A Conversation with Peter Huber
Andreas Buja, Hans R. K\"unsch

TL;DR
This paper features an interview with Peter Huber, highlighting his pioneering work in robust statistics, his academic journey, and his diverse contributions to mathematics, statistics, and their applications.
Contribution
It introduces Huber's fundamental contributions to robust statistics and his interdisciplinary work across various scientific fields.
Findings
Huber's development of robust estimation methods.
His influential publications and books on statistics.
Applications of his work in crystallography and EEG analysis.
Abstract
Peter J. Huber was born on March 25, 1934, in Wohlen, a small town in the Swiss countryside. He obtained a diploma in mathematics in 1958 and a Ph.D. in mathematics in 1961, both from ETH Zurich. His thesis was in pure mathematics, but he then decided to go into statistics. He spent 1961--1963 as a postdoc at the statistics department in Berkeley where he wrote his first and most famous paper on robust statistics, ``Robust Estimation of a Location Parameter.'' After a position as a visiting professor at Cornell University, he became a full professor at ETH Zurich. He worked at ETH until 1978, interspersed by visiting positions at Cornell, Yale, Princeton and Harvard. After leaving ETH, he held professor positions at Harvard University 1978--1988, at MIT 1988--1992, and finally at the University of Bayreuth from 1992 until his retirement in 1999. He now lives in Klosters, a village in…
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