Robyn Anne Owens

Australian mathematician and computer vision researcher
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAustralian mathematician and computer vision researcher
A.K.A.Robyn Owens Robyn A. Owens Robyn A Owens
A.K.A.Robyn Owens Robyn A. Owens Robyn A Owens
PlacesAustralia
isMathematician Researcher
Work fieldMathematics
Gender
Female
Education
University of OxfordOxford, Oxford, United Kingdom
Employers
University of Western AustraliaCity of Perth, Western Australia, Australia
Awards
Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science2020
Fellow of the Australian Academy of Technology and Engineering2012
Member of the Order of Australia2023
The details

Biography

Robyn Anne Owens AM FAA FTSE is an Australian applied mathematician and computer scientist known for her research in computer vision and face recognition, and on the non-invasive imaging of lactation. Formerly a professor at the University of Western Australia (UWA) and the deputy vice-chancellor for research at UWA, she retired in 2019, and remains affiliated with UWA as a professorial fellow.

Education and career

Owens earned a bachelor's degree in mathematics (with honours) at the University of Western Australia and a doctorate in mathematics at the Somerville College, Oxford. Her 1980 dissertation, Almost Periodic Hardy Spaces, was supervised by David Albert Edwards. She returned to the University of Western Australia after postdoctoral study at Paris-Sud University. Before becoming vice-chancellor for research, she headed the UWA School of Computer Science & Software Engineering.

Recognition

With her co-author Peter E. Hartmann, she was a winner of the 2010 Rank Prize in Nutrition, given at the Royal College of Physicians in London, for their work on the imaging of lactation.

Owens is a Fellow of the Australian Computer Society, a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Technology and Engineering (elected 2012), and a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science (elected 2020).

In the 2023 King's Birthday Honours Owens was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia for "significant service to science in the fields of computer vision and mathematics".

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 01 Nov 2024. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.