Sir his profile  is well deep rooted who died at 102 //23 8 23 Such a man
of profile, if healthy, really would have done a lot  as a great stat and
Maths.
"C.R. Rao was born on 10 September 1920 in Huvanna Hadagali, now in
Karnataka State. He studied in schools at Gudur, Nuzvid, Nandigama, and
Visakhapatnam, in Andhra Pradesh and completed his M.A. degree in
Mathematics at the Andhra University in Waltair, Andhra Pradesh. He did his
M.A. degree in Statistics from Calcutta University in Kolkata, West Bengal.

C.R. Rao worked in India at the Indian Statistical Institute for 40 years
before he took mandatory retirement at the age of 60. He moved to the USA
and worked for another 25 years at the University of Pittsburgh and the
Pennsylvania State University. In reply to a query put to him as to what
particular achievement he is most proud of, C.R. Rao replied, “it is the
outstanding contributions my students are making to statistical theory and
practice.”
[image: Thumb]
[image: Thumb]

Prof. Rao in Cambridge
Professor C.R Rao Academic Life:

   - He studied in schools at Gudur, Nuzvid, Nandigama, and Visakhapatnam,
   in Andhra Pradesh
   - MA degree in Statistics from Calcutta University with a first-class,
   first rank and a record of marks unbeaten till now, and a gold medal (1943).
   - Rao received an MA degree in Mathematics with a first-class and first
   rank from Andhra University (1941)

Research Career of Prof. C.R. Rao:

   - He was invited to work on a project at the Museum of Anthropology and
   Archeology at Cambridge University, UK, which required the Statistical
   Methodology developed by P.C. Mahalanobis, the founder of ISI.
   - Based on the work he did, he earned his Ph.D. in 1948 from Cambridge
   University with R.A. Fisher.
   - C.R. Rao worked in India at the Indian Statistical Institute for 40
   years (1941-79)
   - He moved to the USA and worked for another 25 years at the University
   of Pittsburgh and the Pennsylvania State University.

[image: Thumb]

Prof. C. R. Rao and Prof.Roy Frieden at the University of Texas in 2010
during Rao’s 90th birthday celebrations.
POSITIONS HELD

   - Indian Statistical Institute, in various capacities 1941-1979
   - Visiting Professor at University of Illinois 1951-1952
   - National Professor of India 1987-1992
   - University Professor, University of Pittsburgh 1979-1988
   - Eberly Professor of Statistics
   - The Pennsylvania State University (PSU), PA, USA 1988-2001
   - Eberly Professor Emeritus (PSU) 2001
   - Director, Centre for Multivariate Analysis, PSU 2001-2010
   - Indian Statistical Institute, in various capacities 1941-1979
   - Visiting Professor at University of Illinois 1951-1952
   - National Professor of India 1987-1992
   - University Professor, University of Pittsburgh 1979-1988
   - Eberly Professor of Statistics,
   - The Pennsylvania State University (PSU), PA, USA 1988-2001
   - Eberly Professor Emeritus (PSU) 2001
   - Director, Centre for Multivariate Analysis, PSU 2001-2010

Research Professor, University at Buffalo, SUNY 2010 - Retired from active
service at the age of 80 from The Pennsylvania State University, PA, USA
and continues to hold honorary Professorship at The Pennsylvania State
University, PA, USA and at the University at Buffalo, SUNY, USA.
DEVELOPMENT OF STATISTICS IN INDIA

As Head and later Director of the Research and Training School at the ISI
for a period of over 40 years, Rao developed research and training programs
and produced outstanding students which “put India not far from the center
of the statistical map of the world”, and earned for ISI the name of Indian
School of Statistics. During this period he also directed the training
programs at the International Statistical Educational Center which led to
the development of statistics in the South East Asian region. Rao was the
Chairman of a UN Committee, which examined the demand for statistical
personnel in Asian countries and recommended the establishment of an
Institute for statistical development in South East Asia. On the basis of
his recommendation The Asian Statistical Institute now known as Statistical
Institute for Asia and Pacific was established in Tokyo to provide training
to statisticians working in government and industrial organizations.

