static.aminer.org...Nov 30, 2004  · List of Contents Chemistry and Chemical Engineering RW...

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List of Contents Chemistry and Chemical Engineering RW Comprehensive Organic Functional Group Transformations II ..................................... 5 MV Energetic Materials ................................................................... 10 BK The Theories of Chemistry .............................................................. 12 Earth and Planetary Sciences BK Advances in Coastal Modeling........................................................... 14 BK Ice Age Southern Andes ............................................................... 15 BK Interhemispheric Water Exchange in the Atlantic Ocean........................................ 15 BK Land and Marine Hydrogeology .......................................................... 17 BK Mountain Geomorphology - Integrating Earth Systems ......................................... 17 BK The Quaternary Period in the United States ................................................. 19 BK Water Resources Systems Planning and Management......................................... 20 Economics, Business and Management BK Advances in Environmental Accounting and Management ...................................... 21 BK Anthropological Perspectives on Economic Development and Integration ........................... 21 BK Economic Complexity ................................................................. 22 BK Emotional and Physiological Processes and Positive Intervention Strategies ......................... 23 BK Information Asymmetry................................................................ 24 BK International Business Negotiations ....................................................... 25 BK Internationalization of Research and Development and the Emergence of Global R&D Networks .......... 26 BK The Japanese Finance................................................................. 27 BK Multinationals, Environment and Global Competition .......................................... 28 List of Contents NFP 392/1

Transcript of static.aminer.org...Nov 30, 2004  · List of Contents Chemistry and Chemical Engineering RW...

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List of Contents

Chemistry and Chemical EngineeringRW

Comprehensive Organic Functional Group Transformations II . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5MV

Energetic Materials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10BK

The Theories of Chemistry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12

Earth and Planetary SciencesBK

Advances in Coastal Modeling. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14BK

Ice Age Southern Andes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15BK

Interhemispheric Water Exchange in the Atlantic Ocean. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15BK

Land and Marine Hydrogeology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17BK

Mountain Geomorphology - Integrating Earth Systems. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17BK

The Quaternary Period in the United States . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19BK

Water Resources Systems Planning and Management. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20

Economics, Business and ManagementBK

Advances in Environmental Accounting and Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21BK

Anthropological Perspectives on Economic Development and Integration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21BK

Economic Complexity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22BK

Emotional and Physiological Processes and Positive Intervention Strategies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23BK

Information Asymmetry. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24BK

International Business Negotiations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25BK

Internationalization of Research and Development and the Emergence of Global R&D Networks . . . . . . . . . . 26BK

The Japanese Finance. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27BK

Multinationals, Environment and Global Competition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28

List of Contents

NFP 392/1

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BK

New Venture Investment. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28BK

Research in Finance, Volume 20 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29BK

Research in Organizational Behavior, Volume 25. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30BK

Spiritual Intelligence at Work . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31

Engineering, Energy and TechnologyDY

Elsevier’s Dictionary of Refrigeration and Cryogenics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32

Environmental SciencesBK

Arsenic Exposure and Health Effects V. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33BK

Principles and Standards for the Disposal of Long-lived Radioactive Wastes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34

Life SciencesBK

Antiviral Nucleosides. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36BK

Large Marine Ecosystems of the World . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36BK

Lipobiology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37BK

Non-Neuronal Cells of the Nervous System: Function and Dysfunction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38BK

Recent Advances in Psychology and Aging . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40

Materials ScienceBK

14th Wear of Materials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41BK

The Local Chemical Analysis of Materials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41BK

Recrystallization and Related Annealing Phenomena (2nd Edition) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42BK

Tribochemistry of Lubricating Oils . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42

MathematicsBK

Perturbation Theory for Matrix Equations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44

MedicineBK

CARS 2003 - Computer Assisted Radiology and Surgery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45

NeuroscienceCD

Encyclopedia of Neuroscience, Third Edition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53

2/NFP 392

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BK

Movement Disorders. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53

Physics and AstronomyBK

Free Electron Lasers 2002 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55BK

Modern Aspects of Rare Earths and their Complexes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62BK

Quark-Gluon Plasma: Theoretical Foundations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63

Social and Behavioural SciencesBK

Changing Life Patterns in Western Industrial Societies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67DY

Elsevier’s Dictionary of Acronyms, Initialisms, Abbreviations and Symbols . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68MV

Encyclopedia of Public International Law . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68BK

Punishment, Politics and Culture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69BK

Reorganizing Health Care Delivery Systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69BK

Small Firms in Tourism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70BK

Using Video in Teacher Education . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71JN

Body Image . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72

NFP 392/3

List of Contents

Author Index. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75

Title Index. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77

Representatives’ Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79

Legend

In order to identify immediately the type of product described above, please refer to the following abbreviationkeys:BK = Book CD = CD-ROM or CD-I

DY = Dictionary HB = Handbook

JN = Journal MV = Multi-volume

RJ = Review Journal RW = Reference Work

TB = Textbook

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Chemistry and ChemicalEngineering

RW�

Comprehensive OrganicFunctional GroupTransformations II

Editors-in-Chief: A.R. Katritzky,University of Florida, Gainesville,USA, R.J.K. Taylor, Department ofChemistry, University of York, UK

7-Volume set

©2004 6,400 pages

ISBN 0-08-044256-0 Hardbound

Publication: December 2004

Pre-publication price:

EUR 4,115 / USD 3,960 (Valid

until 30 November 2004)

Price: EUR 5,145 / USD 4,950

Comprehensive Organic FunctionalGroup Transformations II(COFGT-II) will provide the firstpoint of entry to the literature forall scientists interested inchemical transformations.Presenting the vast subject oforganic synthesis in terms of theintroduction and interconversionof all known functional groups,COFGT-II will provide a uniqueinformation source documentingall methods of efficientlyperforming a particulartransformation. Organised by thefunctional group formed, COFGT-IIwill consist of 144 specialistreviews, written by leadingscientists who will evaluate andsummarise the methods availablefor each functional group

transformation.The COFGT-II work will bepublished both as a traditional 7volume printed set and on-line viaScienceDirect, the world’s bestinternet resource for scientific,technical and medical information,late 2004.

Volume 1

Carbon with No AttachedHeteroatoms

Edited by J. Cossy

©2004 Hardbound

Publication: December 2004

Volume 1 deals solely with theformation of non-heteroatomfunctional groups and as such isdifferent in style to the remainingvolumes. Volume 1 is arranged inthree parts dealing withtetracoordinated carbon (sp3) withno attached heteroatoms (Part I),tricoordinated carbon (sp2) withno attached heteroatoms (Part II),and dicoordinated andmonocoordinated carbon (sp) withno attached heteroatoms (Part III).In addition to the generalprinciples, Volume 1 is furtherorganized as follows:1. By the type of bond formed (i.e.C—H before C—C).2. By the type of reaction involved(i.e. substitution, then addition,then rearrangement). With C=Cbond formation the order isaddition, elimination,

condensation, then electrocyclicand other methods. Onerearrangement chapter only isdevoted to each of the Parts I andII.3. In Parts II and III the treatmentof formation of ions, radicals, andcarbenes is added at the end ofthe section dealing solely withthose species with a significantrather than a transient lifetime.In Volume 1, the heteroatomsequence is a secondary featuresince only remote heteroatomfunctions are involved in theproducts: but the standard orderpertains in reactants that containheteroatoms (see, e.g. Chapters1.01 and 1.02).All the major structural influencesthat are treated throughout thiswork apply equally (or perhapsmore importantly) in Volume 1.Thus, the effects of conjugation,remote substituents, rings,stereochemistry, strain, kineticand thermodynamic factors,solvation, primary, secondary andtertiary nature etc., are mentionedwhenever relevant.

