flyinthewind2012 发表于 2024-08-05 23:35 Science and academia[edit] Nobel Prize[edit] Chen Ning Yang (楊振寧) – 1957 Nobel laureate, Physics, Yang–Mills theory Tsung-dao Lee (李政道) – 1957 Nobel laureate, Physics Samuel C. C. Ting (丁肇中) – 1976 Nobel laureate, Physics Yuan T. Lee (李远哲) – 1986 Nobel Prize, Chemistry Steven Chu (朱棣文) – 1997 Nobel Prize in Physics, US Secretary of Energy (2009) Daniel Chee Tsui (崔琦) – 1998 Nobel laureate, Physics Roger Y. Tsien (錢永健) – 2008 Nobel laureate, Chemistry Charles K. Kao (高锟) – 2009 Nobel laureate in Physics who pioneered the development and use of fiber optics in telecommunications Mathematics award winners[edit] Terence Chi-Shen Tao (陶哲軒) – Fields Medal (2006), Clay Research Award(2003), Crafoord Prize (2012) Shing-Tung Yau (丘成桐) – Fields Medal (1982), Wolf Prize (2010), Crafoord Prize (1994) Andrew Yao (姚期智) – Turing Award (2000) Shiing-Shen Chern (陳省身) – Wolf Prize (1983) Wei Zhang (张伟) – Clay Research Award (2019) Xinyi Yuan (袁新意) – Clay Research Award (2008) Chemistry[edit] Ching W. Tang – inventor of the organic light-emitting diode(OLED) and the hetero-junction organic photovoltaic cell (OPV); winner of the 2011 Wolf Prize in Chemistry; known as the "father of organic electronics" Roger Y. Tsien (錢永健) – 2008 Nobel laureate, chemistry Peidong Yang – chemist; founding member of the scientific advisory board at Nanosys, a nanomaterials company; co-founder of Alphabet Energy[10] Xiaowei Zhuang – Professor of Chemistry and Chemical Biology and of Physics at Harvard University, member of National Academy of Sciences, MacArthur Fellow (2003) Zhijian Chen (陈志坚) - Professor in the Department of Molecular Biology at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center. He is best known for his discovery of mechanisms by which nucleic acids trigger innate and autoimmune responses from the interior of a cell, work for which he received the 2019 Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences. Xiaoliang Sunney Xie (谢晓亮) - biochemist, considered a founding father of single-molecule biophysical chemistry and single-molecule enzymology Computer science[edit] Danqi Chen (陈丹琦) – AI professor at Princeton University working in Natural language processing, PhD from Stanford University, former student of Andrew Yao[11] Jianlin Cheng (程建林) – computer and data scientist; Associate Professor in the Computer Science Department at the University of Missouri, Columbia Wen Tsing Chow (周文俊) – missile guidance scientist, digital computer pioneer Leon Chua – professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences at the University of California, Berkeley Feng-hsiung Hsu (許峰雄) – IBM developer of Deep Blue, which beat World Chess Champion Garry Kasparov in 1997 Fei-Fei Li (李飞飞) – AI researcher, Stanford University professor Kai Li – Princeton University Ming C. Lin – former Distinguished Professor of Computer Science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,[12][13] now at U. Maryland. Andrew Ng (吴恩达) – AI researcher and entrepreneur: Google Brain, Baidu research, Coursera, Stanford University professor Carol E. Reiley: entrepreneur in health, robotics and AI, Andrew Ng's wife Pei-Yuan Wei (魏培源) – creator of ViolaWWW Wen-mei Hwu – professor at University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaignspecializing in compiler design, computer architecture, computer microarchitecture, and parallel processing Andrew Yao (姚期智) – 2000 Turing Award recipient, Yao's principle, former professor at Princeton University Frances Yao (储枫) – computer scientist, researcher in computational geometry and combinatorial algorithms; wife of Andrew Yao Yuanyuan Zhou – Princeton University PhD, currently UC San Diego Engineering[edit] Huajian Gao – Walter H. Annenberg Professor of Engineering at Brown University Tung Hua Lin (林同驊) – professor (UCLA), aerospace and structural engineer Tung-Yen Lin (林同棪) – (Berkeley) structural engineer who was the pioneer of standardizing the use of prestressed concrete, founded T. Y. Lin International Lee Yuk-Wing (李郁榮) – Professor of Electrical Engineering at Massachusetts Institute of Technology Mathematics[edit] Terence Chi-Shen Tao (陶哲軒) – child genius, Fields Medal winner (2006), professor (UCLA), MacArthur Fellow (2006), Crafoord Prize (2012), Breakthrough Prize in Mathematics (2014). He is the youngest participant to date in the International Mathematical Olympiad, first competing at the age of ten; in 1986, 1987, and 1988, he won a bronze, silver, and gold medal. He remains the youngest winner of each of the three medals in the Olympiad's history, winning the gold medal shortly after his thirteenth birthday. Tao received graduated from university at the age of 16 obtaining his bachelor's and master's degrees, received his PhD at the age of 20. Lenhard Ng – child prodigy who was once thought to be the "smartest kid in America". At age 10, he earned a perfect score of 800 on the math portion of what is now called the SAT, a feat considered to be a “remarkable achievement” when a high school junior or senior did it. Ng is a professor of mathematics at Duke University. Jeffrey Yi-Lin Forrest (林益) – professor of mathematics, systems science, economics, and finance at Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education (Slippery Rock campus) Wei Zhang (张伟) – Professor of Mathematics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Sun-Yung Alice Chang (张圣容) – professor of mathematics and former chair of the department at Princeton University Chen Wen-chen (陈文成) – professor of math at Carnegie Mellon, victim of Taiwan KMT persecution of dissidents (see White Terror) Shiing-Shen Chern (陳省身) – Wolf Prize, considered one of the greatest mathematicians of the 20th century; worked on differential geometry and topology; known for Chern-Simons theory, Chern-Weil theory, Chern classes Chia-Kun Chu (朱家琨) – applied mathematician, Fu Foundation Professor Emeritus of Applied Mathematics at Columbia University[14][15] Chia-Chiao Lin (林家翹) – applied mathematician Tian Gang (田刚) – Princeton University professor emeritus, student of S.T. Yau Paul Tseng – applied mathematician, professor at the Department of Mathematics at the University of Washington in Seattle Paul C. Yang (杨建平) – Princeton University, husband of Alice Chang Shing-Tung Yau (丘成桐) – Fields Medal winner (1982); MacArthur