in an organized fashion. Participants have included Northeast Ohio Universities School of Medicine (campuses at Kent, Youngstown, and Akron), University of Maryland, University of Southern California, University of Oklahoma, University of Tennessee, Southern Illinois University (Carbondale and Springfield medical campuses), and The Johns Hopkins University. A terminal has been located at the Lister Hill Center for Biomedical Communications of the National Library of Medicine for their use in observing the network. The results have largely borne out our early expectations: sharing has been a limited success. Reaction from students at most institutions has been bi-modai; many have become enthusiastic users, and some have started the authoring of lessons under faculty supervision. Others have studiously avoided any but the "games" on the system. Some faculty involvement at each of the participating schools has resulted in a number of additional lessons being written. The high cost of communications coupled with the generally tight economic situation which has discouraged projects with significant start-up costs, as is the case with computer-based education, has been a severe impediment. The Northeast Ohio Universities School of Medicine and University of Southern California have discontinued their terminals. The volume of student use.has been moderately impressive in
/lp/association-for-computing-machinery/clinfo-a-minicomputer-system-to-support-clinical-research-data-l0zYDJw2wK