C.R. Rao played an important role, under the direction the doyen of Indian
statistics, P.C. Mahalanobis, in setting up state statistical bureaus in
different states of India and developing a network of statistical agencies
at the district level for collection of data. Together with the Central
Statistical Organization and the National Sample Survey in planning of
which, C.R. Rao played a significant role, India has one of the best
national statistical systems. He founded the Indian Econometric Society,
which has been active in promoting quantitative studies in economics for
planning purposes.

C.R. Rao was the founder of Indian Econometric Society and Indian Society
for Medical Statistics which hold conferences every year to discuss
problems of current interest.
WORK IN USA

After taking compulsory retirement in India at the age of 60 with 40 years
of service at ISI, Rao tried to get a suitable job in India to continue his
research activities without administrative responsibilities. As
opportunities to work in India were denied, he accepted unsolicited offers
of distinguished professorships in USA.

He worked for another 25 years as University Professor at the University of
Pittsburgh and Eberly (Chair) Professor of Statistics at The Pennsylvania
State University continuing his research in diverse areas of statistics. He
retired from active service at the age of 81 but continued his research
activities as Eberly Professor Emeritus and Director of the Center for
Multivariate Analysis at The Pennsylvania State University. In 2010, he
moved to Buffalo accepting Research Professorship at the University at
Buffalo. He published 201 research papers during his 40 years stay in India
and 272 research papers during his 30 years of stay in USA.
CONTRIBUTIONS TO STATISTICAL THEORY AND APPLICATIONS

C. Radhakrishna Rao is among the world leaders in statistical science over
the last six decades. His research, scholarship, and professional services
have had a profound influence on theory and applications of statistics.

Technical terms such as, Cramer-Rao inequality, Rao-Blackwellization, Rao’s
Score Test, Fisher-Rao and Rao Theorems on second order efficiency of an
estimator, Rao

metric and distance, Analysis of Dispersion (MANOVA) and Canonical Variate
analysis and G-inverse of matrices appear in all standard books on
statistics. Cramer-Rao Bound and Rao-Blackwellization are the most
frequently quoted key words in statistical and engineering literature.
Special uses of Cramer-Rao Bound under the technical term, Quantum Cramer-
Rao Bound have appeared in Quantum Physics. Rao-Blackwellization has found
applications in adaptive sampling, particle filtering in high-dimensional
state spaces, dynamic Bayesian networks etc. These results have led to
contributions of strategic significance to signal detection, tracking of
non-friendly planes and recognition of objects by shape.

Other technical terms bearing his name appearing in specialized books are
Rao’s F and U tests in multivariate analysis, Rao’s Quadratic Entropy,
Cross Entropy and Rao-Rubin, Lau-Rao, Lau-Rao-Shanbhag and Kagan-Linnik-Rao
theorems on characterization of probability distributions. Two of his
papers, one on estimation leading to many technical terms and key words and
another on score test which had a high impact on the development of
statistical theory appear in the book Breakthroughs in Statistics:
1889-1990.

Rao has made some significant contributions to combinatorial mathematics
for use in design of experiments, the most important of which is Orthogonal
arrays (OA).The basic paper on the subject appeared in Proc. Edinburgh
Math. Soc. (the referee of the paper reported that it is a fresh and
original piece of work). The Japanese Quality Control Expert, G.Taguchi
made extensive use of OA’s (described by Forbes Magazine as “new mantra”
for industries), in industrial experimentation.

Rao defined a generalized inverse (g-inverse) of a matrix (singular or
rectangular) and demonstrated its usefulness in the study of linear models
and singular multivariate normal distributions.

He is the author of 14 books and about 350 research papers. Three of his
books have been translated into several European and Chinese and Japanese
languages.
FAMILY

C.R. Rao is the eighth child in a family of six brothers and four sisters
who were raised by his parents, C.D. Naidu and Lakshmikantamma, and was
named Radhakrishna following the tradition of naming the eighth child in a
family after God Krishna, who is the eighth child. He married Bhargavi who
has two master’s degrees, one from Banaras Hindu University in History and
another from the University of Illinois, USA, in Psychology, and a
Bachelor’s degree in Teacher’s Training. She worked as a professor of
psychology at Jadavpur University, Kolkata for a number of years.