Contents: Part I

Tetracoordinated Carbon with

No Attached Heteroatoms

One or More CH Bond(s) Formedby Substitution: Reduction ofC-Halogen and C-ChalcogenBondsOne or More CH Bond(s) Formedby Substitution: Reduction ofCarbon-Nitrogen, -Phosphorus,-Arsenic, -Antimony, -Bismuth,

Chemistry and Chemical Engineering

NFP 392/5

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-Carbon, -Boron, and -MetalBondsTwo or More CH Bond(s) Formedby Addition to CC Multiple BondsOne or More CC Bond(s) Formedby Substitution: Substitution ofHalogenOne or More CC Bond(s) Formedby Substitution: Substitution ofChalcogenOne or More CC Bond(s) Formedby Substitution: Substitution ofCarbon-Nitrogen, -Phosphorus,-Arsenic, -Antimony, -Boron,-Silicon, -Germanium, and -MetalFunctionsOne or More CC Bond(s) Formedby Addition: Addition of CarbonElectrophiles and Nucleophiles toCC Multiple BondsOne or More CC Bond(s) Formedby Addition: Addition of CarbonRadicals and ElectrocyclicAdditions to CC Multiple BondsOne or More CH and/or CCBond(s) Formed byRearrangementPart II Tricoordinated Carbon

with No Attached Heteroatoms

One or More =CH Bond(s)Formed by Substitution or AdditionOne or More =CC Bond(s)Formed by Substitution orAdditionOne or More C=C Bond(s)Formed by AdditionOne or More C=C Bond(s) byElimination of Hydrogen, Carbon,Halogen, or Oxygen FunctionsOne or More C=C Bond(s) byElimination of S, Se, Te, N, P, As,Sb, Bi, Si, Ge, B, or MetalFunctionsOne or More C=C Bond(s)Formed by Condensation:Condensation of NonheteroatomLinked Functions, Halides,Chalcogen, or Nitrogen FunctionsOne or More C=C Bond(s)Formed by Condensation:

Condensation of P, As, Sb, Bi, Si,Ge, B, or Metal FunctionsOne or More C=C Bond(s) byPericyclic ProcessesOne or More =CH, =CC and/orC=C Bond(s) Formed byRearrangementTricoordinate Anions, Cations, andRadicalsPart III Dicoordinate and

Monocoordinate Carbon with

No Attached Heteroatoms

Allenes and CumulenesAlkynesIons, Radicals, Carbenes andOther Monocoordinated Systems

Volume 2

Carbon with One HeteroatomAttached by a Single Bond

Edited by C.A. Ramsden

©2004 Hardbound

Publication: December 2004

Volume 2 is arranged in threeparts: I, II, and III, dealingrespectively with sp3, sp2, and spcarbon linked to the heteroatom.Each chapter endeavors to explainimportant effects due to suchfeatures as the primary,secondary, tertiary nature, ringeffects, strain activation, effect ofbeta, gamma, and more remotefunctionality, stereochemicaleffects, and so on. Methods thatare common to a larger group aredealt with at their first appearanceand suitably cross-referenced.Volumes 2-6 all deal with thesynthesis of functions involving atleast one heteroatom. To avoidmajor overlap we have applied theLatest Placement Principle; thechemistry is discussed at the lastpossible position based on theprioritization of the carbon

attached to the heteroatom. Thus,the compound CH3ONH2 is treatedunder “Alkyl Chalcogenides” in thesubsection “Functions Based onthe RON-Unit” (i.e. 2.02.6).However, CH3ONHCH3 appearsunder “Alkyl NitrogenCompounds” (2.06. 2.3) since theLatest Placement Principleprevails. Also, dialkyl ethersappear in Part I of Volume 2(Functions Linked By a SingleBond to an sp3 Carbon Atom),while alkyl aryl ethers appear inpart II of volume 2 (FunctionsLinked by a Single Bond to an sp2

Carbon Atom). Exceptions to therule are:(a) when a fully unsaturatedheterocyclic substituent (e.g.thienyl, pyridyl, etc) is used as anexample of an aryl group, the ringheteroatom(s) is (are) not takeninto account (e.g.2-methoxypyridine should strictlyappear in Volume 6, but is coveredin Volume 2 along with 3- and4-methoxypyridine).(b) carbon-based metal ligandsthat are incidental to the synthesisunder discussion (e.g. carbonyls,cyclopentadienyls, etc) are nottaken into consideration.

Contents: Part I Functions

Linked by a Single Bond to an

sp3 Carbon AtomAlkyl HalidesAlkyl Chalcogenides:Oxygen-based Functional GroupsAlkyl Chalcogenides: Sulfur-basedFunctional GroupsAlkyl Chalcogenides: Selenium-and Tellurium-based FunctionalGroupsAlkylnitrogen Compounds: Aminesand Their SaltsAlkylnitrogen Compounds:Compounds with N-Halogen, N-O,N-S, N-Se, and N-Te Functional

Chemistry and Chemical Engineering

6/NFP 392

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GroupsAlkylnitrogen Compounds:Compounds with N-N, N-P, N-As,N-Sb, N-Bi, N-Si, N-Ge, N-B, andN-Metal Functional GroupsAlkylphosphorus CompoundsAlkylarsenic, -antimony, and-bismuth CompoundsAlkylboron and -siliconCompoundsAlkyl MetalsPart II Functions Linked by a

Single Bond to an sp2 CarbonAtomVinyl and Aryl HalidesAlkenyl and Aryl Chalcogenides:Oxygen-based Functional GroupsVinyl and Aryl Chalcogenides:Sulfur-, Selenium-, andTellurium-based Functional GroupsVinyl- and ArylnitrogenCompoundsVinyl- and ArylphosphorusDerivativesVinyl- and Arylarsenic, -antimony,and -bismuth CompoundsVinyl- and Arylsilicon,-germanium, and boronCompoundsVinyl- and ArylmetalsStabilized Substituted Ions andRadicals Bearing One Heteroatom(R1R2C-X, R1R2C+X, R1R2C�X)Part III Functions Linked by a

Single Bond to an sp CarbonAtomAlkynyl Halides andChalcogenidesAlkynylnitrogen and -phosphorusCompoundsAlkynylarsenic, -antimony,-bismuth, -boron, -silicon,-germanium, and -metalCompounds

Volume 3

Carbon with One HeteroatomAttached by a Multiple Bond

Edited by K. Jones

©2004 Hardbound

Publication: December 2004

Volume 3 follows the logicaldevelopment indicated in Volume2. Thus, according to the LatestPlacement Principle, the imines,RCH=N—R, appear in Volume 3rather than in Volume 2 (wherefunctions singly bonded to carbonare treated). Furthermore,acetophenone (PhCOCH3) istreated under �,�-unsaturatedketones (3.05) rather thansaturated ketones (3.04).Chloronitroacrylonitriles wouldappear under the section“�,�-Vinylic Nitriles withNitrogen-based Substituents”(3.19.2.7), not under the relatedearlier section dealing withhalo-Substituents (3.19.2.3).

Contents: Part I Tricoordinated

Carbon Functions, R2C=YAldehydes: Alkyl AldehydesAldehydes: �,�-UnsaturatedAldehydesAldehydes: Aryl and HeteroarylAldehydesKetones: Dialkyl KetonesKetones: �,�-UnsaturatedKetonesKetones Bearing an �,�-Aryl or-Hetaryl SubstituentAldehyde and Ketone FunctionsFurther Substituted on OxygenThioaldehydes and ThioketonesSeleno- and Telluroaldehydes and-ketonesImines and Their N-SubstitutedDerivatives: NH, NR, andN-HaloiminesImines and Their N-SubstitutedDerivatives: Oximes and Their O-RSubstituted AnaloguesImines and Their N-SubstitutedDerivatives: Hydrazones and Other

=NN Derivatives Including DiazoCompoundsSynthesis of P, As, Sb and BiYlides (R3P=CR2, etc.)Doubly Bonded MetalloidFunctions (Si, Ge, B)Doubly Bonded Metal FunctionsPart II Dicoordinated Carbon

Functions, R2C=C=YKetenes, Their CumuleneAnalogues and Their S, Se, and TeAnaloguesKetenimines and Their P, As, Sb,and Bi AnaloguesPart III Dicoordinated Carbon

Functions, R-C�ZNitriles: General Methods andAliphatic Nitriles�,�-Unsaturated and Aryl NitrilesN-Substituted Nitriles and OtherHeteroanalogues of Nitriles of theType RCZPart IV Monocoordinated

Carbon Functions

Isocyanides and TheirHeteroanalogues (RZC)

Volume 4

Carbon with Two Heteroatoms,Each Attached by a Single Bond

Edited by G.A. Molander

©2004 Hardbound

Publication: December 2004

Volume 4 is in three parts. Part Ideals with tetracoordinatedcarbon bearing two heteroatoms,Part II with tricoordinated carbonbearing two heteroatoms, andPart III (a brief chapter) withstabilized radicals, ions, and thelike, bearing two heteroatoms.The material is arranged accordingto the Latest Placement Principle:thus, the synthesis of CHBr2CHI2would appear in the sectiondealing with diiodo, not dibromo

Chemistry and Chemical Engineering

NFP 392/7

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functions (i.e. 4.01.5, not 4.01.4),and the synthesis of CF3CHBrCl isdiscussed in Volume 6 (carbonsbearing three heteroatoms), ratherthan in Volume 4.

