Overview
- Editors:
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Edward C. DeLand
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University of California, USA
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Table of contents (30 chapters)
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- Barbara B. Farquhar, Edward P. Hoffer, G. Octo Barnett
Pages 397-422
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- Edward C. DeLand, R. B. Dell, R. Ramakrishnan
Pages 449-464
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- Alan B. Forsythe, James R. Freed
Pages 523-539
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- Charles W. Slack, Douglas Porter, Warner V. Slack
Pages 559-563
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Back Matter
Pages 565-608
About this book
This first volume is but an introduction to the growing use of computer-based systems in health-science education. It is unlikely that the intellectual or applied system constructs herein are either exhaustive of the field or immutable; growth is inevitable. For one thing, the field is still fractured and loosely organized, which is an inevitable description of an adolescent science in a rich mine of ideas. There is emerging, however, an organizing concept. A short look into the future indicates that educational system design will be dominated by a concept which, for want of a better term, we may call an "information system." Actually, this term de rives from an early New York World's Fair exhibition designed by Charles Eames entitled the "Informational Machine," in which the designer illustrated once again his insight into the future by showing how in a fundamental manner the digital computer promised to affect and to change our lives; and this change is by no means completed. Even during the publication of this volume, the basic sciences re quisite to the development of an information machine have evolved significantly. The three intellectual areas to watch are developments in artificial intelligence, graphics and man/machine interaction, and basic component and computer system design.
Editors and Affiliations
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University of California, USA
Edward C. DeLand