Fellow(1984), Crafoord Prize (1994), National Medal of Science (1997), Wolf Prize(2010) Yitang Zhang – mathematician, known for establishing the first finite bound on gaps between prime numbers Stephen Shing-Toung Yau – Distinguished Professor Emeritus at the University of Illinois at Chicago Mu-Tao Wang (王慕道) – Professor of Mathematics at Columbia University, received a PhD in Mathematics in 1998 from Harvard University Medicine and biosciences[edit] Priscilla Chan (陈Priscilla) – Harvard-graduated pediatrician, Chan-Zuckerberg foundation Min Chueh Chang (張明覺) – co-inventor of the first birth control pill; made significant contributions to the development of in vitro fertilisation Gilbert Chu (朱築文) – biochemist and Professor of Medicine (Oncology) and Biochemistry at the Stanford Medical School; older brother of Steven Chu Yuan-Cheng Fung (馮元楨) – founder of modern biomechanics Lue Gim Gong (呂金功) – horticulturalist David Ho – scientific researcher and the Irene Diamond professor at Rockefeller University in New York City Alice S. Huang – virologist Lin He – biochemist, received the MacArthur Fellowship in 2009 Yuet Wai Kan – pioneer of using DNA to diagnose human diseases, research enabled the Human Genome Project, recipient of Lasker Foundation award in 1991[16] Henry C. Lee – forensic scientist Sandra Lee – dermatologist and Internet celebrity as "Dr. Pimple Popper"; now star of the TLC series Dr. Pimple Popper Ching Chun Li – population geneticist and human geneticist Choh Hao Li (李卓皓) – biochemist, discovered growth hormone, beta-endorphin and isolated luteinizing hormone Min Chiu Li – first scientist to use chemotherapy to cure widely metastatic, malignant cancer Anna Chao Pai – geneticist Joe Hin Tjio – cytogeneticist, first person to recognize the normal number of human chromosomes[17] Chang Yi Wang – immunologist; NYIPLA Inventor of the Year Award in 2007 for her work on UBITh peptide immunogens James C. Wang – discovered DNA topoisomerases[18] Sam Wang, neuroscientist and author Shih-Chun Wang – neuroscientist and pharmacology professor Xiaodong Wang, biochemist best known for his work with cytochrome c, won the 2000 Eli Lilly Award in Biological Chemistry, and 2006 Shaw Prizerecipient[19] Leana Wen (温麟衍) – physician; director of Planned Parenthood, Health Commissioner of Baltimore, author David T. Wong – discovered drug Fluoxetine and atomoxetine, duloxetine and dapoxetine[20][21][22] Flossie Wong-Staal – virologist and AIDS researcher Junying Yu – stem cell biologist; recognized as one of the 2007 "Persons of the Year" by TIME magazine[23] Kang Zhang – ophthalmologist at the Institute for Genomic Medicine, University of California, San Diego known for his work on lanosterol Physics[edit] Sow-Hsin Chen – nuclear physicist Alfred Y. Cho – the "father of molecular beam epitaxy" and co-inventor of quantum cascade lasers Paul C. W. Chu (朱經武) – physicist, superconductivity Qian Xuesen (钱学森) – professor of aeronautics, a founder of NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, exiled to China Frank Shu – professor of astronomy at the University of California, Berkeley and University of California; San Diego and 2009 Shaw Prize recipient[24] Chien-Shiung Wu (吳健雄) – Manhattan Project scientist; considerable contribution to Nobel Prize work by Tsung-dao Lee Nai-Chang Yeh – physicist specialized in condensed matter physics; Fellow, American Association for the Advancement of Science; Fellow, American Physical Society Shoucheng Zhang – Stanford physicist Chen Ning Yang (楊振寧) – 1957 Nobel laureate, Physics, Yang–Mills theory Tsung-dao Lee (李政道) – 1957 Nobel laureate, Physics Samuel C. C. Ting (丁肇中) – 1976 Nobel laureate, Physics Steven Chu (朱棣文) – 1997 Nobel Prize in Physics, US Secretary of Energy (2009) Daniel Chee Tsui (崔琦) – 1998 Nobel laureate, Physics Charles K. Kao (高锟) – 2009 Nobel laureate in Physics who pioneered the development and use of fiber optics in telecommunications Xiaoxing Xi (郗小星) – Physicist at Temple University] Economics, Finance, Statistics, OR[edit] Anthony Chan – chief economist, JPMorgan Chase; former economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and economics professor at the University of Dayton[25] Gregory Chow (鄒至莊) – Class of 1913 Professor of Political Economy at Princeton University, known for Chow test Jianqing Fan (范剑青) – professor of finance and statistics at Princeton University William C. Hsiao (萧庆伦) – economist, professor at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health Ann Lee (李淯) – professor, author and commentator on global economics and finance issues Bin Yu (郁彬) – Chancellor's Professor in the Departments of Statistics and of Electrical Engineering & Computer Sciences at University of California, Berkeley Social sciences[edit] Angela Lee Duckworth – professor of Psychology at the University of Pennsylvania, MacArthur Fellow; wrote Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance Peter Kwong – professor of Asian American studies at Hunter College and professor of sociology in the City University of New York system Yu Xie – Bert G. Kerstetter '66 University Professor of Sociology at Princeton University; known for applying quantitative data science methods to sociology as well as Chinese studies Humanities[edit] Wing-tsit Chan (陳榮捷) – professor in Chinese philosophy, wrote influential translations Him Mark Lai (麥禮謙) – professor of Chinese American studies Lin Yutang (林語堂) – Hokkien Chinese writer Huping Ling (令狐萍) – professor of History at Truman State University, author Liu Kwang-ching (劉廣京) – Historian of late imperial China; University of California, Davis. Betty Lee Sung (宋李瑞芳) – former professor of Asian-American Studies at City College of New York; 'leading authority' on Chinese Americans[26][27] Andrew Lih (酈安治) – associate professor of Journalism at American University Teng Ssu-yu (鄧嗣禹) – Historian of late imperial China, at University of Indiana. Tim Wu (吳修銘) – professor at Columbia Law School, in 2014 ran to become the first Chinese-American lieutenant governor of New York State but lost. C.K. Yang (楊慶堃) – Sociologist at University of Pittsburgh. Yang Lien-sheng (楊聯陞) – Sinologist. Harvard University. Yu Ying-shih (余英時) – Historian of China; Harvard, Yale, and Princeton Universities. Zhao Yuanren (Yuen Ren Chao) (趙元任) – Linguist at Harvard and University of California, Berkeley.
