Information Technology Reference
In-Depth Information
[92] B. J. West, V. Bhargava and A. L. Goldberger, “Beyond the principle of similitude:
renormalization in the bronchial tree,”
J. Appl. Physiol
.
60
, 1089-1098 (1986).
[93] B. J. West and A. Goldberger, “Physiology in fractal dimensions,”
American Scientist
75
,
354 (1987).
[94] B. J. West,
Fractal Physiology and Chaos in Medicine
, Singapore: World Scientific (1990).
[95] B. J. West and W. Deering, “Fractal physiology for physicists: Lévy statistics,”
Phys. Rep.
246
, 1-100 (1994).
[96] B. J. West,
The Lure of Modern Science
, Singapore: World Scientific (1995).
[97] B. J. West, “Physiology in fractal dimensions: error tolerance,”
Ann. Biomed. Eng.
18
, 135-
149 (1990).
[98] B. J. West and L. Griffin, “Allometric control of human gait,”
Fractals
6
, 101-108 (1998);
“Allometric control, inverse power laws and human gait,”
Chaos, Solitons & Fractals
10
,
1519-1527 (1999).
[99] B. J. West, L. A. Griffin, H. J. Frederick and R. E. Moon, “The independently fractal nature
of respiration and heart rate during exercise under normobaric and hyperbaric conditions,”
Respiratory Physiol. & Neurobiol
.
145
, 219-233 (2005).
[100] B. J. West,
Where Medicine Went Wrong
, Singapore: World Scientific (2006).
[101] J. C. Willis,
Age and Area: A Study in Geographical Distribution and Origin of Species
,
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (1922).
[102] T. A. Wilson, “Design of bronchial tree,”
Nature
213
, 668-669 (1967).
[103] M. E. Wise, “Skew distributions in biomedicine including some with negative power of
time,” in
Statistical Distributions in Scientific Work
, Vol. 2, eds. G. P. Patil, S. Kotz, and J.
K. Ord, Dordrecht: D. Reidel (1975), pp. 241-262.
[104] G. K. Zipf,
Human Behavior and the Principle of Least Effort: An Introduction to Human
Ecology
, Cambridge, MA: Addison-Wesley (1949).