28th Annual Kyoto Prize Awarded for Advanced Technology, Basic Sciences
DOI: 10.1063/PT.4.0461
KYOTO, JAPAN — November 10, 2012 — The non-profit Inamori Foundation
Dr. Ivan Edward Sutherland
The laureates are in Kyoto for the week attending the ceremony, holding lectures and workshops, and participating in youth development programs. They will reconvene in San Diego, Calif. March 12-14, 2013 to participate in North America’s twelfth annual Kyoto Prize Symposium, a three-day celebration of the lives and works of the laureates with an opening Gala and ongoing lectures at host universities.
2012 Kyoto Prize Laureates
Dr. Ivan Sutherland, Advanced Technology, United States
Dr. Sutherland, 74, is an American computer scientist and visiting scientist at Portland State University. He is widely regarded as the “Father of Computer Graphics” for his lifetime of pioneering work in developing graphical methods of interacting with computers. Dr. Sutherland’s early achievements include creating Sketchpad in 1963, a breakthrough application that allowed users to directly manipulate figures on a computer screen through a pointing device. Sketchpad’s approach was years ahead of its time and served as a conceptual progenitor to today’s “graphical user interface” in everything from smartphones to computer workstations. His work has supported applications ranging from computer operating systems to video editing, animation, 3-D modeling and virtual reality.
Dr. Yoshinori Ohsumi, Basic Sciences, Japan
Dr. Ohsumi, 67, is a Japanese scientist, researcher and professor who has made groundbreaking contributions toward elucidating the molecular mechanisms and physiological significance of autophagy, demonstrating how a cell degrades its own proteins in order to adapt to nutritional deficiency or other environmental influences. Autophagy is now regarded as a vital cell-recycling system that may aid in future treatments for neurodegenerative conditions such as Alzheimer’s disease, cancer and other age-related ailments. Dr. Ohsumi is currently a professor at the Frontier Research Center of the Tokyo Institute of Technology, where he and his colleaguescontinue their world-leading work in autophagy.
Professor Gayatri Spivak, Arts and Philosophy, India
Professor Spivak, 70, is an Indian intellectual, activist, and University Professor at Columbia University, where she founded the Institute for Comparative Literature and Society. Prof. Spivak plans to donate a portion of her prize funds to her foundation, the Pares Chandra Chakravorty Memorial Literacy Project, which provides primary education for children in rural India. She exemplifies the modern intellectual through her theoretical work for the humanities based on comparative literature and her devotion to multifaceted educational activities, especially in developing regions. Her work often focuses on those marginalized by globalization, including the new immigrant, the working class and women, among others. She is perhaps best known for her essay, “Can the Subaltern Speak?,” which spotlights those who are economically dispossessed and rendered without agency by their social status.
About the Inamori Foundation and the Kyoto Prize
The non-profit Inamori Foundation was established in 1984 by Dr. Kazuo Inamori
To date, the prize has honored 90 individuals and one not-for-profit enterprise (The Nobel Foundation), collectively representing 15 nations. Individual laureates range from scientists, engineers and researchers to philosophers, painters, architects, sculptors, musicians and film directors. The United States has produced the most recipients (36), followed by Japan (16), the United Kingdom (12), and France (8). Seven Kyoto Prize winners have subsequently been recognized with the Nobel Prize, including the 2012 Nobel recipient in Physiology or Medicine, Dr. Shinya Yamanaka