崔琦(英語:Daniel C. Tsui,1939年2月28日—),男,河南宝丰人,成長於香港,美国物理学家1998年诺贝尔物理学奖获得者。
flyinthewind2012 发表于 2024-08-05 23:35 Science and academia[edit] Nobel Prize[edit] Chen Ning Yang (楊振寧) – 1957 Nobel laureate, Physics, Yang–Mills theory Tsung-dao Lee (李政道) – 1957 Nobel laureate, Physics Samuel C. C. Ting (丁肇中) – 1976 Nobel laureate, Physics Yuan T. Lee (李远哲) – 1986 Nobel Prize, Chemistry Steven Chu (朱棣文) – 1997 Nobel Prize in Physics, US Secretary of Energy (2009) Daniel Chee Tsui (崔琦) – 1998 Nobel laureate, Physics Roger Y. Tsien (錢永健) – 2008 Nobel laureate, Chemistry Charles K. Kao (高锟) – 2009 Nobel laureate in Physics who pioneered the development and use of fiber optics in telecommunications Mathematics award winners[edit] Terence Chi-Shen Tao (陶哲軒) – Fields Medal (2006), Clay Research Award(2003), Crafoord Prize (2012) Shing-Tung Yau (丘成桐) – Fields Medal (1982), Wolf Prize (2010), Crafoord Prize (1994) Andrew Yao (姚期智) – Turing Award (2000) Shiing-Shen Chern (陳省身) – Wolf Prize (1983) Wei Zhang (张伟) – Clay Research Award (2019) Xinyi Yuan (袁新意) – Clay Research Award (2008) Chemistry[edit] Ching W. Tang – inventor of the organic light-emitting diode(OLED) and the hetero-junction organic photovoltaic cell (OPV); winner of the 2011 Wolf Prize in Chemistry; known as the "father of organic electronics" Roger Y. Tsien (錢永健) – 2008 Nobel laureate, chemistry Peidong Yang – chemist; founding member of the scientific advisory board at Nanosys, a nanomaterials company; co-founder of Alphabet Energy[10] Xiaowei Zhuang – Professor of Chemistry and Chemical Biology and of Physics at Harvard University, member of National Academy of Sciences, MacArthur Fellow (2003) Zhijian Chen (陈志坚) - Professor in the Department of Molecular Biology at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center. He is best known for his discovery of mechanisms by which nucleic acids trigger innate and autoimmune responses from the interior of a cell, work for which he received the 2019 Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences. Xiaoliang Sunney Xie (谢晓亮) - biochemist, considered a founding father of single-molecule biophysical chemistry and single-molecule enzymology Computer science[edit] Danqi Chen (陈丹琦) – AI professor at Princeton University working in Natural language processing, PhD from Stanford University, former student of Andrew Yao[11] Jianlin Cheng (程建林) – computer and data scientist; Associate Professor in the Computer Science Department at the University of Missouri, Columbia Wen Tsing Chow (周文俊) – missile guidance scientist, digital computer pioneer Leon Chua – professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences at the University of California, Berkeley Feng-hsiung Hsu (許峰雄) – IBM developer of Deep Blue, which beat World Chess Champion Garry Kasparov in 1997 Fei-Fei Li (李飞飞) – AI researcher, Stanford University professor Kai Li – Princeton University Ming C. Lin – former Distinguished Professor of Computer Science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,[12][13] now at U. Maryland. Andrew Ng (吴恩达) – AI researcher and entrepreneur: Google Brain, Baidu research, Coursera, Stanford University professor Carol E. Reiley: entrepreneur in health, robotics and AI, Andrew Ng's wife Pei-Yuan Wei (魏培源) – creator of ViolaWWW Wen-mei Hwu – professor at University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaignspecializing in compiler design, computer architecture, computer microarchitecture, and parallel processing Andrew Yao (姚期智) – 2000 Turing Award recipient, Yao's principle, former professor at Princeton University Frances Yao (储枫) – computer scientist, researcher in computational geometry and combinatorial algorithms; wife of Andrew Yao Yuanyuan Zhou – Princeton University PhD, currently UC San Diego Engineering[edit] Huajian Gao – Walter H. Annenberg Professor of Engineering at Brown University Tung Hua Lin (林同驊) – professor (UCLA), aerospace and structural engineer Tung-Yen Lin (林同棪) – (Berkeley) structural engineer who was the pioneer of standardizing the use of prestressed concrete, founded T. Y. Lin International Lee Yuk-Wing (李郁榮) – Professor of Electrical Engineering at Massachusetts Institute of Technology Mathematics[edit] Terence Chi-Shen Tao (陶哲軒) – child genius, Fields Medal winner (2006), professor (UCLA), MacArthur Fellow (2006), Crafoord Prize (2012), Breakthrough Prize in Mathematics (2014). He is the youngest participant to date in the International Mathematical Olympiad, first competing at the age of ten; in 1986, 1987, and 1988, he won a bronze, silver, and gold medal. He remains the youngest winner of each of the three medals in the Olympiad's history, winning the gold medal shortly after his thirteenth birthday. Tao received graduated from university at the age of 16 obtaining his bachelor's and master's degrees, received his PhD at the age of 20. Lenhard Ng – child prodigy who was once thought to be the "smartest kid in America". At age 10, he earned a perfect score of 800 on the math portion of what is now called the SAT, a feat considered to be a “remarkable achievement” when a high school junior or senior did it. Ng is a professor of mathematics at Duke University. Jeffrey Yi-Lin Forrest (林益) – professor of mathematics, systems science, economics, and finance at Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education (Slippery Rock campus) Wei Zhang (张伟) – Professor of Mathematics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Sun-Yung Alice Chang (张圣容) – professor of mathematics and former chair of the department at Princeton University Chen Wen-chen (陈文成) – professor of math at Carnegie Mellon, victim of Taiwan KMT persecution of dissidents (see White Terror) Shiing-Shen Chern (陳省身) – Wolf Prize, considered one of the greatest mathematicians of the 20th century; worked on differential geometry and topology; known for Chern-Simons theory, Chern-Weil theory, Chern classes Chia-Kun Chu (朱家琨) – applied mathematician, Fu Foundation Professor Emeritus of Applied Mathematics at Columbia University[14][15] Chia-Chiao Lin (林家翹) – applied mathematician Tian Gang (田刚) – Princeton University professor emeritus, student of S.T. Yau Paul Tseng – applied mathematician, professor at the Department of Mathematics at the University of Washington in Seattle Paul C. Yang (杨建平) – Princeton University, husband of Alice Chang Shing-Tung Yau (丘成桐) – Fields Medal winner (1982); MacArthur Fellow(1984), Crafoord Prize (1994), National Medal of Science (1997), Wolf Prize(2010) Yitang Zhang – mathematician, known for establishing the first finite bound on gaps between prime numbers Stephen Shing-Toung Yau – Distinguished Professor Emeritus at the University of Illinois at Chicago Mu-Tao Wang (王慕道) – Professor of Mathematics at Columbia University, received a PhD in Mathematics in 1998 from Harvard University Medicine and biosciences[edit] Priscilla Chan (陈Priscilla) – Harvard-graduated pediatrician, Chan-Zuckerberg foundation Min Chueh Chang (張明覺) – co-inventor of the first birth control pill; made significant contributions to the development of in vitro fertilisation Gilbert Chu (朱築文) – biochemist and Professor of Medicine (Oncology) and Biochemistry at the Stanford Medical School; older brother of Steven Chu Yuan-Cheng Fung (馮元楨) – founder of modern biomechanics Lue Gim Gong (呂金功) – horticulturalist David Ho – scientific researcher and the Irene Diamond professor at Rockefeller University in New York City Alice S. Huang – virologist Lin He – biochemist, received the MacArthur Fellowship in 2009 Yuet Wai Kan – pioneer of using DNA to diagnose human diseases, research enabled the Human Genome Project, recipient of Lasker Foundation award in 