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“Nose-Opening” Rays

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 May 2009

Leonard Hill
Affiliation:
From the St John Clinic and Institute of Physical Medicine, London
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Dufton And Bedford (1933) have denied the claim made by me (1932) that bright sources antagonise the “nose-closing” rays given off by dull red and dark sources of heat. They are supported by Winslow, Greenburg and Herring-ton (1934). These five authors have used the same method, viz. the insertion of a well-fitting tube in one nostril of the subject, the connection of this tube with a recording instrument, and the leaving open the other nostril for breathing, the mouth being kept shut.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1935

References

Dufton, A. F. and Bedford, T. (1933). J. Hygiene, 33, 476.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hill, L. (1932). J. Physiol. 74, 1; 75, 8.Google Scholar
Hill, L. (1933). Quart. J. Exp. Physiol. 33, 35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hill, L. (1934). J. Inst. Heat. and Ventil. Engin. 2, 33.Google Scholar
Winslow, C. E. A., Greenburg, L. and Herrington, L. P. (1934). Amer. J. Hygiene, 20, 195.Google Scholar