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1. General texts: Logo


These were used to provide all the original figures which were used in my lectures, most of which were provided for you in the H/O's, although they might well be regarded as being rather small. I found the basic texts that are on your reference list to be adequate for most purposes and I did not find any factual contradictions. I believe that good diagrams can help one understand complex mechanisms far more readily than any amount of words. For this reason I dotted around the texts in order to pull out the figures which I thought were the 'best' in each case. In point of fact, any one of the texts could have provided OK figures and you should use which ever text suits your taste. Please note that all these texts have a reference section at the end of each chapter - you could do worse that look at some of these if the text book itself doesn't have answers to all your questions!

  • Berne & Levy. PHYSIOLOGY 3rd Ed. (1993) or 4th Ed. (1998)
  • Vander Sherman & Luciano. HUMAN PHYSIOLOGY 6th Ed. (1994)
  • Guyton & Hall. TEXTBOOK OF MEDICAL PHYSIOLOGY 9TH Ed. (1996)
  • Alberts, Bray, Lewis, Raff, Roberts & Watson. MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE CELL 3rd Ed. (1994)
  • Bray, Cragg, Macknight, Mills & Taylor. LECTURE NOTES ON HUMAN PHYSIOLOGY 3rd Ed. (1994)
  • Pocock & Richards. HUMAN PHYSIOLOGY (1999)


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Copyright © 1998 University of Bristol. All rights reserved.
Author: Phil Langton
Last modified: 20 Nov 2000 09:17
Authored in CALnet