
The McAulay-Hope
Prize for Original Biophysics
Biophysicists are by
nature innovative. Crossing the
boundaries of many scientific fields, biophysics inherently calls for
the
development of new techniques, equipment and models. The McAulay-Hope
Prize for
Original Biophysics is designed to recognise true originality and
innovation
in the field of biophysics, rather than the use of existing techniques
or
applications.
The Prize comprises a medal
and $1000 to be used to promulgate and further develop the recipient's
work and
ideas.
The recipient will be awarded
the medal (and cheque) and will present a plenary on their work at the
annual
meeting.
This Prize is not given each
year but rather will only be awarded when a truly original biophysicist
is
nominated (and seconded) by members of the society (without
self-nomination).
The Original Biophysicist was
initiated by a donation from one of the founders of the Australian
Society for
Biophysics, Professor Alex Hope.
About Alexander
Leicester McAulay
Alexander Leicester McAulay
graduated from the University of Tasmania in 1916, joined the staff as
a
lecturer in 1922 and was Professor of Physics from 1926 to 1959. His
father was
Professor of Mathematics and Physics before him!
McAulay
was almost certainly Australia’s first Biophysicist.
Here are a couple of impressions from Alex
Hope’s autobiography “Driven by Electricity” (Book One: “Growing up in
Tasmania, 1928-52”).
(On
choosing an Honours programme in the Physics Department)..
He did not See a Ray of Hope in Optical Physics, Cosmic
Rays were less than Cosmic, Theoretical Physics was - well, too
Theoretical for
a practical chap, leaving Biophysics with Professor McAulay. This original man had pioneered in Australia
the study of the mutations in yeast caused by Ultraviolet radiation. He now proposed a project to investigate the
electric fields in and around plant roots and shoots, which he
considered could
be developmental forces in plant growth.
Bioelectricity sounded fun to an electronics freak.
The Professor’s
style of supervision could be described
as unconscious pressure. He probably did
not realise the devastating effect of comments such as “Well, Hope,
I’ll come
back when you have got it working” and his prompt striding away. He had visited the experimental setup just as
problems were encountered, so we could not show progress.
In his appearance, Prof McAulay was slightly
eccentric; while others wore suits and tie (around the neck), he could
be seen
with tie as trouser belt, magnifying lens dangling on a string. A somewhat plummy English accent added to the
total effect.
McAulay later supervised the Ph.D. programmes
of Alan Walker and Bruce Scott.
Prize Conditions
-
Applications
will be evaluated by a committee of
Society Council members, ex-Council members or former awardees, with a
decision
on Prizes made not less than 2 months before each conference.
- Awardees will be presented with a medal and a
cheque
for $1000 at the annual conference and will present a lecture at that
conference on their original work.
- The
McAulay-Hope Prize for Original Biophysics is open to
all financial members of the Society meeting the eligibility criteria
and is
designed to recognise outstanding original biophysics. The biophysics
should
have been undertaken principally in Australia or New Zealand. There is
no age
limit on applicants for this Prize.
Eligibility
Criteria & Application Procedure
- Nominees should have been members of the
Society for at
least two years immediately preceding their nomination.
- Nominators should be current members of the
Society.
- Nominations should be sent to the ASB
Secretary, currently Paul Smith, paul.smith@anu.edu.au.
- Nominations should consist of a covering
letter
summarising the original achievements of the nominee, a Curriculum
vitae
including a complete list of publications, and two confidential
referees’
reports sent direct to the Secretary. Referees should address the
specified
selection criteria in a report of 2 pages or less. Nominators should
seek the
approval of the nominee prior to submitting a nomination.
- If a candidate's nomination is not successful
in any
given year, the Prize Committee will re-consider it the following year,
preferably in an updated form. Once a nomination has been considered in
two
successive years, it would not normally be considered again in the next
one or
two years. A maximum of four nominations for a single candidate in a
six-year
period will be considered by the Prize Committee.
Selection Criteria
& Procedures
Selection criteria
include:
- Quality and impact of the original
work in journals of high international
reputation
- Service
to and impact in the biophysics community of the original biophysics
Selection
procedures:
- Prizes will be decided upon by an Prize
Committee
consisting of four Society Council members, ex-Council members or
former
awardees, together with the Society Secretary, who should normally not
be a
voting member.
- No person shall serve on the Prize Committee
for more
than two consecutive terms.
- The composition of the Prize Committee will
be decided
either by the ASB Council or by election at the AGM of the Society held
during
the annual conference.
- When a Prize nomination is received for a
member of
the Prize Committee, that member will step down from the Prize
Committee and be
replaced by another member meeting the criteria for Prize Committee
membership.
The replacement will be chosen by the ASB Council.
- Where a clear decision cannot be made by the
Prize
Committee, the application may be sent to a third referee, usually an
eminent
international scientist not connected with any applicant.
- The Prize Committee
reserves the right to not grant
the Prize.