1, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Located in Cambridge, Boston, Massachusetts, USA, the main campus is built on the Charles River. It is a world-renowned top private research university and a member of the Global University Presidents Forum.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) focused on applied science and engineering in its early days. After World War II, the demand for R&D relying on American defense technology rose. During World War II and the Cold War, researchers at MIT contributed to the scientific and technological development of computers, radars and inertial navigation systems.
By 2020, MIT has produced 8 Fields Prize winners and 26 Turing Prize winners.
2. Cambridge University.
Located in Cambridgeshire, England, it is a public research university with a traditional college system. The school is a member of Russell University Group and Global University Presidents Forum, and is known as one of the "Golden Triangle Famous Schools" and "G5". Cambridge University is the second oldest university in the English-speaking world. Its predecessor was an association of scholars founded in 1209.
3. Stanford University
Palo Alto, located in the south of San Francisco Bay Area, California, USA, near Silicon Valley, a high-tech park, is a private research university, a member of the Global Forum of University Presidents and a member of the Global Alliance of Higher Education Institutions.
Stanford University 1885 was founded, 189 1 officially enrolled students. It covers an area of about 33 square kilometers (8 180 acres) and is one of the largest universities in the United States.
Stanford University and the University of California, Berkeley * * * constitute the academic centers in the western United States, which are responsible for the operation and management of SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, Hoover Institute and other institutions.
By the end of 20 17, 20 Stanford employees had won Turing Award and 7 others had won Fields Prize.