- Imre Csiszár
Imre Csiszár is a Hungarian mathematician with contributions to
information theory andprobability theory . In 1996 he won theClaude E. Shannon Award , the highest annualaward given in the field of information theory.He was born Feb. 7, 1938, in
Miskolc , Hungary. He became interested in mathematicsin middle school. He was inspired by his father who was a forest engineer and was among the first to use mathematical techniques in his area. He studied mathematics at the L. Eotvos University, Budapest, and received his Diploma in 1961. He got his PhD in 1967 and the scientific degree Doctor of Mathematical Science" in 1977. Later, he was influenced byAlfréd Rényi , who was very activein the area of probability theory. In1990 he was elected Corresponding Member of the Hungarian Academy ofSciences, and in 1995 he became Full Member.Professor Csiszar has been with the Mathematical Institute of the HungarianAcademy of Sciences since 1961. He has been Head of the InformationTheory Group there since 1968, and presently he is Head of the StochasticsDepartment. He is also Professor of Mathematics at the L. Eotvos University, Budapest. He has held Visiting Professorships at various universities including University Bielefeld, Germany (1981), University of Maryland (several times, last in 1992), Stanford University (1982), University of Virginia (1985-86), etc. He has been Visiting Researcher at the University of Tokyo in 1988, and at NTT, Japan, in 1994. He is married and has four children.He is a Fellow of the
IEEE , and is a member of several other learned societies, including the Bernoulli Society for Probability and Statistics. He has received several academic awards, including the Book Excellence Award of theHungarian Academy of Sciences for his 1981 Information Theory monograph, the 1988 Paper Award of the IEEE Information Theory Society, and the Academy Award for Interdisciplinary Research of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences in 1989.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.