Contents: Part I

Tetracoordinated Carbon

Functions Bearing Two

Heteroatoms, R2CX1X2

Dihalo Alkanes, R12C(Hal)2

Functions Incorporating a Halogenand a ChalcogenFunctions Incorporating a Halogenand Another Heteroatom GroupOther Than a ChalcogenFunctions Bearing Two Oxygens,R1

2C(OR2)2

Functions Incorporating Oxygenand Another ChalcogenFunctions Incorporating TwoChalcogens Other Than OxygenFunctions Incorporating aChalcogen and a Group 15ElementFunctions Incorporating aChalcogen and a Silicon,Germanium, Boron, or MetalFunctions Bearing Two NitrogensFunctions Incorporating a Nitrogenand Another Group 15 ElementFunctions Incorporating a Nitrogenand a Silicon, Germanium, Boron,or a MetalFunctions Containing OnePhosphorus and Either AnotherPhosphorus or As, Sb, Bi, Si, Ge,B, or a MetalFunctions Containing at Least OneAs, Sb, or Bi with or without aMetalloid (Si or Ge) or a MetalFunctions Containing at Least OneMetalloid (Si, Ge, or B) Togetherwith Another Metalloid or MetalFunctions Containing Two Atomsof the Same Metallic ElementFunctions Containing Two Atomsof Different Metallic ElementsPart II Tricoordinated Carbon

Functions Bearing Two

Heteroatoms, R2C=CX1X2

Functions Incorporating TwoHalogens or a Halogen and aChalcogenFunctions Incorporating a Halogenand Another Group Other Than aHalogen or a ChalcogenFunctions Bearing TwoChalcogensFunctions Containing a Chalcogenand Any Group Other Than aHalogen or a ChalcogenFunctions Containing at Least OneNitrogen and No Halogen orChalcogenFunctions Containing at Least OnePhosphorus, Arsenic, Antimony orBismuth and No Halogen,Chalcogen or NitrogenFunctions Containing at Least OneMetalloid (Si, Ge, or B) and NoHalogen, Chalcogen or Group 15Element; Also FunctionsContaining Two MetalsPart III

Tri- and Dicoordinated Ions,Radicals and Carbenes BearingTwo Heteroatoms (RC+X1X2,RC�X1X2, RC-X1X2, :CX1X2)

Volume 5

Carbon with Two AttachedHeteroatoms with at Least OneCarbon-to-Heteroatom MultipleLink

Edited by R.C.F. Jones

©2004 Hardbound

Publication: December 2004

Volume 5 is in three parts. Part Ideals with functions with onedoubly bonded and one singlybonded heteroatom, Part II withfunctions containing two doublebonded heteroatoms and Part IIIwith one triply bonded and onesingly bonded heteroatom. Part I

constitutes the bulk of Volume 5.The rearrangement of thechemistry in each part follows thesame logical sequence. Themultiply bonded heteroatom isfocused on first and then the otherheteroatom in a secondaryclassification, both following thepriority rules already described.Each section excludes thecoverage of the previous sections.Thus, all carbonyl derivatives willappear in Chapters 5.01 - 5.10 butnot in Chapters 5.11, et seq.According to the Latest PlacementPrinciple structure RC(O)OC(S)R isdiscussed in the chapter dealingwith carbons bearing doublybonded sulfur and singly bondedoxygen (5.12.3), not in the onedealing with doubly and singlybonded oxygen (5.04.1). Anothereffect of the Latest PlacementPrinciple is that the amidesRCONMePh are discussed underN-arylalkanoamides (5.06.2.4),rather than N-alkylalkanoamides(5.06.2.2). Again, exceptions aremade to the Latest Placementrules for : (a) hetaryl rings used asexamples of aryl substituentswhich are not viewed asfunctional groups (thus,2-methylimidazole is notconsidered as an example of thedoubly bonded nitrogen, singlybonded oxygen function); (b)metal ligands that are incidental tothe organic chemistry underdiscussion are not viewed asfunctions in priorityconsiderations.

Contents: Part I Tricoordinate

Carbon Functions with One

Doubly Bonded and One Singly

Bonded Heteroatom, RC=YX

Acyl HalidesCarboxylic AcidsCarboxylic Esters and Lactones

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Acylsulfur, -selenium, or -telluriumFunctionsAmidesN-Heterosubstituted AmidesAcylphosphorus, -arsenic,-antimony, or -bismuth FunctionsAcylsilicon, -germanium, or-boronFunctionsAcyl Metal FunctionsThio-, Seleno-, and TelluroacylHalidesThio, Seleno, and Telluro AcyloxyFunctions, R1C(S)OR2, R1C(Se)OR2,R1C(Te)OR2, etc.Functions with Two ChalcogensOther Than OxygenThionoamides and Their Se and TeAnaloguesN-Substituted Thionoamides andTheir Se and Te AnaloguesThioacyl Functions Linked to aMetalloid (Si, Ge, or B) or Metal;and Their Seleno and TelluroAnaloguesIminoacyl Halides and OxyFunctionsIminoacyl Functions Linked toChalcogens Other Than OxygenAmidines and N-SubstitutedAmidinesIminoacyl Functions Linked to AnyHeteroatom Other Than Halogen,Chalcogen or NitrogenN-Heterosubstituted IminoacylFunctionsDiazo Functions with ana-Heteroatom (RC(X)N2)Phosphoacyl Functions and TheirAs, Sb, and Bi AnaloguesDoubly Bonded MetalloidFunctions, R1C(X)=SiR2

2,R1C(X)=BR2, R1C(X)=GeR2

2

Functions Doubly Bonded to aMetalPart II Dicoordinate Carbon

Functions with Two Doubly

Bonded Heteroatoms, Y1=C=Y2

Functions with at Least OneOxygen, Y=C=OFunctions with at Least One

Chalcogen Other Than OxygenFunctions with at Least OneNitrogen and No ChalcogensFunctions with Heteroatoms OtherThan Chalcogen or Nitrogen(Y1=C=Y2)Part III Dicoordinate Carbon

Functions with One Singly

Bonded and One Triply Bonded

Heteroatom, X-Cequiv;Z

Nitriles with a HeteroatomAttached to the CyanocarbonTriply Bonded HeteroatomDerivatives Other Than Nitrileswith Another HeteroatomAttached to the sp-Carbon Atom

Volume 6

Carbon with Three or FourAttached Heteroatoms

Edited by E.F.V. Scriven

©2004 Hardbound

Publication: December 2004

Volume 6 is in four parts. Part Ideals with tetracoordinatecarbons bearing threeheteroatoms. Part II coverstetracoordinate compoundsbearing four heteroatoms, i.e.substituted methanes, and Part IIIdeals with tricoordinate systemsbearing three heteroatoms, i.e.where one heteroatom is attachedby a double bond. Part IV is briefand deals with stabilized radicalsand ions. Not surprisingly, thecoverage of Volume 6 is very large- and also indicates that manygaps in the development oforganic chemistry still exist.The organization within the threesections not only follows thesame broad logic developed in theprevious volumes, but also has astructure unique to thismultiheteroatom volume.

According to the Latest PlacementPrinciple, CF3C(NR2)3 appears inthe section dealing with carbonsbearing three nitrogens (6.05.1.1),not that dealing with carbonsbearing three halogens (6.01.2),while (CF3CH2O)2CO appears inPart III, not in Part I.In the chapter dealing withiminocarbonyl functions in Part III,the substituents on nitrogen arediscussed in each appropriatesubsection in the order outlinedabove. Thus, the RN: group wouldbe first considered with R = H,then alkyl, alkenyl, aryl andhetaryl, alkynyl and thenheteroatom substituents in theusual order.In each of the relevant sections,we have endeavored to explainthe influence of importantsecondary effects on thesynthesis such as structure(primary, secondary, etc), ringeffects, strain, activation,stereochemistry, remotesubstituent effects, etc.The arrangement of the chemistryin each of Parts I-III follows asimilar pattern. Thus, each sectioncommences with functionscontaining at least one halogen.This section deals with allcombinations of halogen withother heteroatoms in thedescribed order. The next sectiondeals with functions containing atleast one chalcogen incombination with any otherheteroatoms except halogens.Subsequent sections eachexclude the previous titleheteroatom functions.

