Stevens’ Victor Lawrence Receives Nation’s Highest Technology Innovation Medal from White House
The communications pioneer and longtime Stevens professor and research scientist is celebrated for a lifetime of contributions to our modern world
Stevens professor and senior research scientist Victor Lawrence, a member of the faculty since 2005, has just been honored by the White House with a prestigious National Medal of Technology and Innovation.
The medal — which recognizes individuals and organizations for lasting contributions to America’s competitiveness, quality of life and a strengthened technological workforce — was conferred by White House Office of Science and Technology Policy Director Arati Prabhakar during a January 3 ceremony in Washington, D.C.
Lawrence, noted a White House video accompanying the ceremony, “revolutionized how the world connects.”
From moon shots to HDTVs and smartphones
Inspired as a Ghanaian teenager by U.S. President John F. Kennedy’s famous 1962 ‘moon shot’ speech and the orbital journeys of American astronaut John Glenn, Lawrence became interested in science and engineering at a young age.
Later, as an electrical and computer engineer for more than three decades with Bell Labs, his work would contribute to the foundations upon which the modern-day internet and mobile technologies were built.
Lawrence’s research helped enable the historic global transition from analog communication technologies to faster, more accurate digital communications techniques — including innovating a form of rounding arithmetic critical to digital-signal processing and conducting pioneering work on filtering technologies and digital modems.
He also led Bell Labs teams developing early high-definition television and digital-video technologies.
In addition, Lawrence dedicated considerable time and effort to the establishment of a systems architecture for subsea fiber-optic cable systems that now provide coastal African nations with reliable internet connectivity to the world.
“You have to stand on somebody’s shoulder to see far,” he commented on the White House honor, “but I also hope… my shoulders are strong enough for the next generation to be able to stand on and see far.”
Lawrence, who holds more than 50 U.S. and international patents, was previously honored in 2023 with a Science & Technology Medal by the Research & Development Council of New Jersey.