Biography:Stanley Osher

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Short description: American mathematician (born 1942)
Stanley Joel Osher
Stanley Osher.jpg
Osher in 1968
Born (1942-04-24) April 24, 1942 (age 82)
Brooklyn, New York, U.S.
Known for
Scientific career
FieldsApplied mathematics
Institutions
Doctoral advisorJacob Schwartz
Doctoral students

Stanley Osher (born April 24, 1942) is an American mathematician, known for his many contributions in shock capturing, level-set methods, and PDE-based methods in computer vision and image processing. Osher is a professor at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Director of Special Projects in the Institute for Pure and Applied Mathematics (IPAM) and member of the California NanoSystems Institute (CNSI) at UCLA.

He has a daughter, Kathryn, and a son, Joel.

Education

Research interests

Osher is listed as an ISI highly cited researcher.[1]

Research contributions

Osher was the inventor (or co-inventor) and developer of many highly successful numerical methods for computational physics, image processing and other fields, including:

Osher has founded (or co-founded) three successful companies:

  • Cognitech (with Rudin)
  • Level Set Systems
  • Luminescent Technologies (with Yablonovitch)

Osher has been a thesis advisor for at least 53 PhD students, with 188 descendants, as well as postdoctoral adviser and collaborator for many applied mathematicians. His PhD students have been evenly distributed among academia and industry and labs, most of them are involved in applying mathematical and computational tools to industrial or scientific application areas.

Honors

  • National Academy of Engineering (NAE), 2018
  • William Benter Prize in Applied Mathematics, 2016.[2]
  • Carl Friedrich Gauss Prize, 2014.
  • John von Neumann Lecture prize from SIAM, 2013.[3]
  • Fellow of the American Mathematical Society, 2013.[4]
  • Plenary speaker, International Congress of Mathematicians, 2010[5]
  • American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 2009
  • Fellow, Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM), 2009 [6]
  • Honorary Doctoral Degree, Hong Kong Baptist University, 2009
  • International Cooperation Award, International Congress of Chinese Mathematicians, 2007
  • Computational and Applied Sciences Award, United States Association for Computational Mechanics, 2007
  • Docteur Honoris Causa, ENS Cachan, France 2006
  • National Academy of Sciences (NAS), 2005
  • SIAM Kleinman Prize, 2005[7]
  • ICIAM Pioneer Prize, 2003[5]
  • Computational Mechanics Award, Japan Society of Mechanical Engineering, 2002
  • NASA Public Service Group Achievement Award, 1992
  • US-Israel BSF Fellow, 1986
  • SERC Fellowship (England), 1982
  • Alfred P. Sloan Fellow, 1972–1974[8]
  • Fulbright Fellow, 1971[9]


Books authored

See also

  • James Sethian, co-developer of level-set methods.

References

External links