1991[16] Henry C. Lee – forensic scientist Sandra Lee – dermatologist and Internet celebrity as "Dr. Pimple Popper"; now star of the TLC series Dr. Pimple Popper Ching Chun Li – population geneticist and human geneticist Choh Hao Li (李卓皓) – biochemist, discovered growth hormone, beta-endorphin and isolated luteinizing hormone Min Chiu Li – first scientist to use chemotherapy to cure widely metastatic, malignant cancer Anna Chao Pai – geneticist Joe Hin Tjio – cytogeneticist, first person to recognize the normal number of human chromosomes[17] Chang Yi Wang – immunologist; NYIPLA Inventor of the Year Award in 2007 for her work on UBITh peptide immunogens James C. Wang – discovered DNA topoisomerases[18] Sam Wang, neuroscientist and author Shih-Chun Wang – neuroscientist and pharmacology professor Xiaodong Wang, biochemist best known for his work with cytochrome c, won the 2000 Eli Lilly Award in Biological Chemistry, and 2006 Shaw Prizerecipient[19] Leana Wen (温麟衍) – physician; director of Planned Parenthood, Health Commissioner of Baltimore, author David T. Wong – discovered drug Fluoxetine and atomoxetine, duloxetine and dapoxetine[20][21][22] Flossie Wong-Staal – virologist and AIDS researcher Junying Yu – stem cell biologist; recognized as one of the 2007 "Persons of the Year" by TIME magazine[23] Kang Zhang – ophthalmologist at the Institute for Genomic Medicine, University of California, San Diego known for his work on lanosterol Physics[edit] Sow-Hsin Chen – nuclear physicist Alfred Y. Cho – the "father of molecular beam epitaxy" and co-inventor of quantum cascade lasers Paul C. W. Chu (朱經武) – physicist, superconductivity Qian Xuesen (钱学森) – professor of aeronautics, a founder of NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, exiled to China Frank Shu – professor of astronomy at the University of California, Berkeley and University of California; San Diego and 2009 Shaw Prize recipient[24] Chien-Shiung Wu (吳健雄) – Manhattan Project scientist; considerable contribution to Nobel Prize work by Tsung-dao Lee Nai-Chang Yeh – physicist specialized in condensed matter physics; Fellow, American Association for the Advancement of Science; Fellow, American Physical Society Shoucheng Zhang – Stanford physicist Chen Ning Yang (楊振寧) – 1957 Nobel laureate, Physics, Yang–Mills theory Tsung-dao Lee (李政道) – 1957 Nobel laureate, Physics Samuel C. C. Ting (丁肇中) – 1976 Nobel laureate, Physics Steven Chu (朱棣文) – 1997 Nobel Prize in Physics, US Secretary of Energy (2009) Daniel Chee Tsui (崔琦) – 1998 Nobel laureate, Physics Charles K. Kao (高锟) – 2009 Nobel laureate in Physics who pioneered the development and use of fiber optics in telecommunications Xiaoxing Xi (郗小星) – Physicist at Temple University] Economics, Finance, Statistics, OR[edit] Anthony Chan – chief economist, JPMorgan Chase; former economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and economics professor at the University of Dayton[25] Gregory Chow (鄒至莊) – Class of 1913 Professor of Political Economy at Princeton University, known for Chow test Jianqing Fan (范剑青) – professor of finance and statistics at Princeton University William C. Hsiao (萧庆伦) – economist, professor at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health Ann Lee (李淯) – professor, author and commentator on global economics and finance issues Bin Yu (郁彬) – Chancellor's Professor in the Departments of Statistics and of Electrical Engineering & Computer Sciences at University of California, Berkeley Social sciences[edit] Angela Lee Duckworth – professor of Psychology at the University of Pennsylvania, MacArthur Fellow; wrote Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance Peter Kwong – professor of Asian American studies at Hunter College and professor of sociology in the City University of New York system Yu Xie – Bert G. Kerstetter '66 University Professor of Sociology at Princeton University; known for applying quantitative data science methods to sociology as well as Chinese studies Humanities[edit] Wing-tsit Chan (陳榮捷) – professor in Chinese philosophy, wrote influential translations Him Mark Lai (麥禮謙) – professor of Chinese American studies Lin Yutang (林語堂) – Hokkien Chinese writer Huping Ling (令狐萍) – professor of History at Truman State University, author Liu Kwang-ching (劉廣京) – Historian of late imperial China; University of California, Davis. Betty Lee Sung (宋李瑞芳) – former professor of Asian-American Studies at City College of New York; 'leading authority' on Chinese Americans[26][27] Andrew Lih (酈安治) – associate professor of Journalism at American University Teng Ssu-yu (鄧嗣禹) – Historian of late imperial China, at University of Indiana. Tim Wu (吳修銘) – professor at Columbia Law School, in 2014 ran to become the first Chinese-American lieutenant governor of New York State but lost. C.K. Yang (楊慶堃) – Sociologist at University of Pittsburgh. Yang Lien-sheng (楊聯陞) – Sinologist. Harvard University. Yu Ying-shih (余英時) – Historian of China; Harvard, Yale, and Princeton Universities. Zhao Yuanren (Yuen Ren Chao) (趙元任) – Linguist at Harvard and University of California, Berkeley.
高錕爵士,大紫荊勳賢,KBE(英語:Sir Charles Kuen Kao,1933年11月4日—2018年9月23日),電機工程學家。於上海市出生及長大(至初中),1949年在逃港潮舉家定居英屬香港,1966年在英國標準電信實驗室做出劃時代的光纤實驗,獲諾貝爾物理學獎表揚「在光傳輸於纤维的光学通信领域突破性成就」(2009年)。1970年返回英屬香港,任香港中文大學校長(1987-1996年)。2018年逝世,享壽84歲。
flyinthewind2012 发表于 2024-08-05 23:35 Science and academia[edit] Nobel Prize[edit] Chen Ning Yang (楊振寧) – 1957 Nobel laureate, Physics, Yang–Mills theory Tsung-dao Lee (李政道) – 1957 Nobel laureate, Physics Samuel C. C. Ting (丁肇中) – 1976 Nobel laureate, Physics Yuan T. Lee (李远哲) – 1986 Nobel Prize, Chemistry Steven Chu (朱棣文) – 1997 Nobel Prize in Physics, US Secretary of Energy (2009) Daniel Chee Tsui (崔琦) – 1998 Nobel laureate, Physics Roger Y. Tsien (錢永健) – 2008 Nobel laureate, Chemistry Charles K. Kao (高锟) – 2009 Nobel laureate in Physics who pioneered the development and use of fiber optics in telecommunications Mathematics award winners[edit] Terence Chi-Shen Tao (陶哲軒) – Fields Medal (2006), Clay Research Award(2003), Crafoord Prize (2012) Shing-Tung Yau (丘成桐) – Fields Medal (1982), Wolf Prize (2010), Crafoord Prize (1994) Andrew Yao (姚期智) – Turing Award (2000) Shiing-Shen Chern (陳省身) – Wolf Prize (1983) Wei Zhang (张伟) – Clay Research Award (2019) Xinyi Yuan (袁新意) – Clay Research Award (2008) Chemistry[edit] Ching W. Tang – inventor of the organic light-emitting diode(OLED) and the hetero-junction organic photovoltaic cell (OPV); winner of the 2011 Wolf Prize in Chemistry; known as the "father of organic electronics" Roger Y. Tsien (錢永健) – 2008 Nobel laureate, chemistry Peidong Yang – chemist; founding member of the scientific advisory board at Nanosys, a nanomaterials company; co-founder of Alphabet Energy[10] Xiaowei Zhuang – Professor of Chemistry and Chemical Biology and of Physics at Harvard University, member of National Academy of Sciences, MacArthur Fellow (2003) Zhijian Chen (陈志坚) - Professor in the Department of Molecular Biology at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center. He is best known for his discovery of mechanisms by which nucleic acids trigger innate and autoimmune responses from the interior of a cell, work for which he received the 2019 Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences. Xiaoliang Sunney Xie (谢晓亮) - biochemist, considered a founding father of single-molecule biophysical chemistry and single-molecule enzymology Computer science[edit] Danqi Chen (陈丹琦) – AI professor at Princeton University working in Natural language processing, PhD from Stanford University, former student of Andrew Yao[11] Jianlin Cheng (程建林) – computer and data scientist; Associate Professor in the Computer