Harry Blum (January 30, 1924[1] – April 19, 1987) was a researcher at the National Institutes of Health,[2] known for his work in 1967 introducing the medial axis and grassfire transform of a shape,[3] and more generally for his work on shape analysis, topological skeletonization,[4] biological form, and visual perception.
[1] During World War II, he worked for the Navy in the New York Naval Shipyard.
After the war, he became an engineer for the New York City Subway before going to Cornell University, where he graduated in 1950.
[5] From 1950 to 1958 he worked for the United States Air Force at the Rome Air Development Center,[5] also earning a master's degree in electrical engineering at Syracuse University in 1958.
[1] He joined the National Institutes of Health, in the Lab of Statistical and Mathematical Methodology of the Division of Computer Research, in 1967, and retired in 1982.