Geoffrey Stuart Watson, Professor Emeritus at Princeton University,
celebrated his 75th birthday on December 3, 1996. A native Australian, his
early education included Bendigo High School and Scotch College in Melbourne.
After graduating with a B.A. (Hons.) from Melbourne University in December
1942, he spent the next few years, during and after World War II, doing
research and teaching on applied mathematical topics. His wandering as a
scholar began in 1947, when he became a graduate student in the Institute of
Statistics in Raleigh, North Carolina. Leaving Raleigh after two years, he
wrote his thesis while visiting the Department of Applied Economics in
Cambridge University. Raleigh awarded him the Ph.D. degree in 1951.
¶ That same year, he returned to Australia, to a Senior Lectureship in
Statistics at Melbourne University. He moved in 1954 to a Senior Fellowship at
the Australian National University. Three years later, he left for England and
North America. In 1959, he became Associate Professor of Mathematics at the
University of Toronto. In 1962, he became Professor of Statistics at The Johns
Hopkins University in Baltimore. Soon thereafter he was appointed department
chairman. In 1970, he moved to Princeton University as Professor and Chairman
of Statistics. He became Professor Emeritus at Princeton in 1992.
¶ He has published numerous research papers on a broad range of topics
in statistics and applied probability. His best known contributions are the Durbin-Watson test for serial correlation, the Nadaraya-Watson estimator in nonparametric regression and fundamental methods for analyzing directional or axial data. He is the author of an important monograph, Statistics on Spheres. His professional honors include Membership in the International Statistical Institute and Fellowships of the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics and of the American Association for the Advancement of
Science. In private life, he is an accomplished painter of watercolors, a few
of which may be seen on his website (http://www.princeton.edu/gsw/) at
Princeton University. He married Shirley Elwyn Jennings in 1952. Their four
children, one son and three daughters, pursue careers in Japanese literature,
health care in Uganda, singing opera, and administering opera and ballet.