412 HUMAN PHYSIOLOGY 



Chapter II. For Van Helmont, Foster, loc. cit., 133; 

 for. Priestley, the same, 237. For the " Cycle of Nitro- 

 gen:" Prescott and Winslow, "Elements of Water Bac- 

 teriology/' Third Edition, New York, Wiley, 1915, p. 4. 



Chapter III. For a parallel but fuller outline of 

 anatomy: Hough and Sedgwick, "The Human Mechan- 

 ism," Boston, Ginn, Second Edition, 1917, Chapter^ II and 

 III. 



Chapter IV. For ciliary reversal: Parker, American 

 Journal of Physiology, 1905, xiii, 1. 



Chapter V. For fatigue: Lee, Pop. Sci. Monthly, 

 February, 1910. For a full statement of the modern 

 conception of energy transformation in skeletal muscle: 

 Martin, "The Human Body," Tenth Edition, New York, 

 Holt, 1917. 



Chapter VI. For details of nervous tissue: Lickley, 

 "The Nervous System," New York, Longmans, 1912. 



Chapter VII. For an interesting discussion of reflexes: 

 Hough and Sedgwick, loc. cit., Chapter VII. 



Chapter VIII. For details: Lickley, loc. cit. 



Chapter IX. For a fascinating account of some of the 

 evidence relating to localization in the human brain: 

 Thomson, "Brain and Personality," New York, Dodd, 

 Mead, 1907. (Most physiologists are more conservative 

 than this writer.) Cf. Loeb, "Comparative Physiology 

 of the Brain," New York, The Science Series, 1900. 



Chapter X. Lickley, loc. cit., Chapter X. 



Chapter XL The same. 



Chapter XIL Pyle, loc. cit., 275-314. Courtney, 

 "The Conquest of Nerves," New York, Macmillan, 1911. 

 Cannon, "Bodily Changes in Pain, Hunger, Fear and 

 Rage," New York, Appleton, 1915. "Alcohol: Its Action 

 on the Human Organism" (authorized by a commission of 

 British scientists), New York, Longmans, 1918. 



Chapter XIII. Kimber, loc. cit. 



Chapter XIV. For movements of the stomach: 

 Cannon, "The Mechanical Factors of Digestion," 

 New York, Longmans, 1911. For a record of a memor- 



