Background
Deyrup-Olsen, Ingrith Johnson was born on December 22, 1919 in Englewood, New Jersey, United States. Daughter of Alvin Saunders and Edith Henry (Henry) Johnson.
Deyrup-Olsen, Ingrith Johnson was born on December 22, 1919 in Englewood, New Jersey, United States. Daughter of Alvin Saunders and Edith Henry (Henry) Johnson.
She earned a degree in zoology from Barnard College in 1940, and a Doctor of Philosophy in physiology from Columbia University in 1944. All six of her siblings also attended either Barnard or Columbia.
Deyrup-Olsen began her academic career as an assistant professor of zoology at Barnard College, and teaching physiology at Columbia"s medical school. She became a full professor at Barnard in 1959. She joined the faculty at the University of Washington in 1964.
Her research focused banana slugs and on the chemical structure of the mucus they produce for locomotion.
"The thing that"s wonderful about slugs," she explained to a reporter, "is that they make a lot of mucus and they do it on the skin, while we make it on the inside." Her work had implications for other mucus-production topics, including cystic fibrosis. Ingrith Deyrup-Olsen received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1953.
She was also a Fulbright Scholar in 1954, to fund work in Denmark. In 1956 she was one of two women to receive research grants from the Arctic Institute of North America, to study low-temperature adaptations in the tissues of arctic rodents.
In 1992 she was honored with a Barnard Medal of Distinction.
She was one of the few women to serve on committees of the American Physiological Society before 1970. Later in life, as "the slug lady," she was a guest on The David Letterman Show. She was president of the university"s chapter of Sigma Xi in her retirement.
Among her students at Barnard were chemistry professor Helen M. Berman (who began working in Deyrup"s laboratory as a high school student), and neuroscientist Susan Schwartz-Giblin.
Fellow American Association for the Advancement of Science. Member American Physiological Society (education committee), American Society Zoologists (education committee), Society General Physiologists (education committee), National Association Biology Teachers (honorary), Sigma Xi, Phi Beta Kappa.
Married Sigurd M. Olsen, December 28, 1962 (deceased).