REFERENCES 



313 



TABLE 1 1-2. Table of Rate Constants and Steady-State Concentrations Evaluated by Ana- 

 log Computer and Giving Best Fit to Experimental Results. 



quantities will be fed into the analysis: red cell turnover rate, iron turnover 

 in the percursor step, the side reactions in the reticuloendothelial phase and 

 in the iron pigments, for example, plus better pre-experimental clinical data. 



REFERENCES 



1. Huff. R. L. andjudd, O. J., "Kinetics of Iron Metabolism," Ada. in Biol, and 



Med.Phys., 4,223 (1956). 



2. von Neumann, J., "The General and Logical Theory of Automata," in "The 



World of Mathematics," J. R. Newman, Ed., Simon & Schuster, Inc., New 

 York, N. Y., 1956, p. 2070. 



3. Hutley, A. M., "The Engineering Approach to the Problem of Neural Organiza- 



tion," Prog, in Biophysics and Biophysical Chem., 11, 26 (1961). 



4. Walter, W. G., "The Living Brain," Penguin Books, Ltd., Harmondsworth, 



England, 1961. 



5. Ashby, R., "Design for a Brain," Chapman and Hall, Ltd., London, 1952. 



6. Rothstein, J., "Communication, Organization and Science," The Falcon's Wing 



Press, Indian Hills, Colorado, 1958. 



7. Stacy, R. W., "Biological and Medical Electronics," McGraw-Hill Book Co., 



Inc., New York, N. Y., 1960. 



8. Abrams, Sir Adolphe, "The Human Machine," Penguin Books Inc., Baltimore, 



Md., 1958. 



9. "The Language and Symbology of Digital Computer Systems," R.C.A. Insti- 



tutes, Princeton, N.J. , 1961. 



10. Wiener, N., "Cybernetics," John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York, N. Y., rev. edn.. 



1961. 



1 1 . Cherry, C, "On Human Communication," John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York, 



N. Y., 1957. 