Contents: Part I

Tetracoordinated Carbon with

Three Attached Heteroatoms,

RCX1X2X3

Trihalides Functions Containing

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Halogens and Any Other ElementsFunctions Containing ThreeChalcogens (and No Halogens)Functions Containing a Chalcogenand Any Other Heteroatoms OtherThan a HalogenFunctions Containing at Least OneGroup 15 Element (and NoHalogen or Chalcogen)Functions Containing at Least OneMetalloid (Si, Ge, or B) and NoHalogen, Chalcogen, or Group 15Element; Also FunctionsContaining Three MetalsPart II Tetracoordinated Carbon

with Four Attached

Heteroatoms, CX1X2X3X4

Functions Containing FourHalogens or Three Halogens andOne Other Heteroatom SubstituentFunctions Containing TwoHalogens and Two OtherHeteroatom SubstituentsFunctions Containing One Halogenand Three Other HeteroatomSubstituentsFunctions Containing Four orThree Chalcogens (and NoHalogens)Functions Containing Two or OneChalcogens (and No Halogens)Functions Containing at Least OneGroup 15 Element (and NoHalogen or Chalcogen)Functions Containing at Least OneMetalloid (Si, Ge, or B) and NoHalogen, Chalcogen, or Group 15Element; Also FunctionsContaining Four MetalsPart III Tricoordinated Carbon

with Three Attached

Heteroatoms, Y=CX1X2

Functions Containing a CarbonylGroup and at Least One HalogenFunctions Containing a CarbonylGroup and at Least One Chalcogen(but No Halogen)Functions Containing a CarbonylGroup and Two HeteroatomsOther Than a Halogen or

ChalcogenFunctions Containing aThiocarbonyl Group and at LeastOne Halogen; Also at Least OneChalcogen and No HalogenFunctions Containing aThiocarbonyl Group Bearing TwoHeteroatoms Other Than aHalogen or ChalcogenFunctions Containing aSelenocarbonyl or TellurocarbonylGroup-SeC(X1)X2 and TeC(X1)X2

Functions Containing anIminocarbonyl Group and at LeastOne Halogen; Also One Chalcogenand No HalogenFunctions Containing anIminocarbonyl Group and AnyElements Other Than a Halogen orChalcogenFunctions Containing DoublyBonded P, As, Sb, Bi, Si, Ge, B, ora MetalPart IV

Tricoordinated Stabilized Cationsand Radicals, +CX1X2X3 and�CX1X2X3

Volume 7

Author Index and CumulativeSubject Index

©2004 Hardbound

Publication: December 2004

Author Index and CumulativeSubject Index.

ELSEVIER

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MV

Energetic Materials

Part 1. Decomposition,Crystal and MolecularProperties

Edited by P.A. Politzer,J.S. Murray, Department ofChemistry, University of NewOrleans, New Orleans, LA 70148,USA

©2003 485 pages

ISBN 0-444-51518-6 Hardbound

Publication: November 2003

Price: EUR 210 / USD 210

Theoretical and ComputationalChemistry, Volume 12

This volume provides an overviewof current research and recentadvances in the area of energeticmaterials, focusing ondecomposition, crystal andmolecular properties. Thecontents and format reflect thefact that theory, experiment andcomputation are closely linked inthis field.Since chemical decomposition isof fundamental importance inenergetic performance, thisvolume begins with a survey ofthe decomposition processes of avariety of energetic compounds.This is followed by detailedstudies of certain compounds andspecific mechanisms, such asnitro/aci-nitro tautomerism.Chapter 6 covers the transitionfrom decomposition to crystalproperties, with moleculardynamics being the primaryanalytical tool. The next severalchapters deal with differentaspects of the crystalline state,

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again moving from the general toparticular. There is also adiscussion of methods forcomputing gas, liquid and solidphase heats of formation. Finally,the last portion of this volumelooks at the potential ofhigh-nitrogen molecules asenergetic systems; this has beenof considerable interest in recentyears.Overall, this volume illustrates theprogress that has been made inthe field of energetic materials andsome of the areas of currentactivity. It also indicates thechallenges involved incharacterizing and understandingthe properties and behaviour ofthese compounds. The work is aunique state-of-the-art treatmentof the subject, written bypre-eminent researchers in thefield.

Contents: A survey of the thermalstability of energetic materials(J.C. Oxley).Characterisation of explosivematerials using moleculardynamics simulations (P. Capkovaet al.).Nitro harr;aci-nitro tautomerism inhigh-energetic nitro compounds(P.V. Bharatam, K. Lammertsma).Decomposition mechanism of1,1-diamino-dinitroethylene(FOX-7): an overview of thequantum chemical calculation (A.Gindulyte et al.).Quantum-chemical dynamics withthe slater-roothaan method (B.I.Dunlap).Molecular dynamics simulationsof energetic materials (D.C.Sorescu et al.).Structure and density predictionsfor energetic materials (J. R.Holden et al.).X-ray crystallography - beyond

structure in energetic materials(A.A. Pinkerton et al.).Computational approaches toheats of formation (P. Politzer et al.).Thermodynamics and mechanicalproperties of HMX from atomisticsimulations (D. Bedrov et al.).Optical absorption in PETN andRDX (W.F. Perger).Interactions of model organicspecies and explosives with clayminerals (A. Michalkova et al.).Chemistry and applications ofdinitramides (P. Sjoberg).Polynitrogens as promisinghigh-energy density materials:computational design (O. Kwon,M.L. McKee).Electronic structure calculationsas a tool in the quest forexperimental verification of N4 (T.Brinck et al.).Changing the properties of N5

+

and N5-by substitution (S. Fau,

R.J. Bartlett).

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444515186

MV�

Energetic Materials

Part 2. Detonation,Combustion

Edited by P.A. Politzer,J.S. Murray, Department ofChemistry, University of NewOrleans, New Orleans,LA 70148, USA

©2003 474 pages

ISBN 0-444-51519-4 Hardbound

Publication: November 2003

Price: EUR 210 / USD 210

Theoretical and ComputationalChemistry, Volume 13

This volume provides an overviewof current research and recentadvances in the area of energeticmaterials, focusing on explosivesand propellants. The contents andformat reflect the fact that theory,experiment and computation areclosely linked in this field.The challenge of developingenergetic materials that are lesssensitive to accidental stimulicontinues to be of criticalimportance. This volume openswith discussions of somedeterminants of sensitivity and itscorrelations with variousmolecular and crystal properties.The next several chapters deal inconsiderable detail with differentaspects and mechanisms of theinitiation of detonation, and itsquantitative description. Thesecond half of this volume focusesupon combustion. Extensivestudies model ignition andcombustion, with applications todifferent propellants. The finalchapter is an exhaustivecomputational treatment of themechanism and kinetics ofcombustion initiation reactions ofammonium perchlorate.Overall, this volume illustrates theprogress that has been made inthe field of energetic materials andsome of the areas of currentactivity. It also indicates thechallenges involved incharacterizing and understandingthe properties and behaviour ofthese compounds. The work is aunique state-of-the-art treatmentof the subject, written bypre-eminent researchers in thefield.

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Contents: Sensitivity Correlations(P. Politzer, J.S. Murray).A study of chemicalmicro-mechanisms of initiation oforganic polynitro compounds (S.Zeman).Dynamics of energy disposal inunimolecular reactions (C.Stopera, M. Page).Initiation and decompositionmechanisms of energeticmaterials (M.R. Manaa).Initiation due to plasticdeformation from shock or impact(C.S. Coffey).Fast molecular processes inenergetic materials (D.D. Dlott).The equation of state andchemistry of detonation products(L.E. Fried et al.).Combustion mechanisms andsimplified-kinetics modeling ofhomogeneous energetic solids(M.Q. Brewster).Modeling of nitramine propellantcombustion and ignition (E.S. Kimet al.).Use of kinetic models for solidstate reactions in combustionsimulations (J. Wang, C.A.Wight).Towards reliable prediction ofkinetics and mechanisms forelementary processes: keycombustion initiation reactions ofammonium perchlorate (R.S. Zhu,M.C. Lin).

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444515194

BK�

The Theories of Chemistry

Edited by J.C.A. Boeyens,Department of Chemistry,University of Pretoria, 0002Pretoria, South Africa

©2003 570 pages

ISBN 0-444-51491-0 Hardbound

Publication: November 2003

Price: EUR 190 / USD 190

The Theories of Chemistry reviewsthe theories that underpinchemistry, but which aretraditionally not recognized assuch, being considered as part ofphysics. Based on the argumentthat the needs of chemistry aredistinctive, a mathematicalstructure of topics such asquantum mechanics, relativitytheory, thermodynamics andstatistical mechanics, suiting theneeds of chemistry, is outlined.The subject matter is arranged ina sequence that reveals thefoundations of chemistry. Startingfrom the mathematical basis, thesequence runs through thegeneral concepts (mechanics andwave formalism) and theelementary building blocks, tomolecules and macrosystems.The book is the product of theauthor’s reading of originalliterature rather than of standardtexts. It contains very little originalmaterial, but differs from what isconventionally emphasizedbecause of the different approachthat argues for the recognition ofchemistry as an emergentdiscipline, ultimately based on theproperties and structure of spaceand time. Hence the emphasis onotherwise unexpected topics such

as quaternions, lie groups,polarized light, compressedatoms, rydberg atoms, solitons,molecular hydrogen, and phasetransitions, amongst others. Thetopic is the understanding ofchemistry from first principles.The book is self-contained and canbe used without reference to othersources. It covers themathematical concepts thatenable the exploration ofinteractions between particles,waves and fields within achemical context. Quantummechanics and the theories ofspecial and general relativity areintroduced through conceptsalready familiar to most chemistsand applications to chemistry arehighlighted where possible.The theoretical basis of chemicalthermodynamics and the methodsof statistical thermodynamics arecritically examined. This exerciseincludes a review of irreversibleand far-from-equilibriumthermodynamics. Many topics,routinely referred to in advancedchemistry texts, without makingthem accessible to thenon-specialist, are broughttogether. Specific examplesinclude relativistic waveequations, gauge fields,continuous symmetry breaking,statistical mechanics, secondquantisation and theories of phasetransition and critical phenomena.The results may fall short ofconstituting a convincing theory ofchemical reaction, but contain thegerms for future development.

