a clear national-interest narrative around faster, scalable optimization for critical sectors.

The case moved through heightened scrutiny before approval. The petition was filed on June 12, 2025, and USCIS issued an RFE on August 7, 2025, indicating the officer wanted a clearer linkage between the technical work and national-scale impact, along with a credible mechanism for real-world adoption. NAILG treated the response as a clarity-and-structure task, tightening the narrative around why learning-augmented optimization matters in real environments where decisions must be fast, explainable, and constrained by operational realities.

A major strength of the petition was showing that the client’s work sits at the intersection of rigorous engineering training and modern algorithm design. He earned a Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering, a credential that supported the practical orientation of his optimization research in domains like chemical process operations and energy systems. The national importance argument was reinforced by competitive support from the National Science Foundation (NSF), which helped demonstrate that the underlying research direction aligns with U.S. priorities and has been validated through external funding.

The client’s publication and innovation record further supported that he was well-positioned to advance the endeavor. His work included 6 peer-reviewed journal articles (with 4 first-authored), 2 first-authored peer-reviewed conference articles, 1 first-authored abstract, 1 preprint, and 2 granted patents. His publications received 75 citations, reflecting independent engagement with his approaches, and he completed at least 16 peer reviews, indicating trust by journals and conferences in his technical judgment as a gatekeeper in the field.

Independent expert input helped translate algorithmic advances into real-world stakes. One recommender emphasized: "His innovative work is poised to enhance critical infrastructure and energy systems, making him an invaluable asset to the United States".

USCIS ultimately approved the NIW on December 1, 2025, for a total processing time of 5 months, 19 days, confirming that the strengthened record met the NIW standard even after the RFE.