Mollie Holman

Mollie Elizabeth Holman AO FAA (18 June 1930 – 20 August 2010) was an Australian physiologist whose work focused on muscles and the central nervous system.

Personal life

Mollie Holman was born on 18 June 1930 in Launceston, Tasmania, Australia.

Daughter of an influential father William, a physician and radiologist and of homemaker mother Mollie (née Bain), Professor Holman was raised as one of four girls. Her father was very supportive of each daughter's intellectual development, and sparked and supported Mollie's interest in physics.[1]

Holman died on 20 August 2010. She is survived by her sisters Jill, Joan and Lucie and their families.[2]

Education

Holman completed a Bachelor of Science (BSc) degree at the University of Melbourne in 1952 and a Master of Science (MSc) in 1955. She then moved to England where she undertook studies at the University of Oxford, completing a doctorate in pharmacology in 1957.[3]

  • 1960s- Doctor of Science (DSc) received from Monash University

Working life

  • 1953-54 - Demonstrator in Pharmacology at the University of Melbourne-
  • 1955-57 - Research student at the University of Oxford, on a University of Melbourne Travelling Scholarship
  • 1957 - Wellcome Research Grant in Oxford
  • 1958-62 - Lecturer in Physiology at the University of Melbourne
  • 1962 - Senior Lecturer in Physiology at the University of Melbourne
  • 1963 - Senior Lecturer in Physiology at Monash University
  • 1965 - Edgeworth David Medal received from the Royal Society of New South Wales
  • 1965-7? - Career position - Reader in Physiology at Monash University
  • 1970 - Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science (FAA)
  • 1970-96 - Professor at Monash University
  • 1996 - Emeritus Professor at Monash University

Research

Professor Holman's research focused on the complex network of nerve cells that regulate autonomic movements (such as digestion and blood pressure), and how these interact with smooth muscle in the body.[1]

In a successful collaboration with Geoff Burnstock, Mollie showed how nerves initiated smooth muscle contractions. She often worked late at night to avoid the unwanted vibrations from the rumblings of passing daytime traffic that interfered with her fine electrodes. Holman completed her DPhil degree in 1957 and returned to Australia in 1958. At about the same time Burnstock was appointed to the department of zoology, allowing the collaboration to continue. Their work on smooth muscle and its nerve supply was pioneering. A series of papers was published, beginning with a note to Nature magazine in 1960. This brought Mollie to the attention of the scientific community.[2]

Sample paper from Google Scholar: [HTML] Two types of neurones in the myenteric plexus of duodenum in the guinea-pig GDS Hirst, ME Holman, I Spence - The Journal of Physiology, 1974 - Physiological Soc

Other interests

Mollie had a rich social life and many interests (ranging from roller-skating, as a child, to skiing and travel, as an adult) she applied herself after retirement to a range of tasks including learning about computers.[1]

Awards

  • 1965 - Edgeworth David Medal received from the Royal Society of New South Wales
  • 1998 - Officer of the Order of Australia (AO) "for service to scientific research, particularly relating to the autonomic nervous system and the control of smooth muscle, and to education and university administration".[4]
  • 2001 - Centenary Medal "for service to Australian society and science".[5]

The Mollie Holman Medal

Monash University offered for the first time in 1998, up to 10 medals for award to doctoral candidates, normally one from each faculty, who have fulfilled their degree requirements and presented their faculty's best thesis of the year.[1]

Notable recipients

Notable recipients include:

gollark: Oh, and unify ServiceWorker and WebWorker and SharedWorker and whatever into some sort of nicer "background task" API.
gollark: API coherency: drop stuff like XMLHttpRequest which is obsoleted by cleaner things like `fetch`, actually have a module system and don't just randomly scatter objects and functions in the global scope, don't have a weird mix of callbacks, events and promises everywhere.
gollark: Alternatively, cross-origin stuff is allowed but runs with separate cookies, caches, etc. to first-party requests, and comes with a "requested from this origin" header.
gollark: Cross-origin fixes: *no* use of crossdomain resources unless the other thing opts in. This breaks image hotlinking and such, which is annoying, but fixes CSRF entirely.
gollark: That doesn't really help with the security issues though.

References

  1. "Farewell to Mollie Holman (1930-2010)". Monash University. 2010-09-01. Retrieved 2016-05-16.
  2. Proske, Uwe (2010-10-13). "Key smooth cell researcher". The Age. Retrieved 2016-05-16.
  3. "Holman, Mollie Elizabeth (1930 - 2010) – Biographical entry". Encyclopedia of Australian Science. Retrieved 2016-05-16.
  4. Officer of the Order of Australia (AO), 8 June 1998, It's an Honour
  5. Centenary Medal, 1 January 2001, It's an Honour
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