AUDIENCE

Theoretical and physical chemists.Students and researchers atuniversity and institutionallibraries. Private scientists.

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Contents: Basic Mathematics .Elementary vector algebra.Determinants and matrices. Vectorfields. Differential equations.Group Theory.Introduction. The multiplicationtable. Conjugate elements andclasses. Homomorphism. Someexamples of symmetry groups.Field and space. Representation ofgroups.Continuousgroups (liegroups).Particles and Waves.Introduction. Review of classicaldynamics. Hamilton’s principle.Hamilton-Jacobi theory. Potentialtheory. Wave motion.Space and Time.Introduction. The electromagneticfield. Special relativity. Generalrelativity. Gauge fields. The arrowof time.Quantum Theory.Basic concepts. Wave mechanics.Relativistic wave equations.Angular momentum and spin.Quantum mechanics of the photon.Quantum Chemistry .Introduction. Quantum aspects ofgeneral chemistry. Molecularspectroscopy. Free-particlemodels.Atoms and Molecules.Many-particle systems.Approximation methods. Atomicstructure. Molecular systems.Macrosystems.Introduction. Thermodynamics.Mechanics of macrosystems.Quantum statistics.Non-equilibrium statisticalmechanics.Chemical Change.Introduction. Phase change.Disorder. The scaling hypothesis.Renormalization Group. Chemicalreaction. Conclusion.

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www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444514910

Chemistry and Chemical Engineering

NFP 392/13

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Earth and Planetary Sciences

BK�

Advances in CoastalModeling

Edited by V.C. Lakhan, School ofPhysical Sciences, University ofWindsor, Ontario, Canada

©2003 616 pages

ISBN 0-444-51149-0 Hardbound

Publication: September 2003

Price: EUR 189 / USD 189

Elsevier Oceanography Series,Volume 67

This book unifies and enhancesthe accessibility of contemporaryscholarly research on advances incoastal modeling. Acomprehensive spectrum ofinnovative models addresses thewide diversity and multifacetedaspects of coastal research on thecomplex natural processes,dynamics, interactions and

responses of the coastalsupersystem and its associatedsubsystems.The twenty-one chapters,contributed by internationallyrecognized coastal experts fromfourteen countries, provideinvaluable insights on the recentadvances and presentstate-of-the-art knowledge oncoastal models which areessential for not only illuminatingthe governing coastal process andvarious characteristics, but alsofor understanding and predictingthe dynamics at work in thecoastal system.One of the unique strengths of thebook is the impressive andencompassing presentation ofcurrent functional and operationalcoastal models for all thoseconcerned with and interested inthe modeling of seas, oceans andcoasts. In addition to chaptersmodeling the dynamic naturalprocesses of waves, currents,circulatory flows and sedimenttransport there are also chaptersthat focus on the modeling ofbeaches, shorelines, tidal basinsand shore platforms.The substantial scope of the bookis further strengthened withchapters concentrating on theeffects of coastal structures onnearshore flows, coastal waterquality, coastal pollution, coastalecological modeling, statisticaldata modeling, and coupling ofcoastal models with geographicalinformation systems.

Contents: Preface.Acknowledgments. List ofContributors. 1. Boussinesqmodels and applications tonearshore wave propagation, surfzone processes and wave-inducedcurrents (J.T. Kirby). 2. Frequencydomain wave models in thenearshore and surf zones (J.M.Kaihatu). 3. Advanced numericalmethods for coastalhydrodynamics (C.G. Mingham).4. Numerical models for nearshorecurrents (H. Noda). 5. Spectralwave models in coastal areas (J.Monbaliu). 6. Probabilistic modelsof waves in the coastal zone (C.G.Soares). 7. Modeling the effects ofpermeable and reflectivestructures on waves andnearshore flows (I.J. Losada). 8.Perspective on evolution insediment modelling (K. Black). 9.Large-scale finite elementmodeling and parallel computationof sediment transport in coastalareas (O.W.-H. Wai, Y.-W. Jiang,Q.-M. Lu). 10. Nonlinear wavemodeling and sediment transportin the surf and swash zonetheophanis (V. Karambas). 11.Modeling the morphologicalresponse in a coastal zone fordifferent temporal scales (I.O.Leont’yev). 12. Numericalmodeling of beach topographychange (M. Larson, H. Hanson,N.C. Kraus). 13. Morphodynamicmodeling of tidal basins andcoastal inlets (M.J.F. Stive, Z.B.Wang). 14. Modeling shoreplatforms: present status andfuture developments (A.S.Trenhaile). 15. Merging scales in

Earth and Planetary Sciences

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models of water circulation:perspectives from the GreatBarrier Reef (E. Wolanski, R.Brinkman et al.). 16. A numericalsimulation of Japan/East Sea(JES) thermohaline structure andcirculation (P.C. Chu, S. Lu et al.).17. Analytical modeling ofpollution flushing in well-mixedtidal embayments (R.W. Barber).18. Advances in water qualitymodeling in the coastalenvironment (M.S. Dortch). 19.Neural network applications incoastal ecological modeling (M.Scardi). 20. Space-time transferfunction models of beach andshoreline data for medium-termshoreline monitoring programs(P.D. Lavalle). 21. Progress ingeographical information systemsand coastal modeling: anoverview (D.R. Green, S.D. King).Index.

ELSEVIER

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Ice Age Southern Andes

A Chronicle ofPalaeoecological Events

By C.J. Heusser, New YorkUniversity, Tuxedo, NY, USA

©2003 230 pages

ISBN 0-444-51478-3 Hardbound

Publication: November 2003

Price: EUR 150 / USD 150

Developments in QuaternaryScience, Volume 3

The Southern Andes, stretchingfrom the subtropics to the

subantarctic, are ideally locatedfor palaeoenvironmental research.Over the broad and continuouslatitudinal extent of the cordillera(-24�), vegetation is adjusted toclimatic gradients andatmospheric circulation patterns.Opposed to the prevailingSouthern Westerlies, the SouthernAndes are positioned to receivethe brunt of the winds, while biotaare set to record the shifting ofincoming storm systems overtime. Sequential,latitudinally-placed, sedimentarydeposits containing microfossilsand macroremains, as archives ofpast vegetation and climate, makepossible the detection ofequatorward and polewarddisplacement of plantcommunities and, as aconsequence, changes in climaticcontrols. No terrestrial setting inthe Southern Hemisphere is sounique for palaeoenvironmentalreconstruction during and sincethe last ice age. Twentyradiocarbon-dated fossil pollenand spore records chosen to placeemphasis on the last ice ageinclude high-resolution,submillennial data sets that alsocover the Holocene, thusproviding contrast betweenpresent interglacial and pastglacial ages. From a refined database, the records constitute thefoundation for interpreting factorsresponsible for vegetation changeover �50,000 14C years,glacial-interglacial migration andrefugial patterns for a diversity oftaxa, and the extent ofintrahemispheric and polarhemispheric synchroneity versusasynchroneity.

Contents: Preface.Acknowledgments. 1.Introduction. 2. Backdrop ofbotanical exploration. 3. Physicalsetting. 4. Climate. 5. Glaciation.6. Land - sea level variations. 7.Volcanism. 8. Vegetation. 9. Man,megafauna, and fire. 10. Researchmethods: approach to the problemof palaeoevironmentalreconstruction. 11. Pollen falloutreflective of vegetation duringlatest centuries: presettlementand settlement. 12.Palaeoecological sites, cores, andpollen/spore diagrams. 13. Ice ageSouthern Andes. 14. Globalconnections. 15. Summary.References. Index.