They have a daughter, Tejaswini who holds a Ph.D. in Nutrition from the
Pennsylvania State University and works as a Professor in the Dietetics and
Nutrition department at the SUNY College, Buffalo. She is an accomplished
dancer of the Bharatanatyam and Kuchipudi classical dance styles and is the
director of a dance school called Natya.

They have a son, Veerendra who is an electrical engineer and computer
scientist. He has a computer consultancy in Pittsburgh. He has two sons,
Amar and Rohith.
PEER REVIEWS OF RAO’S CONTRIBUTIONS TO STATISTICS

   - Amari, a renowned mathematician from Japan:
   Dr. Rao is a great scholar beyond the framework of statistics, which he
   himself has founded. It is a big surprise to see that his influence has
   been effective and has played a great role for more than half a century to
   produce fruitful developments in several scientific disciplines. “The idea
   of connecting statistics and differential geometry was too early at that
   time (1945). However, after nearly half a century, Rao’s idea has been
   developed to become one of most active and important topics in information
   sciences, connecting statistics, information theory, control and
   statistical physics.”
   - In an article entitled “The Statistical Century” published in the
   Royal Statistical Society News (Vol 22, Jan 1995), the Distinguished
   American Statistician Bradley Efron stated:
   Karl Pearson’s famous chi-square paper appeared in the spring of 1900,
   an auspicious beginning to a wonderful century for the field of statistics.
   The first half of the century was the golden age of statistical theory,
   during which our field grew from ad hoc origins, similar to the current
   state of computer science, into a firmly grounded mathematical science. Men
   of the intellectual calibre of Fisher, Neyman, Pearson, Hotelling, Wald,
   Cramer and Rao were needed to bring statistical theory to maturity
   - A review of C.R. Rao’s book, Linear Statistical Inference and its
   Applications, by the famous statistician, W.G. Cochran in the Journal of
   the Franklin Institute states the following:
   R. Rao would be found in almost any statistician’s list of the five
   outstanding workers in the world of Mathematical Statistics today. His book
   represents a comprehensive account of the main body of results that
   comprise modern statistics theory.
   - Efron, President of the American Statistical Association, mentions in
   the Issue 327, September 2004, of AMSTAT while introducing the article by
   C.R. Rao on Reflections on the past and visions for the future:
   C.R. Rao, Eberly Professor Emeritus in the Statistics Department at Penn
   State is a towering figure in the postwar development of statistical
   theory. Among his great many honors, he was recently awarded the National
   Medal of Science, the government’s highest scientific prize.
   - Karlin, mathematician who won President’s medal:
   C.R. Rao is among the worldwide leaders in statistical science over the
   last five decades. His research, scholarship, and professional service have
   had a profound influence in the theory and applications of statistics and
   are incorporated into standard references for statistical study and
   practice.C.R. Rao is not only a highly creative theoretician, but was
   attracted and labored with many data sets in health, biology, psychology,
   and social sciences.
   - Citation while awarding Hon. D.Sc. by the Ohio State University
   Among the international community of scholars, you are widely
   acknowledged as one of the world’s foremost statisticians. In the complex
   realms of statistics and higher mathematics, your research and scholarly
   writing have opened new doors of understanding. The statistical theories
   and applications, which bear your name, attest to the fundamental
   contributions you have made to your field and to the larger body of man’s
   knowledge. Numerous honors and awards have followed, in tribute to an
   unusually distinguished and productive life of inquiry. You have earned the
   highest accolade of all, the esteem of your peers throughout the world of
   scholarship.
   - Press release by Government of India on appointment as National
   Professor (limited to 12 at any time)
   Government has appointed C.R. Rao, an eminent statistician, as National
   Professor. Professor Rao is an outstanding and creative thinker in the
   field. He was appointed by Professor Mahalanobis as full-fledged professor
   of the Indian Statistical Institute at the early age of 29 in recognition
   of his creativity.
   - The Institute of Combinatorial Mathematics and its Applications
   elected C.R. Rao as an Honorary Member with the citation:
   …as the world’s leading expert in statistical design theory.
   - Armitage, Professor of Statistics, Oxford University, UK, writes in a
   review of Statistical Analysis and Inference (Ed. Y. Dodge):
   C. Radhakrishna Rao is a polymath amongst statisticians. …Rao’s research
   interests include social, industrial and economic applications. He has been
   (and still is) an influential teacher especially in third world countries.
   …The group of papers are interspersed with quatrains from Rubaiyat of Omar
   Khayyam of Naishapur, whose hedonistic nihilism seems to accord ill with
   C.R. Rao’s outlook:” Myself when young did eagerly frequent/ Doctor and
   Saint ,and heard great Argument/ About it and about: but evermore/ came out
   by the same door as I went”. Those of us who have frequented C.R.’s company
   have invariably found new doors open.
   - A. Fisher in a speech at the Indian Statistical Institute on February
   12, 1963:
   For its (ISI) educational programs, the institute needs not only leaders
   of mathematical thought like Professor Rao, who can uphold and maintain the
   high place in the world opinion that Indians have already won
   - KR  IRS  41024


