dismissed EB-2 NIW

dismissed EB-2 NIW Case: Artificial Intelligence

๐Ÿ“… Date unknown ๐Ÿ‘ค Individual ๐Ÿ“‚ Artificial Intelligence

Decision Summary

The appeal was dismissed because the petitioner failed to establish the 'national importance' of his proposed endeavor, a key requirement under the Dhanasar framework. Although his work in AI was recognized as having substantial merit, he did not sufficiently demonstrate that his specific project would have broad enough implications to impact the field on a national scale.

Criteria Discussed

Substantial Merit And National Importance Well-Positioned To Advance The Endeavor Balance Of Factors For Waiver

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U.S. Citizenship 
and Immigration 
Services 
Non-Precedent Decision of the
Administrative Appeals Office 
Date: DEC. 12, 2024 In Re: 34836224 
Appeal of Texas Service Center Decision 
Form 1-140, Immigrant Petition for Alien Workers (National Interest Waiver) 
The Petitioner, a senior researcher in the field of artificial intelligence (Al), seeks employment-based 
second preference (EB-2) immigrant classification as a member of the professions holding an 
advanced degree, as well as a national interest waiver of the job offer requirement attached to this 
classification. See Immigration and Nationality Act (the Act) section 203(b)(2), 8 U.S.C. 
ยง 1153(b)(2). 
The Director of the Texas Service Center denied the petition, concluding that the record established 
that the Petitioner qualified for classification, but that he had not established that a waiver of the 
required job offer, and thus of the labor certification, would be in the national interest. The matter is 
now before us on appeal pursuant to 8 C.F.R. ยง 103.3. 
The Petitioner bears the burden of proof to demonstrate eligibility by a preponderance of the evidence. 
Matter ofChawathe, 25 l&N Dec. 369, 375-76 (AAO 2010). We review the questions in this matter 
de novo. Matter of Christo 's, Inc., 26 I&N Dec. 537, 537 n.2 (AAO 2015). Upon de novo review, 
we will dismiss the appeal. 
I. LAW 
To qualify for the underlying EB-2 visa classification, a petitioner must establish they are an advanced 
degree professional or an individual of exceptional ability in the sciences, arts, or business. Section 
203(b )(2)(A) of the Act. 
An advanced degree is any U.S. academic or professional degree or a foreign equivalent degree above 
that of a bachelor's degree. A U.S. bachelor's degree or foreign equivalent degree followed by five 
years of progressive experience in the specialty is the equivalent of a master's degree. 
Profession is defined as one of the occupations listed in section 101(a)(32) of the Act, as well as any 
occupation for which a U.S. baccalaureate degree or its foreign equivalent is the minimum requirement 
for entry into the occupation. 1 8 C.F.R. ยง 204.5(k)(2). 
1 Profession shall include but not be limited to architects, engineers, lawyers, physicians, surgeons, and teachers in 
elementary or secondary schools, colleges, academics, or seminaries. Section 10l(a)(32) of the Act. 
If a petitioner establishes eligibility for the underlying EB-2 classification, they must then demonstrate 
that they merit a discretionary waiver of the job offer requirement "in the national interest." 
Section 203(b )(2)(B)(i) of the Act. While neither the statute nor the pertinent regulations define the 
term "national interest," Matter of Dhanasar, 26 I&N Dec. 884, 889 (AAO 2016), provides the 
framework for adjudicating national interest waiver petitions. Dhanasar states that U.S. Citizenship 
and Immigration Services (USCIS) may, as matter of discretion,2 grant a national interest waiver if 
the petitioner demonstrates that: 
โ€ข The proposed endeavor has both substantial merit and national importance; 
โ€ข The individual is well-positioned to advance their proposed endeavor; and 
โ€ข On balance, waiving the job offer requirement would benefit the United States. 
Id. 
II. ANALYSIS 
In denying the petition, the Director concluded that while the Petitioner qualifies as a member of the 
professions holding an advanced degree, he had not established that a waiver of the requirement of a 
job offer, and thus a labor certification, would be in the national interest. Specifically, the Director 
determined that the Petitioner's endeavor did not meet the Dhanasar framework's requirement for 
national importance, nor did the Petitioner establish that, on balance, waiving the job offer requirement 
would benefit the United States.3 Based on our de novo review of the record, we agree that the 
Petitioner has not sufficiently demonstrated the national importance of his proposed endeavor under 
the first prong of the Dhanasar framework. 
The first prong, substantial merit and national importance, focuses on the specific endeavor that the 
individual proposes to undertake. The endeavor's merit may be demonstrated in a range of areas such 
as business, entrepreneurialism, science, technology, culture, health, or education. In determining 
whether the proposed endeavor has national importance, we consider its potential prospective impact. 
Id. at 889. 
On the Form 1-140, Immigrant Petition for Alien Workers, the Petitioner listed his occupation in which 
he is seeking work as "artificial intelligence scientist," and listed his current job title as a "senior 
researcher." He described his job as follows: "I develop medical AI approaches to model hidden 