Science Department at the University of Missouri, Columbia Wen Tsing Chow (周文俊) – missile guidance scientist, digital computer pioneer Leon Chua – professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences at the University of California, Berkeley Feng-hsiung Hsu (許峰雄) – IBM developer of Deep Blue, which beat World Chess Champion Garry Kasparov in 1997 Fei-Fei Li (李飞飞) – AI researcher, Stanford University professor Kai Li – Princeton University Ming C. Lin – former Distinguished Professor of Computer Science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,[12][13] now at U. Maryland. Andrew Ng (吴恩达) – AI researcher and entrepreneur: Google Brain, Baidu research, Coursera, Stanford University professor Carol E. Reiley: entrepreneur in health, robotics and AI, Andrew Ng's wife Pei-Yuan Wei (魏培源) – creator of ViolaWWW Wen-mei Hwu – professor at University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaignspecializing in compiler design, computer architecture, computer microarchitecture, and parallel processing Andrew Yao (姚期智) – 2000 Turing Award recipient, Yao's principle, former professor at Princeton University Frances Yao (储枫) – computer scientist, researcher in computational geometry and combinatorial algorithms; wife of Andrew Yao Yuanyuan Zhou – Princeton University PhD, currently UC San Diego Engineering[edit] Huajian Gao – Walter H. Annenberg Professor of Engineering at Brown University Tung Hua Lin (林同驊) – professor (UCLA), aerospace and structural engineer Tung-Yen Lin (林同棪) – (Berkeley) structural engineer who was the pioneer of standardizing the use of prestressed concrete, founded T. Y. Lin International Lee Yuk-Wing (李郁榮) – Professor of Electrical Engineering at Massachusetts Institute of Technology Mathematics[edit] Terence Chi-Shen Tao (陶哲軒) – child genius, Fields Medal winner (2006), professor (UCLA), MacArthur Fellow (2006), Crafoord Prize (2012), Breakthrough Prize in Mathematics (2014). He is the youngest participant to date in the International Mathematical Olympiad, first competing at the age of ten; in 1986, 1987, and 1988, he won a bronze, silver, and gold medal. He remains the youngest winner of each of the three medals in the Olympiad's history, winning the gold medal shortly after his thirteenth birthday. Tao received graduated from university at the age of 16 obtaining his bachelor's and master's degrees, received his PhD at the age of 20. Lenhard Ng – child prodigy who was once thought to be the "smartest kid in America". At age 10, he earned a perfect score of 800 on the math portion of what is now called the SAT, a feat considered to be a “remarkable achievement” when a high school junior or senior did it. Ng is a professor of mathematics at Duke University. Jeffrey Yi-Lin Forrest (林益) – professor of mathematics, systems science, economics, and finance at Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education (Slippery Rock campus) Wei Zhang (张伟) – Professor of Mathematics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Sun-Yung Alice Chang (张圣容) – professor of mathematics and former chair of the department at Princeton University Chen Wen-chen (陈文成) – professor of math at Carnegie Mellon, victim of Taiwan KMT persecution of dissidents (see White Terror) Shiing-Shen Chern (陳省身) – Wolf Prize, considered one of the greatest mathematicians of the 20th century; worked on differential geometry and topology; known for Chern-Simons theory, Chern-Weil theory, Chern classes Chia-Kun Chu (朱家琨) – applied mathematician, Fu Foundation Professor Emeritus of Applied Mathematics at Columbia University[14][15] Chia-Chiao Lin (林家翹) – applied mathematician Tian Gang (田刚) – Princeton University professor emeritus, student of S.T. Yau Paul Tseng – applied mathematician, professor at the Department of Mathematics at the University of Washington in Seattle Paul C. Yang (杨建平) – Princeton University, husband of Alice Chang Shing-Tung Yau (丘成桐) – Fields Medal winner (1982); MacArthur Fellow(1984), Crafoord Prize (1994), National Medal of Science (1997), Wolf Prize(2010) Yitang Zhang – mathematician, known for establishing the first finite bound on gaps between prime numbers Stephen Shing-Toung Yau – Distinguished Professor Emeritus at the University of Illinois at Chicago Mu-Tao Wang (王慕道) – Professor of Mathematics at Columbia University, received a PhD in Mathematics in 1998 from Harvard University Medicine and biosciences[edit] Priscilla Chan (陈Priscilla) – Harvard-graduated pediatrician, Chan-Zuckerberg foundation Min Chueh Chang (張明覺) – co-inventor of the first birth control pill; made significant contributions to the development of in vitro fertilisation Gilbert Chu (朱築文) – biochemist and Professor of Medicine (Oncology) and Biochemistry at the Stanford Medical School; older brother of Steven Chu Yuan-Cheng Fung (馮元楨) – founder of modern biomechanics Lue Gim Gong (呂金功) – horticulturalist David Ho – scientific researcher and the Irene Diamond professor at Rockefeller University in New York City Alice S. Huang – virologist Lin He – biochemist, received the MacArthur Fellowship in 2009 Yuet Wai Kan – pioneer of using DNA to diagnose human diseases, research enabled the Human Genome Project, recipient of Lasker Foundation award in 1991[16] Henry C. Lee – forensic scientist Sandra Lee – dermatologist and Internet celebrity as "Dr. Pimple Popper"; now star of the TLC series Dr. Pimple Popper Ching Chun Li – population geneticist and human geneticist Choh Hao Li (李卓皓) – biochemist, discovered growth hormone, beta-endorphin and isolated luteinizing hormone Min Chiu Li – first scientist to use chemotherapy to cure widely metastatic, malignant cancer Anna Chao Pai – geneticist Joe Hin Tjio – cytogeneticist, first person to recognize the normal number of human chromosomes[17] Chang Yi Wang – immunologist; NYIPLA Inventor of the Year Award in 2007 for her work on UBITh peptide immunogens James C. Wang – discovered DNA topoisomerases[18] Sam Wang, neuroscientist and author Shih-Chun Wang – neuroscientist and pharmacology professor Xiaodong Wang, biochemist best known for his work with cytochrome c, won the 2000 Eli Lilly Award in Biological Chemistry, and 2006 Shaw Prizerecipient[19] Leana Wen (温麟衍) – physician; director of Planned Parenthood, Health Commissioner of Baltimore, author David T. Wong – discovered drug Fluoxetine and atomoxetine, duloxetine and dapoxetine[20][21][22] Flossie Wong-Staal – virologist and AIDS researcher Junying Yu – stem cell biologist; recognized as one of the 2007 "Persons of the Year" by TIME magazine[23] Kang Zhang – ophthalmologist at the Institute for Genomic Medicine, University of California, San Diego known for his work on lanosterol Physics[edit] Sow-Hsin Chen – nuclear physicist Alfred Y. Cho – the "father of molecular beam epitaxy" and co-inventor of quantum cascade lasers Paul C. W. Chu (朱經武) – physicist, superconductivity Qian Xuesen (钱学森) – professor of aeronautics, a founder of NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, exiled to China Frank Shu – professor of astronomy at the University of California, Berkeley and University of California; San Diego and 2009 Shaw Prize recipient[24] Chien-Shiung Wu (吳健雄) – Manhattan Project scientist; considerable contribution to Nobel Prize work by Tsung-dao Lee Nai-Chang Yeh – physicist specialized in condensed matter physics; Fellow, American Association for the Advancement of Science; Fellow, American Physical Society Shoucheng Zhang – Stanford physicist Chen Ning Yang (楊振寧) – 1957 Nobel laureate, Physics, Yang–Mills theory Tsung-dao Lee (李政道) – 1957 Nobel laureate, Physics Samuel C. C. Ting (丁肇中) – 1976 Nobel laureate, Physics Steven Chu (朱棣文) – 1997 