Living Systems |
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Page 315
... cesses . Tissues do not constitute a level of living sys- tem because they do not have the essential subsystem- a decider - to coordinate all tissue of a particular kind throughout the organism . No organ is able to survive by itself ...
... cesses . Tissues do not constitute a level of living sys- tem because they do not have the essential subsystem- a decider - to coordinate all tissue of a particular kind throughout the organism . No organ is able to survive by itself ...
Page 442
... cesses.350 Both reception ( decoding ) and expression ( encoding and output transducing ) of gamma - coded information can be affected by damage to any part of this area . The more abstract and complicated the ideas , the more sensitive ...
... cesses.350 Both reception ( decoding ) and expression ( encoding and output transducing ) of gamma - coded information can be affected by damage to any part of this area . The more abstract and complicated the ideas , the more sensitive ...
Page 458
... cesses , " he notes , are often equated with cognition , the processes whereby people obtain objective knowl- edge about their environment and analyze informa- tion inputs from it . He wants more investigation of how a person learns ...
... cesses , " he notes , are often equated with cognition , the processes whereby people obtain objective knowl- edge about their environment and analyze informa- tion inputs from it . He wants more investigation of how a person learns ...
Contents
CHAPTER TWO to here | 5 |
CHAPTER THREE | 51 |
CHAPTER FOUR | 89 |
Copyright | |
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abstracting acid activity adjustment processes amino acids animals average axon behavior bits per second blood boundary brain cell membrane cellular cerebral cortex cesses changes channel capacity chemical complex cortex cross-level curves cytoplasm decoding decrease echelon encoding energy ensemble environment enzyme error Example experimental experiments extruder fibers filtering function higher hormones human HYPOTHESIS increased information input information input overload information output information processing information theory Input in bits input rate input transducer internal transducer living systems markers mation matter-energy median memory ment messages microtubules mitochondria mitosis molecules motor nerve nervous system neural neurons nucleus occur omission organelles organism level output rate output transducer percent produced protein Psychol pulses queuing rate of information reaction receptor cells refractory period Reprinted by permission response sensory signals similar species storage stored structure subjects substances suprasystem synapses synthesis theory tion tissue transmission transmitted types variables various