Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Info

nameEnglish nameCategorybornageundergraduategraduate
錢煦Shu ChienScientistBeijing1931Beijing UniversityColumbia
蔡少棠Leon O. ChuaScientistPhilippines1936Mapúa Institute of TechnologyUIUC
吳仙標Shien Biau "S.B." WooScholar, PoliticianShanghai1937Georgetown CollegeWashington University
陳卓光Denny ChinJudgeHong Kong1954Princeton UniversityFordham University
傅苹Ping Fu EntrepreneurNanjing1958Suzhou University, University of New Mexico, University of San Diego, UCSD
李翊云Liu HongweiWriterBeijing1962Beijing UniversityUniversity of Iowa
孟晓犁Xiao-Li MengScholarShanghai1963Fudan UniversityHarvard University
黃仁勳Jen-Hsun HuangEntrepreneurTaipei1963Oregon State UniversityStanford University
劉雲平Ted W. LieuPoliticianTaipei1969Stanford UniversityGeorgetown University
劉弘威Goodwin Hon LiuJudgeAugusta, GA1970Stanford UniversityYale Law School
孙雯Linda SunPoliticianChina1984Columbia UniversityColumbia University
钱璐璐Lulu QianScientistChinaSoutheast UniversityShanghai Jaiotong University

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Cai Shaotang


Cai Shaotang (Leon O. Chua), a Chinese minority, grew up in Philippines and move to the States to earn a PhD from UIUC in 1964. Currently Dr. Chua is an IEEE fellow and a professor at UC Berkeley.

Chua is deemed the 'father' of nonlinear circuit theory. He pioneered this field with his PhD dissertation 'Nonlinear Network Analysis -- The Parametric Approach'. More recently, he was chased with spotlight for his invention of 'memristor', a circuit element formulated and named by Chua in a 1971 paper 'Memristor -- The Missing Circuit Element'. 40 years later, HP discovered a pragmatic technique to mass produce memristor by accident.

The potential of this 'fourth element (after resister, capacitor and inductor)' is thunderous and endless. Memristor promises not only greater capacity but also lower energy. Leon Chua could be the next Chinese for the Nobel prize.

Chua's eldest daughter Amy caught media attention not too long ago with her book Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother in which she advocate for strict parenting guidance, aka, raising children the Chinese way.