Name Pat Hanrahan Role Computer researcher | ||
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Awards Academy Award for Best Technical Achievement, Academy Scientific and Engineering Award Similar People Henrik Wann Jensen, Loren Carpenter, Maneesh Agrawala, Christian Chabot, Edwin Catmull | ||
People, Data and Analysis
Patrick M. Hanrahan (born 1954) is a computer graphics researcher, the Canon USA Professor of Computer Science and Electrical Engineering in the Computer Graphics Laboratory at Stanford University. His research focuses on rendering algorithms, graphics processing units, as well as scientific illustration and visualization.
Contents
- People Data and Analysis
- Pat Hanrahan Technology and the Democratization of Craft
- Education and academic work
- Career
- Awards
- References

Pat Hanrahan - Technology and the Democratization of Craft
Education and academic work

Hanrahan grew up in Green Bay, Wisconsin, and received a Ph.D. in biophysics from the University of Wisconsin–Madison in 1985. In the 1980s, he worked at the New York Institute of Technology Computer Graphics Laboratory and Digital Equipment Corporation.
Career

As a founding employee at Pixar Animation Studios from 1986 to 1989, Hanrahan was part of the design of the RenderMan Interface Specification and the RenderMan Shading Language. He was credited in Pixar productions, including The Magic Egg (1984), Tin Toy (1988) and Toy Story (1995).
In 1989, Hanrahan joined the faculty of Princeton University. In 1995, he moved to Stanford University. In 2003, Hanrahan co-founded Tableau Software and remained its chief scientist. In February 2005, Stanford University was named the first regional visualization and analytics center for the United States Department of Homeland Security, focused on problems in information visualization and visual analytics. In 2011, Intel Research announced funding for a center for visual computing, co-led by Hanrahan and Jim Hurley of Intel.
Awards
Hanrahan received three Academy Awards (known as "Oscars") for his work in rendering and computer graphics research. In 1993, Hanrahan and other Pixar founding employees were awarded a scientific and engineering award for RenderMan. In 2004 he shared a technical achievement award with Stephen R. Marschner and Henrik Wann Jensen, for research in simulating subsurface scattering of light in translucent materials. In 2014, he shared a technical achievement award with Matt Pharr and Greg Humphreys, for their formalization and reference implementation of the concepts behind physically based rendering, as shared in their book Physically Based Rendering.
Hanrahan received the 2006 Career Award for Visualization Research from the IEEE Visualization Conference, the 2003 SIGGRAPH Steven A. Coons Award for Outstanding Creative Contributions to Computer Graphics, for "leadership in rendering algorithms, graphics architectures and systems, and new visualization methods for computer graphics", and the 1993 SIGGRAPH Computer Graphics Achievement Award.
He became a member of the National Academy of Engineering in 1999, a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2007 and of the Association for Computing Machinery in 2008, and received three university teaching awards at Stanford.