Woolley spent much of his career at the
Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research in New York City. His major work focused on
serotonin in brain chemistry: how substances such as
LSD might affect the action of serotonin, how disorders of serotonin function might be responsible for mental disorders, and how serotonin might play a part in memory and learning. Though his career was shorter-lived than expected, subsequent work by others has developed many of Woolley's hypotheses in productive directions. One of his assistants,
Robert Bruce Merrifield, won the
Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1984, for work on
peptide synthesis they did together in the 1950s. In 1940 Woolley received the
Eli Lilly and Company-Elanco Research Award from the
American Society for Microbiology. In 1948 he received
Eli Lilly Award in Biological Chemistry from the
American Chemical Society. In 1952 he was elected to membership in the
National Academy of Sciences. He served as president of the Institute of Nutrition in 1959. Woolley was an author on over 200 research papers and book articles in his thirty-year career. Books by Woolley included
A Study of Antimetabolites (1952), and
The Biochemical Bases of Psychoses (1962). ==Personal life==