Wang Yansong, male, ethnic Manchu Chinese, was born in February 1971, with his ancestral hometown in Wendeng, Shandong Province. Doctor of Engineering, professor. He joined the Communist Party of China in May 1993 and started working in July 1994, graduated from the University of Ulsan, South Korea in February 2006 with a doctorate degree in automotive engineering, and was selected into the Liaoning Province University Excellent Talent Support Program and Shanghai Distinguished Professor in 2008. Professor Wang was formerly the Executive Deputy Dean and Dean of School of Automotive Engineering, and has served as Vice President of Shanghai University of Engineering Science since July 2017.
He is a member of the IEEE and IIAV Societies, member of the Society of Automotive Engineering, member of the Acoustical Society, board member of the Shanghai Society of Automotive Engineers, expert member of the SAIC Motor Science and Technology Foundation. He also serves as a reviewer for more than 10 international academic journals like J. Sound Vib.
Main research areas: Vehicle noise and vibration measurement and control technology. He has undertaken over 30 domestic and international research projects, including three projects funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China and five provincial and ministerial projects. He has published over 120 papers domestically and internationally, with 27 included in SCI and 63 in EI. He has authored and co-authored six monographs and textbooks. He holds 14 authorized national patents and software copyrights. He has received multiple awards, including the Second Prize and Third Prize in the China Machinery Industry Awards, the Third Prize in the China Automotive Industry Science and Technology Progress Awards, the Third Prize in the Shanghai Science and Technology Progress Awards, three Liaoning Provincial Natural Science Academic Achievement Awards (Paper Category), and the Silver Award for Excellent Inventions in Shanghai. Additionally, he has received the Second Prize and Third Prize in provincial and ministerial teaching reform achievements.