King-Sun Fu


Dr. King-Sun Fu was a Chinese-born American computer scientist. He was a Goss Distinguished Professor at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Indiana. He was instrumental in the founding of International Association for Pattern Recognition, served as its first president, and is widely recognized for his extensive contributions to- and a pioneer in- the field of pattern recognition and machine intelligence. In honor of the memory of Professor King-Sun Fu, IAPR gives the biennial King-Sun Fu Prize to a living person in the recognition of an outstanding technical contribution to the field of pattern recognition. The first King-Sun Fu Prize was presented in 1988, to Azriel Rosenfeld.

Biography

Fu was born on October 2, 1930 in Nanjing, then China's capital. He received B.S. from National Taiwan University in 1953, M.A. from University of Toronto in 1955, and Ph.D from University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign in 1959.
Fu died on April 29, 1985 in Washington, DC.

Academic life

Fu and others organized the First International Conference Pattern Recognition in 1973 and served as Chairman. The conference later evolved into the formation of the International Association for Pattern Recognition by 1976 and was elected to be its President.
He reorganized the Pattern Recognition Committee and was its first Chairman in 1974, which led to the founding of the IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence and he served as its first Editor-in-Chief in 1978.
King-Sun gave invited lectures in China almost every year over the past decades and was a Member of the Academia Sinica in 1978. He was instrumental in establishing the Microelectronics and Information Science and Technology Research Center at the National Chiao Tung University in 1984.

Selected works