Nobel Prize in Physics, US Secretary of Energy (2009) Daniel Chee Tsui (崔琦) – 1998 Nobel laureate, Physics Charles K. Kao (高锟) – 2009 Nobel laureate in Physics who pioneered the development and use of fiber optics in telecommunications Xiaoxing Xi (郗小星) – Physicist at Temple University] Economics, Finance, Statistics, OR[edit] Anthony Chan – chief economist, JPMorgan Chase; former economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and economics professor at the University of Dayton[25] Gregory Chow (鄒至莊) – Class of 1913 Professor of Political Economy at Princeton University, known for Chow test Jianqing Fan (范剑青) – professor of finance and statistics at Princeton University William C. Hsiao (萧庆伦) – economist, professor at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health Ann Lee (李淯) – professor, author and commentator on global economics and finance issues Bin Yu (郁彬) – Chancellor's Professor in the Departments of Statistics and of Electrical Engineering & Computer Sciences at University of California, Berkeley Social sciences[edit] Angela Lee Duckworth – professor of Psychology at the University of Pennsylvania, MacArthur Fellow; wrote Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance Peter Kwong – professor of Asian American studies at Hunter College and professor of sociology in the City University of New York system Yu Xie – Bert G. Kerstetter '66 University Professor of Sociology at Princeton University; known for applying quantitative data science methods to sociology as well as Chinese studies Humanities[edit] Wing-tsit Chan (陳榮捷) – professor in Chinese philosophy, wrote influential translations Him Mark Lai (麥禮謙) – professor of Chinese American studies Lin Yutang (林語堂) – Hokkien Chinese writer Huping Ling (令狐萍) – professor of History at Truman State University, author Liu Kwang-ching (劉廣京) – Historian of late imperial China; University of California, Davis. Betty Lee Sung (宋李瑞芳) – former professor of Asian-American Studies at City College of New York; 'leading authority' on Chinese Americans[26][27] Andrew Lih (酈安治) – associate professor of Journalism at American University Teng Ssu-yu (鄧嗣禹) – Historian of late imperial China, at University of Indiana. Tim Wu (吳修銘) – professor at Columbia Law School, in 2014 ran to become the first Chinese-American lieutenant governor of New York State but lost. C.K. Yang (楊慶堃) – Sociologist at University of Pittsburgh. Yang Lien-sheng (楊聯陞) – Sinologist. Harvard University. Yu Ying-shih (余英時) – Historian of China; Harvard, Yale, and Princeton Universities. Zhao Yuanren (Yuen Ren Chao) (趙元任) – Linguist at Harvard and University of California, Berkeley.
flyinthewind2012 发表于 2024-08-05 23:35 Science and academia[edit] Nobel Prize[edit] Chen Ning Yang (楊振寧) – 1957 Nobel laureate, Physics, Yang–Mills theory Tsung-dao Lee (李政道) – 1957 Nobel laureate, Physics Samuel C. C. Ting (丁肇中) – 1976 Nobel laureate, Physics Yuan T. Lee (李远哲) – 1986 Nobel Prize, Chemistry Steven Chu (朱棣文) – 1997 Nobel Prize in Physics, US Secretary of Energy (2009) Daniel Chee Tsui (崔琦) – 1998 Nobel laureate, Physics Roger Y. Tsien (錢永健) – 2008 Nobel laureate, Chemistry Charles K. Kao (高锟) – 2009 Nobel laureate in Physics who pioneered the development and use of fiber optics in telecommunications Mathematics award winners[edit] Terence Chi-Shen Tao (陶哲軒) – Fields Medal (2006), Clay Research Award(2003), Crafoord Prize (2012) Shing-Tung Yau (丘成桐) – Fields Medal (1982), Wolf Prize (2010), Crafoord Prize (1994) Andrew Yao (姚期智) – Turing Award (2000) Shiing-Shen Chern (陳省身) – Wolf Prize (1983) Wei Zhang (张伟) – Clay Research Award (2019) Xinyi Yuan (袁新意) – Clay Research Award (2008) Chemistry[edit] Ching W. Tang – inventor of the organic light-emitting diode(OLED) and the hetero-junction organic photovoltaic cell (OPV); winner of the 2011 Wolf Prize in Chemistry; known as the "father of organic electronics" Roger Y. Tsien (錢永健) – 2008 Nobel laureate, chemistry Peidong Yang – chemist; founding member of the scientific advisory board at Nanosys, a nanomaterials company; co-founder of Alphabet Energy[10] Xiaowei Zhuang – Professor of Chemistry and Chemical Biology and of Physics at Harvard University, member of National Academy of Sciences, MacArthur Fellow (2003) Zhijian Chen (陈志坚) - Professor in the Department of Molecular Biology at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center. He is best known for his discovery of mechanisms by which nucleic acids trigger innate and autoimmune responses from the interior of a cell, work for which he received the 2019 Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences. Xiaoliang Sunney Xie (谢晓亮) - biochemist, considered a founding father of single-molecule biophysical chemistry and single-molecule enzymology Computer science[edit] Danqi Chen (陈丹琦) – AI professor at Princeton University working in Natural language processing, PhD from Stanford University, former student of Andrew Yao[11] Jianlin Cheng (程建林) – computer and data scientist; Associate Professor in the Computer Science Department at the University of Missouri, Columbia Wen Tsing Chow (周文俊) – missile guidance scientist, digital computer pioneer Leon Chua – professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences at the University of California, Berkeley Feng-hsiung Hsu (許峰雄) – IBM developer of Deep Blue, which beat World Chess Champion Garry Kasparov in 1997 Fei-Fei Li (李飞飞) – AI researcher, Stanford University professor Kai Li – Princeton University Ming C. Lin – former Distinguished Professor of Computer Science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,[12][13] now at U. Maryland. Andrew Ng (吴恩达) – AI researcher and entrepreneur: Google Brain, Baidu research, Coursera, Stanford University professor Carol E. Reiley: entrepreneur in health, robotics and AI, Andrew Ng's wife Pei-Yuan Wei (魏培源) – creator of ViolaWWW Wen-mei Hwu – professor at University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaignspecializing in compiler design, computer architecture, computer microarchitecture, and parallel processing Andrew Yao (姚期智) – 2000 Turing Award recipient, Yao's principle, former professor at Princeton University Frances Yao (储枫) – computer scientist, researcher in computational geometry and combinatorial algorithms; wife of Andrew Yao Yuanyuan Zhou – Princeton University PhD, currently UC San Diego Engineering[edit] Huajian Gao – Walter H. Annenberg Professor of Engineering at Brown University Tung Hua Lin (林同驊) – professor (UCLA), aerospace and structural engineer Tung-Yen Lin (林同棪) – (Berkeley) structural engineer who was the pioneer of standardizing the use of prestressed concrete, founded T. Y. Lin International Lee Yuk-Wing (李郁榮) – Professor of Electrical Engineering at Massachusetts Institute of Technology Mathematics[edit] Terence Chi-Shen Tao (陶哲軒) – child genius, Fields Medal winner (2006), professor (UCLA), MacArthur Fellow (2006), Crafoord Prize (2012), Breakthrough Prize in Mathematics (2014). He is the youngest participant to date in the International Mathematical Olympiad, first competing at the age of ten; in 1986, 1987, and 1988, he won a bronze, silver, and gold medal. He remains the youngest winner of each of the three medals in the Olympiad's history, winning the gold medal shortly after his thirteenth birthday. Tao received graduated from university at the age of 16 obtaining his bachelor's and master's degrees, received his PhD at the age of 20. Lenhard Ng – child prodigy who was once thought to be the "smartest kid in America". At age 10, he earned a perfect score of 800 on the math portion of what is now called the SAT, a feat considered to be a “remarkable achievement” when a high