Michael I. Jordan elected 2021 Foreign Member of the Royal Society

Michael Jordan (photo Peg Skorpinski)

CS Prof. Mike Jordan has been elected a Foreign Member of the Royal Society.  The Royal Society began as an “‘invisible college’ of natural philosophers and physicians,” which opened its first meeting in 1660 with a lecture by acclaimed scientist Christopher Wren.  Their mission is “to recognise, promote, and support excellence in science and to encourage the development and use of science for the benefit of humanity.”  Jordan joins an elite group of 8,000 Fellows elected over the past 400 years that includes Isaac Newton (1672), Charles Darwin (1839), Albert Einstein (1921), Stephen Hawking (1974), and EECS Prof. Eli Yablonovitch (2013). Fellows and Foreign members must be nominated by at least two Fellows of the Royal Society, and must have made “a substantial contribution to the improvement of natural knowledge, including mathematics, engineering science and medical science.”  Jordan is known as one of the leading figures in machine learning, and one of the world’s most influential computer scientists.  New Fellows are formally admitted to the Society at the Admission Day ceremony in July, when they sign the Charter Book and the Obligation of the Fellows of the Royal Society.