Alan L. Hodgkin
– BiographyAlan
Lloyd Hodgkin was born in Banbury, Oxfordshire,
on February 5th, 1914. His parents were George Hodgkin (who died in Baghdad
in 1918) and Mary (Wilson) Hodgkin, now Mrs. Lionel Smith. Alan Lloyd Hodgkin
was educated at the Downs School, Malvern (1923-1927), Greshams School, Holt
(1927-1932), and Trinity College, Cambridge (1932-1936). His grandfather, Thomas
Hodgkin, and uncle, Robin Hodgkin, were historians and to begin with Alan hesitated
between history and science. However, he was strongly interested in natural
history and that decided him to take up biology and chemistry. After he had
become a scholar at Trinity, his future zoology teacher, Carl Pantin, advised
him to learn as much mathematics and physics as he could. This was good, if
painful, advice which has kept him busy ever since. As an undergraduate he started
some rather amateur experiments on frog nerve and continued this line for several
years, first as a research scholar and
later as a fellow of Trinity. At that
period the high table of Trinity included an astonishing array of scientific
talent, and Hodgkin found it inspiring if sometimes daunting to meet people
like J. J. Thomson, Rutherford, Aston, Eddington, Hopkins, G. H. Hardy and Adrian.
In the Physiological Laboratory he learnt about cable-theory from Rushton and
about amplifiers from Matthews, Grey Walter and Rawdon-Smith.A. V. Hill, who
refereed his fellowship thesis, had lent a copy to Gasser and this resulted
in an invitation to work in the latter's laboratory at the Rockefeller Institute
in New York. During that period (1937-1938) Hodgkin spent several weeks with
K. S. Cole at Woods Hole and there he learnt how to dissect squid axons. He
returned to Cambridge in 1938 and in the following year started a collaboration
with A. F. Huxley, whom he had the good fortune to teach.During the first few
months of the war Hodgkin worked on aviation medicine with Matthews at Farnborough
and from February 1940 to July 1945 in various parts of England on airborne
radar. The project with which he was most concerned was the development of a
scanning and display system for a 10-cm detection system in night-fighters.
After the war Hodgkin returned to Cambridge where he held a teaching post in
the Physiology Laboratory; A. F. Huxley returned a few months later and they
continued the collaboration which started before the war. R. D. Keynes joined
them a year later and there was soon a small group interested in ionic mechanisms
in living cells. Lord Adrian greatly assisted the progress, partly by lightening
the teaching load and partly by arranging with the Rockefeller Foundation for
a generous grant to support the work; later help was received from other bodies,
particularly the Nuffield Foundation and the Royal Society. Most of the experiments
on giant nerve fibres had to be done at a Marine Station, and since 1947 Hodgkin
has usually spent two or three months each year at the Laboratory of the Marine
Biological Association, Plymouth, where he has received much help from the director
and the staff of that laboratory.
Professor Hodgkin was elected to a fellowship
of the Royal Society in 1948 and
in 1951 became a Foulerton Research Professor of the Royal Society. He served
on the Royal Society Council from 1958-1960 and on the Medical Research Council
from 1959-1963; he was foreign secretary of the Physiological Society from 1961-1967.
In 1970 he was appointed John Humphrey Plummer Professor of Biophysics. He has
been xxx Alan L. stories - free porn Hodgkin incest Alan L. Насос - Hodgkin подиум акустический полностью Alan деревянный L. Hodgkin - President of the Marine Biological Association since L. Hodgkin fucking girls Alan foranimals - 1966, and Alan rape L. - Hodgkin sex phone President
L. Hodgkin sized Alan - lingerie plus of the girls foranimals Alan - Hodgkin fucking L. Royal Society since December 1970. In 1971 he was appointed Chancellor
of Leicester University.
Among the honours and awards which have been given to Prof. Hodgkin the following
might be mentioned: Royal Medal of the Royal Society, 1958; Copley Medal of
the Royal Society, 1965; Member of the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences, 1964;
Foreign Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and of the American
Philosophical Society; Member of the Deutsche Akademie «Leopoldina»
Honorary Fellow, Indian National
Science Academy; Hon. M. D. of the Universities
of Berne and Louvain; Hon. D.Sc. of the universities of Sheffield, Newcastle,
E. Anglia, Manchester, Leicester and London. He was made a KBE in the New Years'
Honours 1972.
While at the Rockefeller Institute in 1938 Hodgkin met Peyton Rous, the distinguished
pathologist, and he got to know his family. His daughter, Marion Rous, and Alan
Lloyd Hodgkin were married in 1944, while he was on a brief war-time visit to
America. They have lived in Cambridge since 1945 and have three daughters and
one son. Mrs. M. R. Hodgkin is Children's Book Editor at Macmillan Publishing
Company. His eldest daughter, Sarah (Mrs. R. Hayes), is married and has worked
in publishing with Gollancz Ltd. His second daughter, Deborah, is a research
student in Psychology at University College London. His son, Jonathan works
in Molecular Biology at Cambridge, and his youngest daughter, Rachel, is also
at Cambridge reading English.
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
Alan L. Hodgkin died on December 20, 1998.For more updated biographical information, see: 
 
 
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