Computer graphics in medical research and hospital administration

Bibliographic Information

Computer graphics in medical research and hospital administration

edited by R. D. Parslow and R. Elliot Green

Plenum Press, 1971

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Includes bibliographical references

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The graphics terminal makes it possible for people who are not computer specialists to communicate with computers on an inter- active basis, without the delay or inconvenience of working constantly through an intermediary. It provides a language of shapes or symbols (full graphics) or words and numbers (alphanumerics) which is understood by both man and machine. The visual output and input facility has considerably widened the applications of computers within the medical world, bringing their enormous powers of data handling and simulation to bear on solving problems in adminis- tration, patient monitoring and clinical analysis and research. The purpose of this book is to provide examples of the work being carried out now in the U.K. and U.S.A., showing the applications of all types of installations-from small to very complex-for both administrative and research uses. It gives a brief overview of benefits already derived and of future plans; of hardware utilisation and of software approach; of problems met and of problems solved. The intention is to acquaint executives and researchers in all branches of the medical world with the rapid progress being made in computer graphics and to stimulate thought on which way the technique can be developed to the advantage of all.

Table of Contents

1 The Visual Display Unit for Data Collection and Retrieval.- 2 Graphic Presentation of Clinical Measurement and Monitoring.- 3 The Use of Graphic Input and Output Devices Attached to a Small Computer for Planning Radiotherapy Treatment.- 4 Small Computer Graphics in the Physiological Laboratory.- 5 Preliminary Analysis of Blood Flow Characteristics in the Abdominal Aorta by Computer Interpretation.- 6 Computer Graphics in Molecular Biology.- 7 Interactive Computer-Generated Stereoscopic Displays for Biomedical Research:.- I Development of Techniques.- II Applications.- III Development of the System for Molecular Structures.

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