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Interhemispheric WaterExchange in the AtlanticOcean

Edited by G.J. Goni, NationalOceanic and AtmosphericAdministration, AtlanticOceanographic andMeteorological Laboratory, Miami,FL, USA, P.M. Rizzoli,Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology, Department of Earth,Atmospheric and PlanetarySciences, Cambridge, MA, USA

©2003 524 pages

ISBN 0-444-51267-5 Hardbound

Publication: November 2003

Price: EUR 179 / USD 179

Elsevier Oceanography Series,Volume 68

Earth and Planetary Sciences

NFP 392/15

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Recent results from modeling andobservational studies demonstratethat the tropical Atlantic is acritical region for processes thatmaintain the meridionaloverturning circulation, such ascross-equatorial exchanges, andfor sea surface temperaturevariability that impacts on climatevariability of the coupled tropicalocean/atmosphere system.The theme of this book is theinter-hemispheric and inter-gyreexchanges of heat, salt and freshwater, while its goal is to improvethe knowledge of the tropicalAtlantic dynamics and how itaffects the global ocean. A clearunderstanding of the dynamics ofprocesses that affect the flow ofmass and heat between thesouthern and the northernhemispheres in the upper fewhundred meters in the tropicalAtlantic and of those associatedto the ocean circulation or tosurface signals, from decadal,inter-annual to mesoscale periods,becomes necessary to betterevaluate their contribution to theinterhemispheric mass exchange.These processes are believed tobe largely responsible in drivingthe sea surface temperature,which in turn, is a criticalparameter to investigateocean-atmospheric interactions.Output produced by regionalmodels is also used tocomplement the observations andto provide additional informationon their spatial and temporalvariability. The subtropical cells,by bringing water massessubducted in the subtropics to theequator, and zonal currentsinvestigated here contribute to theinterhemispheric water exchange.Special attention is also given tothe warm and salty anticyclonic

rings shed by the North BrazilCurrent, which are now known tohave a much broader impact, notonly on interhemispheric watermass transfer, but also on theenvironment of remote regions.Observations from differentsources are blended together, areused to validate model outputsand are also assimilated intomodels to obtain a more completeand accurate picture of theoceanic circulation and of its timeevolution.

Contents: Preface. 1. Circulation,variability and near-equatorialmeridional flow in the centraltropical Atlantic (L. Stramma, J.Fischer et al.). 2. Comparison ofhydrographic and altimeter basedestimates of sea level heightvariability in the Atlantic Ocean (D.Mayer, M. Baringer, G. Goni).3. Estimation of the tropicalAtlantic circulation from altimetrydata using a reduced-rankstationary Kalman filter (M.Buehner, P. Malanotte-Rizzoli et al.).4. A synthetic float analysis ofupper-limb meridional overturningcirculation interior oceanpathways in thetropical/subtropical Atlantic (G.Halliwell, R. Weisberg, D. Mayer).5. A seasonal and interannualstudy of the western equatorialAtlantic upper thermoclinecirculation variability (M. Vianna,V. Menezes). 6. Fate of theequatorial undercurrent in theAtlantic (W. Hazeleger, P. deVries). 7. The flow of AAIW alongthe equator (M. Jochum, P.Malanotte-Rizzoli). 8. Planetaryequatorial trapped waves in theAtlantic Ocean fromTOPEX/Poseidon altimetry (C.França, I. Wainer et al.).9. Pathways and variability at

intermediate depths in the tropicalAtlantic (C. Schmid, Z. Garraffo etal.). 10. A comparison ofkinematic evidence for tropicalcells in the Atlantic and Pacificoceans (R. Molinari, S. Bauer etal.). 11. Subtropical cells in theAtlantic Ocean: An observationalsummary (D. Snowden, R.Molinari). 12. Spectral, formal, andnonlinear stability in a layeredquasigeostrophic model withapplication to the Atlantic NorthEquatorial Current (F. Beron-Vera,J. Olascoaga). 13. Synoptic studyof warm rings in the North Brazil:Current retroflection region usingsatellite altimetry (G. Goni, W.Johns). 14. North Brazil Currentrings and the variability in thelatitude of the retroflection(S. Garzoli, A. Ffield, Q. Yao).15. North Brazil Current rings andtransport of southern waters in ahigh resolution numericalsimulation of the North Atlantic(Z. Garraffo, W. Johns et al.).16. Cross-gyre transport by NorthBrazil Current rings (W. Johns,R. Zantopp, G. Goni). 17. Impact ofNorth Brazil Current rings on thelocal circulation and coral reef fishrecruitment to Barbados, WestIndies (R. Cowen, S. Sponaugle etal.). 18. Wind bursts andenhanced evaporation in thetropical and subtropical AtlanticOcean (K. Katsaros, A.Mestas-Nuñez et al.).19. Spatial-temporal evolution ofthe low frequency climatevariability in the tropical Atlantic(L. Ayina, J. Servain). Index.

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Earth and Planetary Sciences

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Land and MarineHydrogeology

Edited by M. Taniguchi, ResearchInstitute for Humanity and Nature(RIHN), Kyoto, Japan, K. Wang,Pacific Geoscience Centre,Geological Survey of Canada,Sidney, BC, Canada, T. Gamo,Division of Earth and PlanetarySciences, Graduate School ofScience, Hokkaido University,Sapporo, Japan

©2003 208 pages

ISBN 0-444-51479-1 Hardbound

Publication: November 2003

Price: EUR 110 / USD 110

This volume represents an effortto bring together communities ofland-based hydrogeology andmarine hydrogeology. The issuesof submarine groundwaterdischarge and its oppositephenomenon of seawater invasionare discussed in this book fromthe geophysical, geochemical,biological, and engineeringperspectives. This is where landhydrogeology and marinehydrogeology overlap. Submarinegroundwater discharge is a rapidlydeveloping research field. TheSCOR and LOICZ of the IGBP haverecently established a workinggroup for this research. IASPO andIAHS under IUGG also recentlyformed a new joint committee“Seawater/GroundwaterInteractions” to collaborate withoceanographers and hydrologists.The other articles introducefrontier research topics in moretypical land and marineenvironments, such as fluid flowin karst aquifers, the biological

aspects of fluids in sedimentarybasins and submarinesedimentary formations,respectively, and vigorous fluidflow in subsea formations andtheir significance in globaltectonics. Geochemicalcharacteristics of hydrothermalactivities at a number of activecontinental margins are alsoreviewed, and multidisciplinarygeophysical constraints of thepermeability of young igneousoceanic crust are summarized. Avariety of driving mechanisms forfluid flow is discussed in land andsubsea formations; terrestrialhydraulic gradient, buoyancydriven free convection, tidallyinduced flow, flow induced bytectonic strain, flow due tosediment compaction.

Contents: Preface. 1. Assessmentmethodologies for submarinegroundwater discharge (M.Taniguchi, W.C. Burnett et al.).2. Radon tracing of submarinegroundwater discharge in coastalenvironments (W.C. Burnett, J.E.Cable, R. Corbett). 3. Chemicalcharacteristics of submarinegroundwater seepage in ToyamaBay, Central Japan (J. Zhang, H.Satake). 4. Prospects ofengineering applications ofsubmarine-groundwater-dischargeresearch in Japan (H. Miyamoto,T. Tokunaga). 5. Evaluation of seawater intrusion accompanying thecoastal coal mine excavation inthe Joban coalfield area, Japan(J. Shimada, K. Kojima et al.).6. Natural tracing in karst aquifers(M. Monnin, M. Bakalowicz).7. Abundance and viability ofsubsurface microbial communitiesin sedimentary and igneous rockaquifers (Y. Murakami, Y.Fujita et al.). 8. Stable isotopic

compositions of bacterial lighthydrocarbons in marginal marinesediments (F. Nakagawa,U. Tsunogai et al.). 9. Submarinehydrothermal activity in coastalzones (T. Gamo, G.P. Glasby).10. High permeability of youngoceanic crust constrained bythermal and pressure observations(K. Wang, E. Davis). Index ofAuthors. Subject Index.

