hardware for the graphics display (Joe Capowski has constructed such a unit, the Neuroscience Display Processor) and add memory to the microcomputer. Then you would have a stand alone system. When I began the research for which I wanted to try using a computer-microscope system, I wasn't sure whether such a system would help meo At that point it was more economical both in time and money to travel to the existing system in Chapel Hill rather than to set up a remote terminal. Now that I have seen the need for access to such a system, it is only a little more expensive to set up a stand alone system (which I know will work) than to set up a remote system (which may have serious imperfections). THE PERSONNEL NEEDS OF A NEUROSCIENTIFIC COMPUTING CENTER Joseph J. Capowski Introduction Since 1972 1 have been the director of a small computing center in the Department of Physiology at the University of North Carolina. The center services the data collection and analysis needs of the Physiology Department and Neurobiology program, a total of about 75 faculty members involved in neuroscience research. Most of the programming at the computer center
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