DR. PHILIP S. HOLZMAN, AT 82
Philip S. Holzman, the founder and director of McLean Hospital's
Psychology Research Laboratory and one of the country's leading
researchers on schizophrenia, died Tuesday after a post-surgery stroke
at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. He was 82.
Dr. Holzman was well known for his research on schizophrenics and
their unaffected relatives. While most studies of the disorder begin and
end at analyzing a schizophrenic's symptoms, Dr. Holzman went beyond
that, his colleagues said. Some of his most influential experimentation
examined the eye movement of schizophrenics and their relatives. Dr.
Holzman found that eye movement in schizophrenics and their relatives is
usually erratic. Because people who have the disease and their relatives
experience the same type of eye movement patterns, studying it could
provide clues as to what types of genes put people at risk for the
illness.
This discovery changed the way scientists study schizophrenia, said
Dr. Bruce Cohen, president and psychiatrist in chief at McLean Hospital,
because it established the disease as a brain disorder.
"He'll leave a void that can't be filled for so many reasons," Cohen
said. "I don't think you can come close to finding anyone in the field
who had the breadth of view of the illness that Phil had."
While Dr. Holzman is known throughout the world as a preeminent
scientist, he was a humble man, said Dr. Jerome Kagan, who became a
friend and academic colleague during their tenure at Harvard
University.
"He comes close to what Americans regard as ideal," Kagan said,
describing him as a sanguine person with an extraordinary sense of
humor.
After receiving a bachelor's degree in 1943 from the College of the
City of New York, he earned a doctoral degree from the University of
Kansas in 1952. Dr. Holzman trained at the Menninger Foundation School
of Clinical Psychology, the Winter Veterans Administration Hospital, and
Topeka Institute for Psychoanalysis in Kansas.
In Topeka, Dr. Holzman cofounded the Fine Arts Society, which
arranged chamber music concerts for which he penned the program notes.
Later in life he started taking cello lessons and eventually played in
chamber music groups, said one of his sons, Carl Holzman.
He later joined the faculty of the University of Chicago as a
professor in the departments of psychology and psychiatry, and in 1977
he founded the Psychology Research Laboratory at McLean Hospital in
Belmont. He led the laboratory and its staff of about 10 until his
death. He was also the Esther and Sidney R. Rabb Professor in the
Department of Psychology at Harvard University and a professor in the
department of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School.
In Boston, Dr. Holzman became involved with many of the area's
scientific community organizations. He was a communications secretary
for the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, a scientific council
member for the National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and
Depression, and a member of the Institute of Medicine of the National
Academy of Sciences.
He also had a lifelong affinity for nature, despite his urban roots,
his son said. As an avid mountain climber, he scaled the highest peaks
of the Rockies in treks that often began at 3 a.m.
Besides his son, Dr. Holzman leaves his wife of 58 years, Ann;
another son, Paul; a daughter, Natalie Bernardoni; a sister, Sylvia
Steinbrock; and three grandchildren.
He was buried in Chicago. A private memorial service will be today.
In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations be sent to the
National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression.
Author(s): Katie Nelson, Globe Correspondent Date: June 4,
2004 Page: C24 Section: Obituary