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Mountain Geomorphology- Integrating EarthSystems

Proceedings of the 32ndBinghamton Symposium inGeomorphology, held 19-21October, 2001

Edited by D.R. Butler, Departmentof Geography, Texas StateUniversity, San Marcos, TX, USA,S.J. Walsh, Department ofGeography, University of NorthCarolina, Chapel Hill, NC, USA,G.P. Malanson, Department ofGeography, University of Iowa,Iowa City, IA, USA

©2003 400 pages

ISBN 0-444-51531-3 Hardbound

Publication: September 2003

Price: EUR 120 / USD 120

Mountain Geomorphology -Integrating Earth Systemspresents the papers of the 32ndAnnual BinghamtonGeomorphology Symposium, heldin 2001 in advance of the UnitedNations-designated ‘2002

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International Year of Mountains’.The three co-editors havecollectively worked in mountainenvironments for over 70 years,and brought togetherinternationally recognized expertsin mountain geomorphology from7 nations presenting research onmountain processes from aroundthe world, including the USA,Canada, China, Europe, and SouthAmerica.The volume utilizes Earth Systemsas a unifying and organizingtheme, examining the interactionsof the four Earth “spheres”(Lithosphere, Biosphere,Atmosphere, and Hydrosphere) inthe context of geomorphicprocesses in mountainenvironments. The volume is alsoa “Festschrift” in honor ofProfessor John D. “Jack” Vitek,long-time editor ofGeomorphology and anoutstanding mentor to each of thethree co-editors. Papers presentedin the volume representcutting-edge examinations ofmountain landforms, geomorphicprocesses in mountains, and theapplication of advanced remotesensing and GeographicInformation Science technologiesfor the study of mountaingeomorphology.The book should be of interest toall geomorphologists, and tophysical geographers andgeologists interested in mountainenvironments. MountainGeomorphology - Integrating EarthSystems is the only book of itskind, and stands as a testament tothe importance of mountains aslocations for studying theinteraction of geomorphicprocesses within an EarthSystems perspective.

Contents: Editorial. Research

Papers. Infiltration on mountainslopes: a comparison of threeenvironments (C.P. Harden, P.D.Scruggs). Drainage, sedimenttransport, and denudation rates onthe Nanga Parbat Himalaya,Pakistan (K. Cornwell, D. Norsby,R. Marston). Spatial distribution ofsediment storage types andquantification of valley fill depositsin an alpine basin, Reintal,Bavarian Alps, Germany (L.Schrott, G. Hufschmidt et al.).Impacts of reforestation andgravel mining on the MalnantRiver, Haute-Savoie, French Alps(R.A. Marston, J.-P. Bravard, T.Green). Spatial variation in thepower of mountain streams in theSangre de Cristo Mountains, NewMexico (M.A. Fonstad). Localscouring and morphologicaladjustments in steep channelswith check-dam sequences (M.A.Lenzi, F. Comiti). Predicting finesediment dynamics along apool-riffle mountain channel (S.Rathburn, E. Wohl). Thegeomorphic significance ofstep-pools in mountain streams(A. Chin). Equal-mobility bed loadtransport in a small, step-poolchannel in the OuachitaMountains (D.A. Marion, F.Weirich). Boulder weathering anderosion associated with a wildfire,Sierra Ancha Mountains, Arizona(R.I. Dorn). Influence of substrateon the distribution of the HawaiianSilversword (Argyroxiphiumsandwicense DC.) in Haleakala(Maui, HI) (F.L. Pérez). Lithologic,structural, and geomorphiccontrols on ribbon forest patternsin a glaciated mountainenvironment (D.R. Butler, G.P.Malanson et al.).Zoogeomorphology in the Alpine:some observations on

abiotic-biotic interactions (K. Hall,N. Lamont). Post-Oligocene riverincision, southern Sierra MadreOccidental, Mexico (D.R.Montgomery, J. López-Blanco).The shapes of cold, highmountains in sedimentary rocks(D.M. Cruden). Inferring erosionalresistance of bedrock units in theeast Tennessee mountains fromdigital elevation data (H.H. Mills).Glacial erosion andgeomorphology in the northwestSierra Nevada, CA (L.A. James).Advances in Holocene mountaingeomorphology inspired bysediment budget methodology (O.Slaymaker, C. Souch et al.).Debris flows in Glacier NationalPark, Montana: geomorphologyand hazards (F.D. Wilkerson, G.L.Schmid). Integrating soils andgeomorphology in mountains - anexample from the Front Range ofColorado (P.W. Birkeland, R.R.Schroba et al.). Remote sensingand geomorphometry for studyingrelief production in high mountains(M.P. Bishop, J.F. Schroder Jr.,J.D. Colby). High spatialresolution, hyperspectral mappingof in-stream habitats, depths, andwoody debris in mountainstreams (W.A. Marcus, C.J.Legleiter et al.). Solifluction stepsand risers, Lee Ridge, GlacierNational Park, Montana, USA: ascale and pattern analysis (S.J.Walsh, L. Bian et al.).

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The Quaternary Period inthe United States

Edited by A.R. Gillespie, W.M.Keck Remote Sensing Laboratory,University of Washington, Seattle,WA, USA, S.C. Porter, QuaternaryResearch Center, University ofWashington, Seattle, WA, USA,B.F. Atwater, US GeologicalSurvey, Seattle, WA, USA

©2003 830 pages

ISBN 0-444-51470-8 Hardbound

Publication: December 2003

Price: EUR 195 / USD 195

ISBN 0-444-51471-6 Paperback

Publication: December 2003

Price: EUR 90 / USD 90

Developments in QuaternaryScience, Volume 1

This book reviews advances inunderstanding of the past ca. twomillion years of Earth history - theQuaternary Period - in the UnitedStates. It begins with sections onice and water - as glaciers,permafrost, oceans, rivers, lakes,and aquifers. Six chapters aredevoted to the high-latitudePleistocene ice sheets, tomountain glaciations of thewestern United States, and topermafrost studies. Otherchapters discuss ice-age lakes,caves, sea-level fluctuations, andriverine landscapes.With a chapter on landscapeevolution models, the book turnsto essays on geologic processes.Two chapters discuss soils andtheir responses to climate, andwind-blown sediments. Two moredescribe volcanoes andearthquakes, and the use ofQuaternary geology to understand

the hazards they pose.The next part of the book is onplants and animals. Five chaptersconsider the Quaternary history ofvegetation in the United States.Other chapters treat forcingfunctions and vegetation responseat different spatial and temporalscales, the role of fire as acatalyst of vegetation changeduring rapid climate shifts, and theuse of tree rings in inferring ageand past hydroclimatic conditions.Three chapters address vertebratepaleontology and the extinctionsof large mammals at the end ofthe last glaciation, beetleassemblages and the inferencesthey permit about past conditions,and the peopling of NorthAmerica. A final chapteraddresses the numerical modelingof Quaternary climates, and therole paleoclimatic studies andclimatic modeling has inpredicting future response of theEarth’s climate system to thechanges we have wrought.

Contents: Preface (A.R. Gillespie,S.C. Porter, B.F. Atwater). 1. Thesouthern Laurentide Ice Sheet inthe United States: What have welearned in the last 40 years? (D.M.Mickelson, P.M. Colgan). 2. TheCordilleran Ice Sheet (D.B. Booth,K. Goetz Troost et al.). 3. Controls,history, outbursts, and impact oflarge late-quaternary proglaciallakes in North America (J.T.Teller). 4. Pleistocene glaciationsof the Rocky Mountains (K.L.Pierce). 5. Quaternary alpineglaciation in Alaska, the PacificNorthwest, Sierra Nevada, andHawaii (D.S. Kaufman, S.C. Porter,A.R. Gillespie). 6. Coupling icesheet and climate models forsimulation of former ice sheets(S.J. Marshall, D. Pollard et al.).7. Advances in permafrostprocess research in the United

States since 1960 (B. Hallet, J.Putkonen et al.). 8. Quaternarysea-level history of the UnitedStates (D.R. Muhs, J.F. Wehmilleret al.). 9. Western Lakes, (L.Benson). 10. Isotopic records fromground-water and cavespeleothem calcite in NorthAmerica (J. Quade). 11. Riversand riverine landscapes (D.R.Montgomery, E.E. Wohl).12. Landscape evolution models(F.J. Pazzaglia). 13. Eoliansediments (A.J. Busacca, J.E.Begét et al.). 14. Soils and thequaternary climate system (M.J.Pavich, O.A. Chadwick).15. Earthquake recurrenceinferred from paleoseismology(B.F. Atwater, M.P. Tuttle et al.).16. Quaternary volcanism in theUnited States (W.E. Scott).17. Late quaternary vegetationhistory of the eastern UnitedStates (E.C. Grimm, G.L. JacobsonJr.). 18. Quaternary vegetationand climate change in the westernUnited States: Developments,perspectives, and prospects (R.S.Thompson, S.L. Shafer et al.).19. Results and paleoclimateimplications of 35 years ofpaleoecological research in Alaska(P.M. Anderson, M.E. Edwards,L.B. Brubaker). 20. Quaternaryhistory from the US tropics(S. Hotchkiss). 21. Climaticallyforced vegetation dynamics ineastern North America during thelate quaternary (T. Webb III,B. Shuman, J.W. Williams).22. Holocene fire activity as arecord of past environmentalchange (C. Whitlock, P.J.Bartlein). 23. Interannual todecadal climate and streamflowvariability estimated tree rings(D.W. Stahle, F.K. Fye, M.D.Therrell). 24. Quaternarycoleoptera of the United Statesand Canada (A.C. Ashworth).

