GEEELEY, COLORADO. 41 



12. Influences of Small Doses of Alcohol on Capacity for 

 Muscular Work (5 Figures): Rivers and Weber, British 

 Jr. of Psycli., Jan., 1908, vol. II, Part 3, pp. 261-280. 



13. Fatigue, Normal and Abnormal: McMillan, Early Child- 

 hood, chap. 10, pp. 155-180. 



14. General and Special Characteristics of Fatigue: Mosso, 

 Fatigue, chap. 4, pp. 74-102. 



15. Fatigue: Donaldson, Growth of the Brain, chap. 16, 

 pp. 309-323. 



16. Fatigue — Causes, Laws, Signs of, etc.: Kirkpatrick, 



Fundamentals of Child Study, chap. 17, pp. 321-332. 



17. A New Type of Ergograph: J. A. Bergstrom, Am. Jr. of 

 Psych., July-Oct., 1903, vol. XIV, Nos. 3 and 4, pp. 246- 

 276. 



18. Attention Waves as a Means of Measuring Fatigue: W. 

 B. Pillsbury, Amer. Jr. of Psych., 1903, vol. XIV, pp. 

 541-552. 



19. On the Invalidity of Aesthesiometric Method as a 

 Measure of Mental Fatigue: G. B. Germann, Psych. 

 Rev., 1899, vol. VI, No. 6, pp. 590-605. 



20. Some Effects of Incentives on Work and Fatigue: W. R. 

 Wright, Psych. Rev., 1906, vol. XIII, 22-34. 



II. FATIGUE IN ANIMALS: 



1. History of the Study of the Movements of Animals: 



Mosso, Fatigue, chap. 2, pp. 30-49. 



2. Fatigue in Migration of Birds, etc.: Mosso, Fatigue, 

 chap. 1, pp. 1-29. 



III. ARREST OF DEVELOPMENT DUE TO OVERPRESSURE 



IN SCHOOL WORK: 



1. Artificial Production of Stupidity in Schools: Pop. Sci. 

 Mon., vol. I, pp. 129-143. 



2. The Insanity of the Overexertion of the Brain: J. Batty 

 Tuke, The Brain, 1896, Parts LXXIII-LXXVI, pp. 121- 

 129. 



