UCLA Mathematics Professor Chenfanfu Jiang is collaborating with the Toyota Research Institute (TRI) as a part of the next five-year phase of their University Research Program, known as URP 3.0. This marks Jiang’s second collaboration with TRI.

“Starting in 2026, URP 3.0 supports 69 research projects across 31 universities, bringing together 88 TRI researchers and 104 faculty members. This is the biggest cohort since the program’s inception, with 11 new institutions participating for the first time and bringing fresh perspectives and expertise.

TRI funds collaborative university research projects that are intentionally structured for deep collaboration. Each project is co-led by a university researcher and a TRI co-investigator working as peers to ensure that fundamental research and real-world application evolve together.”

Response from Professor Chenfanfu Jiang:

“‘Pushing the Limits of GPU-based Physics Simulations for Robotics,’ focuses on developing fast, accurate physics simulations that allow robots to train and be evaluated in complex virtual environments before real-world deployment. Our team is building new GPU-accelerated algorithms, simulation tools, and 3D AI asset-generation pipelines for challenging robotic interactions involving soft objects, cloth, rope, articulated objects, and other deformable materials. What excites me most about this collaboration with Toyota Research Institute is the opportunity to connect mathematical and computational advances directly with real robotic systems and generative AI frontiers. We hope this work will help make robot learning more reliable, scalable, and useful in contact-rich real-world settings.”

Learn more about Professor Jiang’s lab here.

Read the full TRI blog post here.

Learn more about TRI’s University Research Program here.

Under the guidance of Professor Mason Porter, six UCLA Undergraduate Math students were named Finalists in the 42nd annual Mathematical Contest in Modeling (MCM) and the 28th annual Interdisciplinary Contest in Modeling (ICM).

This year, 32,213 teams representing 28 countries and regions participated, with 93,977 students working in teams of up to three to research and model their solutions over one weekend.

Both UCLA teams were named “Finalists” for their work on Problem B. The students were among the 120 Finalist teams for this problem out of a total of 5,194 competing teams. One team’s members were Jiayi (Cora) Guo, Junming Gong, and Hanmo Yang. The other team’s members were Renxin (Jessica) Li, Manqing (Eleanore) Zhu, & Jiayi (Bob) Fan.

In addition to being named finalists, the team consisting of Renxin (Jessica) Li, Manqing (Eleanore) Zhu, and Jiayi (Bob) Fan received the additional designation of MAA Award.

For Problem B, students were asked to figure out the most effective way to get all the materials needed to build and support a 100,000-person Moon colony.

Read more about the results here.