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Biomedical Computing:

Digitizing Life in the United States
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Imagine biology and medicine today without computers. What would laboratory work be like without electronic databases and statistical software? Would disciplines like genomics even be feasible without the means to manage and manipulate huge volumes of digital data? How would patients fare in a world without CT scans, programmable pacemakers, and computerized medical records?Today, computers are a critical component of almost all research in biology and medicine. Yet, just fifty years ago, the study of life was by far the least digitized field of science, its living subject matter thought too complex and dynamic to be meaningfully analyzed by logic-driven computers. In this long-overdue study, historian Joseph A. November explores the early attempts, in the 1950s and 1960s, to computerize biomedical research in the United States.Computers and biomedical research are now so intimately connected that it is difficult to imagine when such critical work was offline. Biomedical Computing transports readers back to such a time and investigates how computers first appeared in the research lab and doctor's office. November examines the conditions that made possible the computerization of biology and mdash;including strong technological, institutional, and political support from the National Institutes of Health and mdash;and shows not only how digital technology transformed the life sciences but also how the intersection of the two led to important developments in computer architecture and software design. The history of this phenomenon is only vaguely understood. November's thoroughly researched and lively study makes clear for readers the motives behind computerizing the study of life and how that technology profoundly affects biomedical research even today.

Acknowlegments
Abbreviations, Acronyms, and Initialisms
Introduction
1. Putting Molecular Biology and Medical Diagnosis into Metal Brains: Operations Research and the Origins of Biomedical Computing
2. Building Tomorrow's Biomedicine: The National Institutes of Health's Early Mission to Computerize Biology and Medicine
3. The LINC Revolution: The Forgotten Biomedical Origins of Personal Computing
4. A New Way of Life: Computing in the Lab, in the Clinic, and at the Foundation
5. Martians, Experts, and Universitas: Biomedical Computing at Stanford University, 1960–1966
Conclusion
Notes
Essay on Sources
Index

""Rich local detail... Biomedical Computing offers an essential framework for marrying the bigger picture with case-by-case local analysis.""

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