school junior or senior did it. Ng is a professor of mathematics at Duke University. Jeffrey Yi-Lin Forrest (林益) – professor of mathematics, systems science, economics, and finance at Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education (Slippery Rock campus) Wei Zhang (张伟) – Professor of Mathematics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Sun-Yung Alice Chang (张圣容) – professor of mathematics and former chair of the department at Princeton University Chen Wen-chen (陈文成) – professor of math at Carnegie Mellon, victim of Taiwan KMT persecution of dissidents (see White Terror) Shiing-Shen Chern (陳省身) – Wolf Prize, considered one of the greatest mathematicians of the 20th century; worked on differential geometry and topology; known for Chern-Simons theory, Chern-Weil theory, Chern classes Chia-Kun Chu (朱家琨) – applied mathematician, Fu Foundation Professor Emeritus of Applied Mathematics at Columbia University[14][15] Chia-Chiao Lin (林家翹) – applied mathematician Tian Gang (田刚) – Princeton University professor emeritus, student of S.T. Yau Paul Tseng – applied mathematician, professor at the Department of Mathematics at the University of Washington in Seattle Paul C. Yang (杨建平) – Princeton University, husband of Alice Chang Shing-Tung Yau (丘成桐) – Fields Medal winner (1982); MacArthur Fellow(1984), Crafoord Prize (1994), National Medal of Science (1997), Wolf Prize(2010) Yitang Zhang – mathematician, known for establishing the first finite bound on gaps between prime numbers Stephen Shing-Toung Yau – Distinguished Professor Emeritus at the University of Illinois at Chicago Mu-Tao Wang (王慕道) – Professor of Mathematics at Columbia University, received a PhD in Mathematics in 1998 from Harvard University Medicine and biosciences[edit] Priscilla Chan (陈Priscilla) – Harvard-graduated pediatrician, Chan-Zuckerberg foundation Min Chueh Chang (張明覺) – co-inventor of the first birth control pill; made significant contributions to the development of in vitro fertilisation Gilbert Chu (朱築文) – biochemist and Professor of Medicine (Oncology) and Biochemistry at the Stanford Medical School; older brother of Steven Chu Yuan-Cheng Fung (馮元楨) – founder of modern biomechanics Lue Gim Gong (呂金功) – horticulturalist David Ho – scientific researcher and the Irene Diamond professor at Rockefeller University in New York City Alice S. Huang – virologist Lin He – biochemist, received the MacArthur Fellowship in 2009 Yuet Wai Kan – pioneer of using DNA to diagnose human diseases, research enabled the Human Genome Project, recipient of Lasker Foundation award in 1991[16] Henry C. Lee – forensic scientist Sandra Lee – dermatologist and Internet celebrity as "Dr. Pimple Popper"; now star of the TLC series Dr. Pimple Popper Ching Chun Li – population geneticist and human geneticist Choh Hao Li (李卓皓) – biochemist, discovered growth hormone, beta-endorphin and isolated luteinizing hormone Min Chiu Li – first scientist to use chemotherapy to cure widely metastatic, malignant cancer Anna Chao Pai – geneticist Joe Hin Tjio – cytogeneticist, first person to recognize the normal number of human chromosomes[17] Chang Yi Wang – immunologist; NYIPLA Inventor of the Year Award in 2007 for her work on UBITh peptide immunogens James C. Wang – discovered DNA topoisomerases[18] Sam Wang, neuroscientist and author Shih-Chun Wang – neuroscientist and pharmacology professor Xiaodong Wang, biochemist best known for his work with cytochrome c, won the 2000 Eli Lilly Award in Biological Chemistry, and 2006 Shaw Prizerecipient[19] Leana Wen (温麟衍) – physician; director of Planned Parenthood, Health Commissioner of Baltimore, author David T. Wong – discovered drug Fluoxetine and atomoxetine, duloxetine and dapoxetine[20][21][22] Flossie Wong-Staal – virologist and AIDS researcher Junying Yu – stem cell biologist; recognized as one of the 2007 "Persons of the Year" by TIME magazine[23] Kang Zhang – ophthalmologist at the Institute for Genomic Medicine, University of California, San Diego known for his work on lanosterol Physics[edit] Sow-Hsin Chen – nuclear physicist Alfred Y. Cho – the "father of molecular beam epitaxy" and co-inventor of quantum cascade lasers Paul C. W. Chu (朱經武) – physicist, superconductivity Qian Xuesen (钱学森) – professor of aeronautics, a founder of NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, exiled to China Frank Shu – professor of astronomy at the University of California, Berkeley and University of California; San Diego and 2009 Shaw Prize recipient[24] Chien-Shiung Wu (吳健雄) – Manhattan Project scientist; considerable contribution to Nobel Prize work by Tsung-dao Lee Nai-Chang Yeh – physicist specialized in condensed matter physics; Fellow, American Association for the Advancement of Science; Fellow, American Physical Society Shoucheng Zhang – Stanford physicist Chen Ning Yang (楊振寧) – 1957 Nobel laureate, Physics, Yang–Mills theory Tsung-dao Lee (李政道) – 1957 Nobel laureate, Physics Samuel C. C. Ting (丁肇中) – 1976 Nobel laureate, Physics Steven Chu (朱棣文) – 1997 Nobel Prize in Physics, US Secretary of Energy (2009) Daniel Chee Tsui (崔琦) – 1998 Nobel laureate, Physics Charles K. Kao (高锟) – 2009 Nobel laureate in Physics who pioneered the development and use of fiber optics in telecommunications Xiaoxing Xi (郗小星) – Physicist at Temple University] Economics, Finance, Statistics, OR[edit] Anthony Chan – chief economist, JPMorgan Chase; former economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and economics professor at the University of Dayton[25] Gregory Chow (鄒至莊) – Class of 1913 Professor of Political Economy at Princeton University, known for Chow test Jianqing Fan (范剑青) – professor of finance and statistics at Princeton University William C. Hsiao (萧庆伦) – economist, professor at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health Ann Lee (李淯) – professor, author and commentator on global economics and finance issues Bin Yu (郁彬) – Chancellor's Professor in the Departments of Statistics and of Electrical Engineering & Computer Sciences at University of California, Berkeley Social sciences[edit] Angela Lee Duckworth – professor of Psychology at the University of Pennsylvania, MacArthur Fellow; wrote Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance Peter Kwong – professor of Asian American studies at Hunter College and professor of sociology in the City University of New York system Yu Xie – Bert G. Kerstetter '66 University Professor of Sociology at Princeton University; known for applying quantitative data science methods to sociology as well as Chinese studies Humanities[edit] Wing-tsit Chan (陳榮捷) – professor in Chinese philosophy, wrote influential translations Him Mark Lai (麥禮謙) – professor of Chinese American studies Lin Yutang (林語堂) – Hokkien Chinese writer Huping Ling (令狐萍) – professor of History at Truman State University, author Liu Kwang-ching (劉廣京) – Historian of late imperial China; University of California, Davis. Betty Lee Sung (宋李瑞芳) – former professor of Asian-American Studies at City College of New York; 'leading authority' on Chinese Americans[26][27] Andrew Lih (酈安治) – associate professor of Journalism at American University Teng Ssu-yu (鄧嗣禹) – Historian of late imperial China, at University of Indiana. Tim Wu (吳修銘) – professor at Columbia Law School, in 2014 ran to become the first Chinese-American lieutenant governor of New York State but lost. C.K. Yang (楊慶堃) – Sociologist at University of Pittsburgh. Yang Lien-sheng (楊聯陞) – Sinologist. Harvard University. Yu Ying-shih (余英時) – Historian of China; Harvard, Yale, and Princeton Universities. Zhao Yuanren (Yuen Ren Chao) (趙元任) – Linguist at Harvard and University of California, Berkeley.
