| No. | Section | Name | Professional Affiliation | Citation |
| 1 | Tokyo | Yasuhiko Arakawa | University of Tokyo | for contributions to the understanding of quantum confinement effects in semiconductor lasers and the development of quantum dot lasers. |
| 2 | Kanasai | Mituhiko Araki | Matuse National College of Technology | for contributions to control theory and its industrial/medical applications. |
| 3 | Tokyo | Tohru Furuyama | Toshiba Corp. | for contributions to high speed dynamic random access memory (DRAM) design and technologies. |
| 4 | Fukuoka | Masanori Hara | Kyushu Univ. | for contributions to electrical insulation technology in superconducting power devices. |
| 5 | Tokyo | Shinji Hara | University of Tokyo | for contributions to robust, servo tracking, and sampled-data control theories. |
| 6 | Tokyo | Hideki Hashimoto | University of Tokyo | for contributions to mechatronics systems. |
| 7 | Tokyo | Hideki Hayashi | Sumitomo Electric Industries,Ltd. | for contributions to and leadership in compound semiconductor device technologies. |
| 8 | Tokyo | Kazuhiro Hirasawa | Tokyo University of Aguriculture and Technology | for contributions to antennas for mobile communications. |
| 9 | Kansai | Katsuo Ikeda | Osaka Institute of Technology | for contributions to and leadership in informatics education. |
| 10 | Nagoya | Naoki Inagaki | Nanzan University | for contributions to array antenna design. |
| 11 | Hiroshima | Makoto Kaneko | Hiroshima University | for contributions to design, sensing, and manipulation schemes for robotic hands. |
| 12 | Kanasai | Masatsugu Kidode | Nara Institute of Science and Technology | for contributions to high-speed local parallel image processors. |
| 13 | Kansai | Tetsuro Kobayashi | Osaka University | for contributions to ultrafast optoelectronics and electrooptic devices. |
| 14 | Sendai | Kazuhiro Kosuge | Tohoku University | for contributions to multiple robots coordination and human-robot interface. |
| 15 | Tokyo | Youji Kotsuka | Tokai University | for contributions to ferrite application to RF/microwave devices. |
| 16 | Tokyo | Tadahiro Kuroda | Keio University | for contributions to low-power and high-speed very large scale integrated (VLSI) design. |
| 17 | Tokyo | Hideo Kuwahara | Fujitsu Laboratories Ltd. | for contributions to high capacity optical fiber communication technologies. |
| 18 | Nagoya | Hiroshi Murase | Nagoya University | for contributions to image recognition and multimedia content monitoring systems. |
| 19 | Tokyo | Masao Nakagawa | Keio University | for contributions to the advancement of code division multiple access (CDMA) and mobile communications. |
| 20 | Tokyo | Juro Ohga | Shibaura Institute of Technology | for research, development and standardization activity for electroacoustical transducers of telephony. |
| 21 | Tokyo | Hiroshi Sakou | Central Research Laboratory, Hitachi, Ltd. | for contributions to machine vision technology. |
| 22 | Tokyo | Masatoshi Suzuki | KDDI R&D Laboratories | for contributions to high-speed optical communication systems. |
| 23 | Tokyo | Shuichi Tahara | NEC Corp. | for contributions to superconducting digital integrated circuits and single-flux quantum electronics. |
| 24 | Tokyo | Tomohiko Taniguchi | Fujitsu Laboratories Ltd. | for contributions to speech coding technologies and development of digital signal processing (DSP) based communication systems. |
| 25 | Tokyo | TsuneoTokumitsu | Eudyna Devices Inc. | for contributions to uniplanar and 3-dimensional monolithic microwave integrated circuits (MMICs). |
| 26 | Tokyo | Katsuyoshi Washio | Central Research Laboratory, Hitachi, Ltd. | for contributions to high-speed silicon and silicon germanium bipolar/Bi complimentary metal oxide semiconductors (CMOS) device and circuit technologies. |
| 27 | Tokyo | Tadashi Watanabe | Ministry of Education,Culture,Sports,Science and Technology | for contributions to supercomputer architectures. |