On Fri, 4 Oct 2024 at 16:41, 'venkat giri' via iyer123 <
[email protected]> wrote:

>
> *Calyampudi Radhakrishna Rao, also known as C.R. Rao, was 102 years
> old when he received the International Prize in Statistics in 2023. The
> International Prize in Statistics is often called the "statistics'
> equivalent of the Nobel Prize". *
> *Rao was an Indian-American mathematician and statistician whose work
> influenced many fields, including economics, genetics, anthropology,
> geology, and medicine. His contributions include the Cramer-Rao bound,
> Rao-Blackwell theorem, and Cramer-Rao inequality. *
> *Rao was born on September 10, 1920 in Hadagali, which is now part of the
> Ballari district of Karnataka. He died in Buffalo, New York on August 22,
> 2023. *
> *SOURCE:GOOGLE*
> On Friday 4 October, 2024 at 04:25:46 pm IST, venkat giri <
> [email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
>
> Yahoo Mail: Search, organise, conquer
> <https://mail.onelink.me/107872968?pid=NativePlacement&c=Global_Acquisition_YMktg_315_EmailSignatureGrowth_YahooMail:Search,Organize,Conquer&af_sub1=Acquisition&af_sub2=Global_YMktg&af_sub3=&af_sub4=100000945&af_sub5=OrganizeConquer__Static_>
>
> ----- Forwarded message -----
> *From:* "Gopalakrishnan V" <[email protected]>
> *To:* "venkat giri" <[email protected]>
> *Cc:* "Iyer" <[email protected]>
> *Sent:* Fri, 4 Oct 2024 at 4:17 pm
> *Subject:* Re: AGE is not a HURDLE if one has WILL
> Very interesting! But is there a Nobel prize for Maths or Statistics?
>
> On Fri, Oct 4, 2024 at 6:34 PM venkat giri <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> RESPECTED Sir/s,
>
>    C. Radhakrishna Rao, retired at the age of sixty and went to live with
> his daughter in America along with his grandchildren.    There, at the age
> of 62, he became a professor of statistics at the University of Pittsburgh
> and at the age of 70, he became the head of the department at the
> University of Pennsylvania.  US citizenship at the age of 75. National
> Medal For Science at the age of 82, a White House honor.    Today, at the
> age of 102, he received the Nobel Prize in Statistics.   In India, the
> government has already honored him with Padma Bhushan (1968) and Padma
> Vibhushan (2001).  Rao says: No one asks after retirement in India.
> Colleagues also respect power and not scholarship.   At the age of 102,
> receiving a Nobel while in good physical condition, it is probably the
> first example. An event that should be taken into account by all of us !
>  Age is just a number. Willingness to work and excel always matter.
> -----
> Regards
> V.Sridharan
> Trichy
> Yahoo Mail: Search, organise, conquer
> <https://mail.onelink.me/107872968?pid=NativePlacement&c=Global_Acquisition_YMktg_315_EmailSignatureGrowth_YahooMail:Search,Organize,Conquer&af_sub1=Acquisition&af_sub2=Global_YMktg&af_sub3=&af_sub4=100000945&af_sub5=OrganizeConquer__Static_>
>
> --
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> .
>

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