Haldan K. Hartline
– BiographyHaldan Keffer Hartline was born in Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania,
on December 22nd, 1903. His parents were teachers there in the State Normal
School (now Bloomsburg State College) where he received his early education.
His father, Daniel S. Hartline,
was Professor of Biology, but a man whose wide
interests also included Astronomy and Geology. It was through his father that
Keffer became interested in Natural Sciences.Keffer Hartline attended Lafayette
College in Easton, Pennsylvania, graduating in 1923 (B. Sc.). His college teacher
of biology, Beverly W. Kunkel, encouraged him to undertake research; his first
scientific paper concerned visual responses of land isopods. Summers at the
Marine Biological Laboratory at Woods Hole added to his biological training;
there he was especially influenced by Jacques Loeb, Selig Hecht, and Merkel
H. Jacobs.In the autumn of 1923 he entered the Johns Hopkins School where he
was encouraged to continue his research interest in vision in the Department
of Physiology under E. K. Marshall and C. D. Snyder. Dr. Snyder let him use
his Einthoven string galvanometer
with which Hartline undertook the study of
the retinal action potential using frogs, decerebrate cats and rabbits. He learned
to obtain electroretinograms from intact animals, and recorded clearly recognizable
retinal action potentials from human subjects. He also used intact insects for
quantitative studies.
After receiving his M. D. from Johns Hopkins in 1927 a National Research Council
Fellowship (Medical Sciences) enabled him to study Mathematics and Physics so
as to strengthen his background for future biophysical research. He spent two
years in the Physics Department of Johns
Hopkins taking courses and working
as a student in the laboratory of A. H. Pfund; F. D. Murnaghan was his teacher
of mathematics. In 1929 he received an Eldridge Reeves Johnson Traveling Fellowship
from the University of Pennsylvania, for a continuation of his studies in Physics.
He spent one semester with W. Heisenberg's seminar group in the University of
Leipzig and two semesters attending lectures by A. Somerfeld at the University
of Munich.
In the spring of 1931 Hartline returned to the United States taking a position
at the University of Pennsylvania, in Philadelphia, in the Eldridge Reeves Johnson
Foundation for Medical Physics, which was under the directorship of Detlev W.Bronk.
This was the start of a stimulating association with Bronk, which has continued
to the present time.
At the Johnson Foundation Hartline
began his studies on the activity of single
optic nerve fibers in the eye of the horseshoe crab, Limulus, recording
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adaptation. In the mid 1930's he undertook the single fiber analysis of the
optic responses of the vertebrate retina, principally in the eye of the frog.
In the early 1940's Hartline worked on problems of night vision in human subjects.
In 1940-1941 he was Associate Professor of Physiology at Cornell Medical College
in New York City, but returned to the Johnson Foundation where he stayed until
1949.
In 1949 Hartline accepted a position at Johns Hopkins University as Professor
of Biophysics and Chairman of the Thomas C. Jenkins Department of Biophysics.
There, he began with his colleagues work on intracellular recording from receptor
units in the Limulus eye. It was at that time that he took up the study
of the inhibitory interaction in the Limulus retina, begun briefly several
years before. In 1963 he accepted his present position as Professor at the Rockefeller
University (then the Rockefeller Institute). Hartline was joined there, in 1954,
by Floyd Ratliff and they have continued to the present time collaboration in
their joint laboratory on the study of receptor properties and inhibitory interaction
in the eye of Limulus, and on related aspects of visual physiology.
Hartline was awarded the William H.
Howell Award (Physiology) in 1927; the Howard
Crosby Warren Medal (Society of Experimental Psychologists) in 1948; an Sc.
D. (hon.) from Lafayette College, 1959; the Albert A. Michelson Award ( Case
Institute of Technology) in 1964; a degree of LL. D. from the Johns Hopkins
University in 1969; and an hon. D.Sc. from the University of Pennsylvania in
1971; the Lighthouse Award in 1969; hon. M.D. Albert-Ludwigs University, Freiburg
im Breisgau, 1971.
Professor Hartline is a Member of the National Academy of Sciences; Foreign
Member of the Royal Society (London); Member of the American Academy of Arts
and Sciences; Member of the American Philosophical Society, American Physiological
Society, Optical Society of America, Biophysical Society, etc.
In 1936 Haldan Keffer Hartline married Elizabeth Kraus, daughter of the eminent
chemist C. A. Kraus. At that time she was instructor in Comparative Psychology
at Bryn Mawr College. They have three sons, Daniel Keffer, Peter Haldan, and
Frederick Flanders. Daniel Keffer and Peter Haldan have positions in neurophysiology
in the University of California at San Diego; Frederick Flanders is still engaged
in graduate studies in the biological sciences.
Haldan K. Hartline died on March 17, 1983.
 
 
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