Harman, who worked into his mid-90s at the University of Nebraska Medical Center, died yesterday after a brief illness at a hospital in Omaha, medical center spokesman Tom O'Connor said.
Harvard Medical School professor David Sinclair said Harman's research inspired thousands of young scientists to work on aging research.
"Dr Harman is one of the most influential scientists of the past 50 years, bringing world-class science to what was once a backwater of biology," Sinclair said in a statement yesterday.
The medical community initially scoffed at Harman's theory. But by the 1980s, free radicals had become part of research into cancer, cardiovascular disease and strokes. Free radicals have since been linked to Alzheimer's disease.
Sinclair said the theory "is a cornerstone of the aging field."
Harman believed the aging process could be slowed by reducing the production of free radicals with a healthy diet, regular exercise and taking certain vitamins. He also recommended not smoking and limiting drinking alcohol.
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