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25. Vertebrate paleontology (S.D.Webb, R.W. Graham et al.).26. Peopling of North America(D.J. Meltzer). 27. Modelingpaleoclimates (P.J. Bartlein,S.W. Hostetler).

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Water ResourcesSystems Planning andManagement

By S.K. Jain, National Institute ofHydrology, Roorkee, Uttaranchal,India, V.P. Singh, Department ofCivil and EnvironmentalEngineering, Louisiana StateUniversity, Baton Rouge, LA, USA

©2003 858 pages

ISBN 0-444-51429-5 Hardbound

Publication: August 2003

Price: EUR 170 / USD 170

Developments in Water Science,Volume 51

This book is divided into fourparts. The first part, Preliminaries,begins by introducing the basictheme of the book. It provides anoverview of the current status ofwater resources utilization, thelikely scenario of future demands,and advantages anddisadvantages of systemstechniques. An understanding ofhow the hydrological data aremeasured and processed isimportant before undertaking anyanalysis. The discussion isextended to emerging techniques,such as Remote Sensing, GIS,Artificial Neural Networks, andExpert Systems. The statisticaltools for data analysis includingcommonly used probabilitydistributions, parameterestimation, regression andcorrelation, frequency analysis,and time-series analysis arediscussed in a separate chapter.Part 2 Decision Making, is abouquet of techniques organizedin 4 chapters. After discussingoptimization and simulation, thetechniques of economic analysisare covered. Recently,environmental and social aspects,and rehabilitation andresettlement of project-affectedpeople have come to occupy acentral stage in water resourcesmanagement and any good bookis incomplete unless these topicsare adequately covered. Theconcept of rational decisionmaking along with risk, reliability,and uncertainty aspects formsubject matter of a chapter. Withthese analytical tools, thepractitioner is well equipped totake a rational decision for waterresources utilization.Part 3 deals with WaterResources Planning andDevelopment. This part discussesthe concepts of planning, the

planning process, integratedplanning, public involvement, andreservoir sizing. The last partfocuses on Systems Operationand Management. After aresource is developed, it isessential to manage it in the bestpossible way. Many dams aroundthe world are losing some storagecapacity every year due tosedimentation and therefore, theassessment and management ofreservoir sedimentation isdescribed in details. No analysisof water resources systems iscomplete without consideration ofwater quality. A river basin is thenatural unit in which wateroccurs. The final chapterdiscusses various issues relatedto holistic management of a riverbasin.Contents: Part I. Preliminaries.1. Introduction to water resourcessystems. 2. Acquisition andprocessing of water resourcesdata. 3. Emerging techniques fordata acquisition and systemsmodeling. 4. Statistical techniquesfor data analysis.Part II. Decision Making.5. Systems analysis techniques.6. Economic considerations.7. Environmental and socialconsiderations. 8. Rationaldecision making.Part III. Water ResourcesPlanning and Development.9. Water resources planning.10. Reservoir sizing.Part IV. Systems Operation andManagement. 11. Reservoiroperation. 12. Reservoirsedimentation. 13. Water qualitymodeling. 14. River basin planningand management. Appendix A.Appendix B. Index.ELSEVIER

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Economics, Business andManagement

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Advances inEnvironmental Accountingand Management

Edited by M. Freedman,Binghamton University, NY, USAE-mail: [email protected]. Jaggi, Rutgers University, NewBrunswick, NJ, USAE-mail: [email protected]

©2003 152 pages

ISBN 0-7623-1070-7 Hardbound

Publication: November 2003

Price: USD 90 / EUR 90

Advances in EnvironmentalAccounting and Management,Volume 2

Since the publication of the firstvolume in the series in 2000, therehave been advances and retreatsin both the physical environmentand in accounting’s role incontributing to the planet’ssurvival. With many nationssigning the Kyoto Protocol andwith certain businessesacknowledging the necessity toalter their production processes toreduce and eliminate pollution anelement of progress has occurred.However, the US has taken abackward step in choosing toignore the Kyoto Protocol andrelaxing many environmentalregulations.The accounting profession

especially in the US, has lostcredibility and this has seriousimplications for environmentalreporting. As a number of papersin this volume attest, the amountof environmental reporting hasincreased in the period from the1980s-mid 1990s. However, thevalue of those disclosures is opento serious question. The researchfor most of the papers in thisvolume was completed prior tothe Enron scandal, but the findingsindicate a need to re-evaluatewhat is reported about the firm’srelationship to the physicalenvironment.This volume should be of interestto people concerned withenvironmental information. Theseinclude employees of firms thatcreate environmental damageincluding the preparers of financialstatements, shareholders,creditors, environmentalist,academics, regulators, policymakers and people living in theaffected communities.Furthermore, auditors who shouldbe properly attesting to theenvironmental information, shouldalso have an interest in thecontent of this volume.

Contents: List of contributors. Adhoc reviewers. Editorial (M.Freedman, B. Jaggi). Theidentification, measurement, andreporting of corporate socialimpacts: past, present, and future(M.J. Epstein). Legitimacy and theinternet: an examination of

corporate web pageenvironmental disclosures (D.M.Patten, W. Crampton). Impact ofthe Clean Air Act of 1990 onpollution disclosures by electricutilities (M. Freedman et al.).Financial analysts’ views of thevalue of environmental information(H.G. Hunt III, D. Jacque Grinnell).The impact of corporate socialresponsibility on theinformativeness of earnings andaccounting choices (A.Riahi-Belkaoui). An assessment ofthe quality of environmentaldisclosure themes (W.D. Walden,A.J. Stagliano).

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AnthropologicalPerspectives onEconomic Developmentand Integration

Edited by: N. Dannhaeuser,Texas A&M University, CollegeStation, TX, USA, C. Werner,Texas A&M University, CollegeStation, TX, USA

©2003 580 pages

ISBN 0-7623-1071-5 Hardbound

Publication: October 2003

Price: EUR 105 / USD 105

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Research in EconomicAnthropology, Volume 22

The collection of originalcontributions in this volume ofResearch in EconomicAnthropology addresses tworecurrent themes in economicanthropology. These are theprocess of economic developmentand the basis on which economicintegration takes place. Thedevelopment theme is dividedbetween papers that areconcerned with the social anddemographic impact ofdevelopment, and those thatexamine the recent post-socialisttransition. The integration themeis represented by articles thatexamine the symbolic foundationsof economic integration, and bycontributions that focus on themoral basis of integration andcontinuity. With respect to boththemes theoretical issues arediscussed, and detailedethnographic cases are drawnfrom Asia, Europe, Russia, LatinAmerica, and the U.S.

Contents: Introduction (N.Dannhaeuser, C. Werner). Part I:

Social and Demographic Impact

of Development. Class-basedsocial networks in regionaleconomic systems (E.C. Jones).New inequalities: Changing Mayaeconomy and social life in centralQuintana Roo, Mexico (U.Hostettler). Children are thewealth of the poor: Pronatalismand the economic utility ofchildren in Jean Rabel, Haiti (T.T.Schwartz). Mixed response toneo-liberalism: Questioning“sustainable development” as aremedy to free trade and globalcapitalism in Oaxaca, Mexico (C.Newling). Fragmented solidarity:

Commercial farming and ricemarketing in an experimentalJapanese village (D.C. Wood).Part II: Post-Socialist

Adjustments to Market

Development. Productionmatters: Consumerism and globalcapitalism in Vietnam (E.F. Vann).Labour and technologicaldiscipline: Chaos and order inRussian textile company town (C.Morrison). Does privatisationmean commoditisation? Marketexchange, barter and gift giving inpost-socialist Mongola (P. Finke).Part III: The Symbolic in

Economic Integration. Fetishismand hauism in central Mexico:using marx and mauss tounderstand commodity productionin a cooperative setting (E.E.Ferry). Fluid signs of commodityfetishism: The cosmologies ofcoca-cola and tesguino (K.Applbaum, J.M. Levi). Celebritiesand the name economy (B.Moeran). Part IV: The Moral in

Economic Integration. The socialorganization of intention: sacredgiving and its implications forBurma’s political economy (I.Jordt). Catch the cranberry wave:Ocean spay’s role as an importantsocial and economic institution(B.K. Jones).

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Economic Complexity

Non-linear Dynamics,Multi-agents Economiesand Learning

Edited by W.A. Barnett,University of Kansas, