As an undergraduate at Princeton, Hsu won the 1985
LeRoy Apker Award of the
American Physical Society (APS) for outstanding achievements in physics by an undergraduate student. She was named a
Fellow of the American Physical Society in 2001, after a nomination from the APS Division of Materials Physics, "for pioneering work in applying scanning probe microscopy techniques to elucidate the nanometer scale electronic and optical properties of novel materials, in particular the physics related to defects". In 2007 she was elected as a Fellow of the
American Association for the Advancement of Science, and in 2011 she became a Fellow of the
Materials Research Society, "for contributions to understanding relationships between materials structure and electronic properties at the nanoscale via careful experimentation and technique development, and for leadership of the materials research community". She was named an Honorary Fellow of the
Technical University of Munich in 2018, and an Honorary International Chair Professor at
National Taipei University of Technology in 2020. ==References==