1. The first Japanese to be nominated for the Nobel Prize were Saisanro Kitari and Hideki Noguchi. However, the 1901 Physiology or Medicine Prize was awarded to Emyr Adolf von Behring alone, ignoring Beili, who developed serum therapy together and led antitoxin research, making the Nobel Prize discriminatory from the beginning.
2. In 1926, the Physiology or Medicine Award was awarded to the wrong theory of Johannes Fabig, ignoring the world's first artificially induced cancer, Katsuraro Yamaguchi and Yoichi Shikawa. Because the judges advocate "Don't let yellow people win too early". Now, in the "Nobel Prize in Cancer Research" introduced in the British Encyclopedia, only the achievements of Mountain Pole are mentioned, and Phoebig is completely deleted.
3. The chemistry prize in 1929 ignored Mei Taro Suzuki, who was the first person in the world to successfully extract thiamine, because the German translation of Suzuki's paper did not claim to be "the first in the world".
4. Between 1951 and 1963, six people were nominated for the Physics Prize and the Chemistry Prize. Later, the physics prize in 1969 was awarded to Murray Gelman alone, ignoring Nishishima and Yoshihiko, who jointly proposed the Gelman West Island relationship. The chemistry prize in 1996 ignored Yinger Ozawa, who predicted the existence of c60 molecule in the world at first, because Ozawa's paper was not translated and the judges did not understand Japanese. Because of the discovery of neutrino oscillation in 1998, Yoji Otsuka was regarded as "bound to win the prize" and never won the prize.
5. Up to the 21st century, the Nobel Prize still misses the Japanese many times. Because Japan's scientific strength has been underestimated for a long time, many Japanese have not been nominated or missed.
6. The first Japanese winner appeared in 1949. The award of Hideki Tomokawa inspired the self-confidence of Japanese people after the defeat. Kenichi Tanaka, a private enterprise technician who only graduated from university, won the award in 2002, which caused a worldwide topic.