ELECTRICAL MEASUREMENTS 189 



SELECTED REFERENCES 



Anonymous, The Radio Amateur's Handbook, 38th ed. Amateur 

 Radio Relay League, 1960. The various editions of this handbook 

 have been among the most useful references for those who work with 

 electronics. 



Lion, Kurt S., Instrumentation in Scientific Research: Electrical 

 Input Transducers. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc., 

 1959. A truly remarkable coverage of a difficult subject: compre- 

 hensive, detailed, factual, and yet readable. 



Lurch, E. Norman, Fundamentals of Electronics. New York: John 

 Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1960. Deliberately written for people who are 

 not engineers. 



Stacy, Ralph W., Biological and Medical Electronics. New York: 

 McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc., 1960. 



Whitfield, I. C, An Introduction to Electronics for Physiological 

 Workers, 2nd ed. London: Macmillan & Co. Ltd., 1960. Whitfield 

 uses the British terminology (for example, he refers to vacuum tubes 

 as "valves"), but some of his explanations are the most lucid to be 

 found anywhere. 



