An experimental psychologist, Gloria Twine Chisum, is primarily known for developing protective eyewear for pilots in extreme conditions.
Chisum was born in Muskogee, Oklahoma in 1930. She grew up in Muskogee but then attended Howard University, where she earned an undergraduate degree in psychology in 1951 and completed an MS in psychology in 1953. Chisum pledged Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority during her undergraduate years and was involved with the Howard University Players, a student-run dramatic group.
Chisum entered the University of Pennsylvania for graduate work, earning a Ph.D. in 1960. Her dissertation was titled “Transposition as a Function of the Number of Test Trials.” She parlayed her graduate research into her professional career, mainly in military research. One of her first positions was as the manager of the Life Sciences Research Group for the U.S. Navy. She later headed of the Environmental Physiology Research Team at the U.S. Naval Air Development Center in Warminster, Pennsylvania.
Dr. Chisum has served as a consultant to all branches of the U.S. Department of Defense, as well as many other organizations throughout the world. In the 1970s, she represented the United States government in several conferences held by the North Atlantic Treaty Organization Advisory Group for Aerospace Research and Development. During the mid-1970s, Dr. Chisum developed specialized protective goggles for pilots who operate high-performing aircraft, significantly decreasing their exposure to bright light and to losing consciousness.
An accomplished research psychologist, educator, and administrator, Chisum has received the Aerospace Medical Association’s Raymond F. Longacre Award, the University of Pennsylvania Alumni Award of Merit, and the Scientific Achievement Award. Additionally, Chisum has authored two books: the AN/PVS-5 Night Vision Laboratory Assessment (1975) and a 1978 book on laser eye protection for flight personnel. She is the first African American woman to serve as a member of the University of Pennsylvania’s Board of Trustees.
Chisum met her future husband, physician Melvin “Jack” Chisum, at the University of Pennsylvania in 1954 and were married on September 10, 1955, in her hometown of Muskogee, Oklahoma. Melvin Chisum died on October 22, 2014, at the age of 92 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Dr. Gloria Twine Chisum currently lives in a Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, suburb.