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Thelma Estrin (1924-): First Female IEEE President

Posted March 08, 2012 12:00 AM by SavvyExacta

Thelma Estrin was an early pioneer in the application of computer technology to healthcare and medical research. She later became a professor at a number of colleges including the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA). Estrin was president of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society and vice president of the IEEE.

Education and Early Career

Estrin, pictured at the center of the top of the photo, was born in New York City. She originally studied accounting and history in college; her mother thought she would wind up a lawyer. That changed when her husband entered the U.S. Army during World War II. Estrin took a three-month engineering course and began working at Radio Receptor Company. She built electronic devices, working first as a machinist and then as an electronic technician.

After the war, she obtained her BSc, MSc, and Ph.D in electrical engineering from the University of Wisconsin - Madison. Her husband attended the same college at the same time. His education was financed by the GI Bill; Estrin sold her deceased mother's engagement ring to help pay her bills.

Computers and Biomedical Engineering

In 1951, Estrin's husband obtained a job back on the east coast. Estrin found her own job in the electroencephalography department at New York's Columbia Presbyterian Hospital Neurological Institute. At the hospital she developed an interested in biomedical engineering when her colleagues were interested in measuring the action potentials along the nerve fiber. She redesigned a frequency analyzer to examine EEGs quickly and accurately.

A physicist visited the institute where Estrin was working. He was interested in learning about computers so he could build one for Israel. Estrin's husband received a fellowship to go to Israel to build a computer and they both--with their young daughter--sailed there in 1953. Estrin helped redesign the computer's adder and multiplier, improving reliability by using newer vacuum tubes.

When Estrin's husband got a job on the faculty of UCLA she was unable to find work there because it was considered nepotism. She joined the faculty of a junior college in San Fernando Valley, CA teaching drafting. Through a colleague Estrin joined the Brain Research Institute (BRI) in 1960 and became director of its Data Processing Laboratory. She published 50 technical papers on the use of computing technology in healthcare. She also provided support for research projects by promoting the use of computers and helping scientists use computers to solve problems.

Estrin received an appointment to the anatomy department and eventually to the computer science department at UCLA. She also served as president of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society. She was the first woman elected to national office as vice president of the IEEE.

Editor's Note - If you're interested in reading more about Thelma Estrin, I highly recommend you check out the first resource link, below. It's a transcript of an interview where you can read about her background in her own words.

Resources:

Women in the History of Computing Technology - Thelma Estrin

IEEE Global History Network - Oral-History: Thelma Estrin

Wikipedia - Thelma Estrin

Women in Computer Science - Thelma Estrin

http://archive.computerhistory.org/resources/still-image/WEIZAC/102707324.03.01.lg.jpg [image]

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#1

Re: Thelma Estrin (1924-): First Female IEEE President

03/13/2012 8:23 AM

Excellent, but that pic should really be in the caption competition!
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Re: Thelma Estrin (1924-): First Female IEEE President

03/13/2012 8:59 AM

I thought it was interesting. That's why I chose it over the typical portrait.

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Re: Thelma Estrin (1924-): First Female IEEE President

03/13/2012 9:08 AM

I thought .
"Has the mouse gone yet?"
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