early-stage disease risks from large-scale biomedical data using deep learning, CNN, LSTM, 
Transformer, RFHL and transfer learning methodologies. I serve various companies and collaborate 
with hospitals to provide medical analytics and risk assessment." In his Proposed Endeavor & Future 
Plans in the Field, the Petitioner stated as follows: 
"My proposed endeavor is to apply advanced artificial intelligence 
techniques, cloud computing architectures, early disease risk 
2 See Flores v. Garland, 72 F.4th 85, 88 (5th Cir. 2023) (joining the Ninth, Eleventh, and D.C. Circuit Courts (and Third 
in an unpublished decision) in concluding that USCIS' decision to grant or deny a national interest waiver is discretionary 
in nature). 
3 The Director also found that the Petitioner's proposed endeavor had substantial merit. 
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assessment techniques, biomedical big data, and personalized bio-signal 
modeling to the creation of state-of-the-art disease risk prediction tools 
for disease detection and classification. To progress this endeavor, I 
will utilize my extensive experience with efficient, accurate analysis and 
evaluation of nationally representative health data of millions of patients 
for rheumatoid arthritis, type 2 diabetes, and chronic kidney disease, 
among other types of diseases. My work will continue to be circulated 
in the field through my peer-reviewed publications in journals and 
conference proceedings. 
I intend to pursue a position as a Senior Researcher in the United States. 
I am most interested in pursuing this position with 
My planned research topics include applying AI 
with natural language communication and analysis of medical records 
for early disease risk assessment, conducting brain wave analyses, and 
analyzing gene sequence function." 
The Petitioner submitted peer reviewed journal articles, citing articles, letters of recommendation, his 
resume, academic records, google scholar profile and publication information, industry reports and 
articles. 
In determining national importance, "we look for broader implications" of the proposed endeavor and 
that "[a ]n undertaking may have national importance for example, because it has national or even 
global implications within a particular field." See Dhanasar, 26 I&N Dec. at 889. In Dhanasar, we 
determined that the petitioner's teaching activities, even in a field with substantial merit in relation to 
U.S. educational interests, did not rise to the level of having national importance because they would 
not impact his field more broadly. Id. at 893. 
The Petitioner generally argues on appeal that he has already submitted sufficient evidence of his 
eligibility for the national interest waiver, including the national importance of his proposed endeavor. 
In support of these arguments, the Petitioner re-states the description of his endeavor and excerpts his 
previous statements in the record. For example, the Petitioner points to the academic article on the 
health effects of chronic hepatitis B published in Digestive Diseases and Science, an article on 
eliminating hepatitis B by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and a commentary article 
on COVID-19's impact on the United States as evidence of the national importance of his proposed 
endeavor, and which he used to "contextualize the value of [his] proposed endeavor." He contends 
that the Director incorrectly evaluated the Petitioner's proposed endeavor and failed to consider all the 
relevant evidence. 
Next, the Petitioner further argues that in analyzing the first prong of the Dhanasar framework, the 
Director improperly applied "record of success" as a criterion, although this criterion is only applicable 
to the Petitioner's ability to advance the proposed endeavor under the second prong of Dhanasar. 
Specifically, the Director noted as follows: "The self-petitioner provided citations and contend that 
the citations are "notable." However, there is no evidence in the record that distinguishes the citation 
marked "notable" from other citations in the record. Without evidence to explain or clarify, such as a 
letter from the individuals that cited the self-petitioner, the reason the citations are notable, it cannot 
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prove that the self-petitioner's citation record is indicative of a record of success or otherwise 
demonstrate his proposed endeavor is of national importance." However, although inartful, the 
Director correctly concludes that the Petitioner did not demonstrate that his proposed endeavor is of 
national importance under prong one. Thus, we determine that this anomalous reference to "record of 
success" in the prong one discussion, is harmless error rather than an incorrect application of law or 
policy. 
We recognize the emerging importance of artificial intelligence research and note that the Director 
found the Petitioner's endeavor to have substantial merit. But the relevant question is not the 
importance of the field, industry, or profession in which the individual will work; instead, we focus 
on the "the specific endeavor that the foreign national proposes to undertake." Dhanasar, at 889. The 
term "endeavor" is more specific than the general occupation; a petitioner should offer details not only 
as to what the occupation normally involves, but what types of work the person proposes to undertake 
specifically within that occupation. See generally 6 USCIS Policy Manual F.5(D)(l), 