楼上的ABC黑看一下,你自己用来对比的优秀的"老鹰"名单。我随便把第二个人google了一下:Yellapragada Subbarow:He was born in a Telugu Brahmin family in Bhimavaram, Madras Presidency, now in West Godavari District, Andhra Pradesh in India. 这人也是老印第一代!不是第二代!他在他岳父的资助下才移民美国的。 你还是省点力气,先把自己"老鹰"列表里的第一代老鹰先摘一摘吧!
公用马甲36 发表于 2024-08-06 00:22 楼上的ABC黑看一下,你自己用来对比的优秀的"老鹰"名单。我随便把第二个人google了一下:Yellapragada Subbarow:He was born in a Telugu Brahmin family in Bhimavaram, Madras Presidency, now in West Godavari District, Andhra Pradesh in India. 这人也是老印第一代!不是第二代!他在他岳父的资助下才移民美国的。 你还是省点力气,先把自己"老鹰"列表里的第一代老鹰先摘一摘吧!
崔琦(英語:Daniel C. Tsui,1939年2月28日—),男,河南宝丰人,成長於香港,美国物理学家1998年诺贝尔物理学奖获得者。
高錕爵士,大紫荊勳賢,KBE(英語:Sir Charles Kuen Kao,1933年11月4日—2018年9月23日),電機工程學家。於上海市出生及長大(至初中),1949年在逃港潮舉家定居英屬香港,1966年在英國標準電信實驗室做出劃時代的光纤實驗,獲諾貝爾物理學獎表揚「在光傳輸於纤维的光学通信领域突破性成就」(2009年)。1970年返回英屬香港,任香港中文大學校長(1987-1996年)。2018年逝世,享壽84歲。
没人嫉妒ABC,特别是有你这样一个把堂堂中国人杨振宁label成ABC的妈,你这样的文化水平可怕
丘成桐(英語:Shing-tung Yau,1949年4月4日—),廣東汕头人,祖籍广东蕉岭[2],美籍华人数学家,曾獲菲尔兹奖及沃爾夫數學獎。自小在香港成長直至大學畢業,後赴美國深造並且入籍美國。曾担任哈佛大學教授和香港中文大学博文讲座教授、清華大學丘成桐數學科學中心主任
老姚你也不认识?
姚期智(英語:Andrew Chi-Chih Yao;1946年12月24日—),男,汉族,湖北孝感人,生于上海,中国计算机科学家,2000年图灵奖得主,是目前唯一一位获得此奖项的华人。现任清华大学人工智能学院院长, 清华大学交叉信息研究院院长、清华大学理论计算机科学研究中心主任兼教授[2]、香港中文大學博文講座教授[3]、新竹國立清華大學榮譽講座[4],以及國立臺灣大學特聘研究講座[5]教授。
你还是省点力气,先把自己"老鹰"列表里的第一代老鹰先摘一摘吧!
我就不说你说的是不是事实了,让你去问女儿关于生孩子的问题,你怎么不去问呢?
比你这样人身攻击还要披马甲的强的多了。 人身攻击,还不敢用自己的ID,真low啊。
我可没在这儿吹老鹰有多厉害,我又不是老鹰的粉丝,我只是在嘲笑这个贴abc list的贴了一堆土生土长的中国人,哈哈哈哈,没见过这么没文化的人
你嘲笑别人贴了一堆土生土长的中国人不make sense,你自己倒贴了一堆土生土长的印度人出来反击。你吹捧老印第二代吹得脸都不要了。
我是讽刺他呀,你看不出来吗?也没文化?她说杨振宁是ABC,人土生土长中国人,
我生活中根本不认识烙印,别给自己加戏了,提高一下文化水平吧,杨振宁是中国人
你说你没吹老鹰?要不要我一句句引用出来?"总裁_人家Google,amazon都是烙印,abc做了哪家CEO了?说句ABC都是扶不上墙的烂泥没什么毛病吧?","你这是和现实社会有多脱节。还各行各业的精英。你说的每一个行业,老鹰都比abc做的好多了。这就是现实","假如你真的有素质,直接回复我ABC有什么在美国的成就高于老鹰的,别的都是自欺欺人","其实这帖子一开始我也不过是说了句大实话,abc在美国的成就并没有老印高,我也不知道怎么就得罪王婆卖瓜的各位abc大妈了"。现在又说自己没吹老印,不是老印的粉丝了,睁眼说瞎话你是第一。
所以你说有哪个行业abc是比老鹰做的好的?你说的出来吗?
就像我说黑人百米赛跑就是厉害一样 这不能说吗?说了就是吹黑人?
你有没有边踩ABC边吹捧老印,看了你的那些话,弱智都能明白答案是什么。也不知道你现实里是受了啥创伤,听不得说ABC半句好。看不惯ABC们和ABC的爸妈们,你不如回国去好了,省得在这边左扑右扑没扑到老印,不小心也生下个ABC。
是你认识的上代是在太差了。所以任何一个人正常点都可以超越他们😂
我娃大学同房间的小印室友,作业考试都是要我娃帮助和辅导的。千万别小看ABC,他们的优秀你可能还没机会接触到.
同感。看了层主的发言,我一下子觉得我家娃不属于ABC二代的群体了,一没有乐器,二没有体育。😀 那位层主家娃应该是大藤吧!不然太打击人啦。
赞同每一个字,一直觉得中西结合的教育才最好扬长避短。既有父母的勤劳刻苦,也有西方的开放豁达,从下也受到了严格系统的教育真的挺好。我一直觉得卷不是贬义,年少不卷更待何时,只是如何科学的卷才是父母要把控的
这么长的list,就算一半是一代,那也有一半是ABC,陶泽轩是不是abc?Samuel Chao Chung Ting (Chinese: 丁肇中是不是abc?Steven Chu (朱棣文是不是abc?Roger Y. Tsien (錢永健是不是abc? 你把我的list删掉一半也是很多人了。这就是你说的“烂泥扶不上墙的”的abc?呵呵。14亿中国人本土的出了几个诺贝尔?abc人口基础才多少?ABC还不够优秀? 并且中国大量移民美国也只是最近20年的事情,很多年轻的abc年龄还很小,后面会有更大的潜力。
你先筛选出来你的list上面的abc再说吧,你那个类似5个有4个都是中国土生土长的。文盲一样把杨振宁中国人列为abc,你还好意思说?