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The Academy Recognizes Yann LeCun for Advancing AI

Yann LeCun, VP and Chief AI Scientist at Meta, was one of three Honorees recently recognized by The New York Academy of Sciences (the Academy) for outstanding contributions to science.

Published May 1, 2025

By Nick Fetty
Digital Content Manager

Yann LeCun (right) poses with his wife Isabelle during the Soirée.

Yann LeCun was recently recognized by The New York Academy of Sciences, for his pioneering work in machine learning, computer vision, mobile robotics, and computational neuroscience. He was presented with the Academy’s inaugural Trailblazer Award during the 2025 Spring Soirée, hosted at the University Club of New York.

“His work has been instrumental in setting the terms of how we think about the uses, implications, and impact of AI in all its forms,” said Nick Dirks, President and CEO of the Academy, while introducing LeCun during the Soirée. “Yann, we’re grateful that your view has carried the day and are inspired by the boldness of your vision. A vision that has shaped the evolution of this amazing and transformative technology.”

LeCun, a Turing Laureate, who also serves as the Jacob T. Schwartz Professor of Computer Science for the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences at New York University, has been called everything from a “pioneer” to a “godfather” within the field of AI. His connection with the Academy dates back several years when he and Manuela Veloso, Head of AI Research at J.P. Morgan, “agreed to serve as honorary chairs for the launch of a new initiative on applications of AI to critical sectors of the New York City economy.”

Tata Series on AI & Society

LeCun spoke during the first installment of the Tata Series on AI & Society at the Academy in March 2024. His talk covered everything from his early work in revitalizing and advancing neural networks to the need for open sourcing AI to the limitations he sees with large language models (LLMs). He believes that sensory, as opposed to language, inputs are more effective for building better AI systems, due in part to the brain’s ability to process these inputs faster.

Yann LeCun (center) visits with Hon. Jerry Hultin, immediate past chair of The New York Academy of Sciences Board of Governors, during the Soirée.

“To build truly intelligent systems, they’d need to understand the physical world, be able to reason, plan, remember, and retrieve. The architecture of future systems that will be capable of doing this will be very different from current large language models,” he explained.

LeCun was presented with an Honorary Life Membership to the Academy during the 2024 event.

A Frenchman with a Clever Sense of Humor and Passion for Jazz

Though a serious computer scientist (he received the prestigious ACM Turing Award in 2018), his wry sense of humor often comes through when he talks and on his personal website.

“French people are generally known for their utter contempt of every product of the American culture (“or lack thereof”, as my friend John Denker would say with a smile),” LeCun writes on the “Fun Stuff” section of his website. “But there are two notable exceptions to this attitude, two pure products of the American culture that the French have embraced wholeheartedly (and no, one of them is not Jerry Lewis): Jazz music, and Tex Avery cartoons.”

A fan of jazz music, LeCun considers John Coltrane’s Giant Steps and Miles Davis’s Kind of Blue among his favorite jazz albums of all time. LeCun is a musician himself and plays various woodwind instruments. He even builds his own that combine traditional wind instruments with electronic synthesizers. When he worked at Bell Labs in the 1990s, he played in an informal jazz band with some colleagues. The passion for jazz (and tech) runs in the blood of the LeCun family, as Yann’s brother Bertrand plays the bass (and works at Google in Paris).

From left: Peter Salovey, former president of Yale University and current chair of The New York Academy of Sciences Board of Governors; Yann LeCun, VP and Chief AI Scientist at Meta; and Nick Dirks, President and CEO of The New York Academy of Sciences.

“I have always been interested in jazz because I have always been intrigued by the intellectual challenge of improvising music in real time,” he writes on his website.

Humble in nature—on his website he lists himself as an ACM Turing Award Laureate, but in a parenthetical note next to it indicates “(sounds like I’m bragging, but a condition of accepting the award is to write this next to your name)” —he was nonetheless appreciative of this recent recognition and the broader power of science.

“I like jazz so I’m fond of improvising speeches,” LeCun said when he took to the stage to accept his award, adding that he didn’t use AI to write his speech. “I’ve become a public advocate of science and rationalism. It’s true that today there’s been a lot of attacks against universities, rationalism, science, and scientists. All are being vilified by our own government. We have to stand up for science.”


Author

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Nick Fetty
Digital Content Manager, The New York Academy of Sciences
Nick is the digital content manager for The New York Academy of Sciences. He has a BA and MA in journalism from the University of Iowa as well as more than a decade of experience in STEM communications. Nick is also an adjunct instructor in mass media at Kirkwood Community College.