About a year ago the author distributed a letter to some 400 colleagues, asking them for reprints of recent publications. This method of obtaining the basic information was so successful that it seemed both unavoidable and legitimate to limit the review to those aspects closest to the personal interests of fhe reviewer. Among the fields which have been almost completely excluded are metabolism, contractility, and drug effects. Furthermore, little emphasis has been placed on the results obtained from hearts in situ.Several reviews on special aspects of cardiac electrophysiology have appeared. A volume edited by De Mello (20) contains sixteen articles written by specialists in their respective fields. Comparative electrophysiology of the heart is treated by McCann (68, 69). A major part of a "Liber Memorialis" marking the 65th birthday of Dr. Chandler McC. Brooks (50) is devoted to cardiac electrophysiology. The Proceedings of the 4th International Biophysics Congress held in Moscow in 1972 make it clear that a theoretical analysis of conduction in various networks has been the main contribution of our Russian colleagues (28). There is a volume on cardiac metabolism containing forty-eight individual contributions (75). To satisfy clinical ly-minded readers, a large number of recent reviews treat the problem of dys rhythmia (1, 16, 21, 37, 88, to