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| Fotografii | Monede | Timbre | Schite | Cautare |
Hsu's school education was in Peking and he did not choose mathematics as a career at this stage but rather it was chemistry which he decided to study at university. In 1928 he enrolled at Yangjing University to study chemistry. Two years later he decided to change subject, to change universities, and so he went to Tsing Hua University to read for a degree in mathematics. He obtained his Bachelor of Science degree from Tsing Hua University in 1933 and then moved to the Mathematics Department of Peking University where he was employed as an assistant. Hsu passed examinations in 1936 at Peking University and obtained a scholarship to enable him to continue his graduate studies in Britain. He spent four years in Britain mainly at University College, London but he also spent some time studying at Cambridge. Certainly University College, London was an excellent place for Hsu to study as his mathematical interests were in probability and statistics. Egon Pearson , following the retiral of his father Karl Pearson as Galton Professor of Statistics, had been made Reader and became Head of the Department of Applied Statistics three years before Hsu arrived there. Jerzy Neyman had been appointed in 1934 while R A Fisher held Karl Pearson 's Galton Chair of Statistics and was Head of the Department of Eugenics at University College. Lehmann writes in :
Hsu's first two papers were published in the Statistical Research Memoirs which were edited by Jerzy Neyman and Egon Pearson . One concerned what is now known as the Behrens-Fisher problem, while the second Hsu examined the problem of optimal estimators of the variance in the Gauss - Markov model. In 1938 Hsu, while still undertaking research for his doctorate, too up a position as lecturer in Egon Pearson 's Department. He was awarded the degree of Ph.D. and then that of D.Sc. from University College, London, in 1938 and 1940, respectively. Anderson, Chung and Lehmann write in :
This is a very fair comment on the style of British statistics during this period, in contrast to the style in Continental Europe. By 1940 China was engaged in World War II fighting against the Japanese invasion and Britain was involved in the war against Germany. Hsu chose to leave Britain to return to his homeland of China where he was appointed as Professor at Peking University. It was a period of great difficulty and hardship for Hsu. He corresponded with Neyman during the years 1943-44, who by this time was at Berkeley in the United States, about statistical matters but he mentions in these letters the great hardship he was suffering, particularly suffering starvation. It is a great tribute to Hsu's determination to devote himself to statistics that he managed to continue his research during these difficult war years. Many of his publications on multivariate analysis from this period show that he had been strongly influenced by R A Fisher while at University College. His role in promoting the use of matrix theory in statistics should also be emphasised. These papers brought him to :
Attempts were made to get Hsu to the United States. In 1945 he arrived in the USA just in time for the First Berkeley Symposium on Probability and Statistics. During the next two years he taught at the University of California, Columbia University, and the University of North Carolina where he was offered an associate professorship. After spending 1946-47 at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, in 1947 Hsu returned to his professorship at Peking University. One of his students at Chapel Hill wrote:
Anderson, Chung and Lehmann describe in (see also ) Hsu's personality, particularly during these years in the United States:
Hsu had turned down many offers of position, one particularly attractive one from Wald , from universities in the United States but he felt that there he could be :
Hsu had poor health from 1950. He recovered but the extremely hard work which he undertook brought about a recurrence in the summer of 1951 and he spent some time in hospital. His battle against illness is movingly described in Jiang and Duan in :
Hsu died in his home on the campus of Peking University in 1970. He had published a total of 40 mathematical papers.
Source:School of Mathematics and Statistics University of St Andrews, Scotland |