https://www.uscis.gov/policy-manual. Simply being employed in an occupation does not constitute 
an endeavor for the purposes of these proceedings. We note that the Petitioner is already employed 
by inin Taiwan, and intends to work for in the United States. To the extent his current 
doctoral research and career goals constitute an endeavor, the record does not contain sufficient 
evidence describing the Petitioner's endeavor and its future potential impact. For example, two 
recommendation letters describe the Petitioner's past contributions to artificial intelligence research 
in the medical field. However, they do not adequately describe the endeavor itself: the Petitioner's 
future plans, or how they would rise to the level of national importance. Specifically, the letter of 
recommendation from Dr. broadly states the Petitioner's research" ... has involved the creation 
of tailor-made artificial intelligence and machine learning solutions for medical purposes." Simply 
going on record without supporting substantive evidence to support assertions, is not sufficient in these 
proceedings. See Matter of Treasure Craft ofCaltfornia, 14 I&N Dec. 190 (BIA 1972). While in the 
other recommendation letter Dr. I I asserts that the Petitioner's work has had significant impact 
on global public health processes by employing his artificial intelligence methodologies in the 
detection of rheumatoid arthritis. However, the Petitioner's knowledge, skills, and abilities relate to 
the second prong of the Dhanasar framework, which "shifts the focus from the proposed endeavor to 
the foreign national." Id. at 890. The issue here is whether the specific endeavor that he proposes to 
undertake has national importance under Dhanasar 's first prong. 
Although the Petitioner contends that his proposed endeavor outlines the importance of various 
national and government initiatives, such as the "Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health," to 
be launched by the Biden Administration, the matter here is not whether these initiatives, as well as 
the topics of healthcare or similarly related subjects, are nationally important. Rather, the Petitioner 
must demonstrate the national importance of his specific, proposed endeavor of providing his services 
as a researcher employed by the US office of his Taiwanese company. 
In Dhanasar, we noted that "we look for broader implications" of the proposed endeavor and that 
"[ a ]n undertaking may have national importance for example, because it has national or even global 
implications within a particular field." Id. We also stated that "[a]n endeavor that has significant 
potential to employ U.S. workers or has other substantial positive economic effects, particularly in an 
economically depressed area, for instance, may well be understood to have national importance." Id. 
at 890. Here, the Director observed that the Petitioner had not demonstrated that the specific endeavor 
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he proposed had significant potential to employ U.S. workers or otherwise offered substantial positive 
economic effects on our nation. Nor did the Petitioner show that the benefits to the regional or national 
economy resulting from his proposed endeavor would reach the level of "substantial positive economic 
effects" contemplated by Dhanasar. Id at 890. A petitioner's proposed endeavor can rise to the level 
of national importance through establishing one or more of the criteria including positive economic 
effects. In any given set of facts, it is a petitioner's burden to show by a preponderance of the evidence 
(more likely than not) that the proposed endeavor is of national importance. Matter of Chawathe, 25 
I&N Dec. 369, 376 (AAO 2010). A petitioner must also support assertions with relevant, probative, 
and credible evidence. See Matter ofChawathe, 25 I&N Dec. at 376. Below, the Director determined 
that the national importance impact was limited to the Petitioner and his employer. On appeal, the 
Petitioner does not address the potential employment of US workers, but re-asserts that his proposed 
endeavor would "ultimately improve the health and well-being of the US population." He proffers 
that the prospective economic effects would result in a reduction in healthcare costs because of disease 
prevention and early treatment, and a reduction in the consumption of healthcare resources. However, 
the Petitioner has not sufficiently established that his proposed endeavor in the United States will have 
national importance under the first Dhanasar prong. 
Because the identified basis for denial is dispositive of the Petitioner's appeal, we decline to reach and 
hereby reserve the remaining eligibility requirements for the requested national interest waiver. See 
INS v. Bagamasbad, 429 U.S. 24, 25 (1976) (stating that agencies are not required to make "purely 
advisory findings" on issues that are unnecessary to the ultimate decision); see also Matter ofL-A-C-, 
26 I&N Dec. 516, 526 n.7 (BIA 2015) (declining to reach alternative issues on appeal where the 
applicant did not otherwise meet their burden of proof). 
III. CONCLUSION 
As the Petitioner has not met the requisite first prong of the Dhanasar analytical framework, we 
conclude that he has not established he is eligible for or otherwise merits a national interest waiver as 
a matter of discretion. 
ORDER: The appeal is dismissed. 
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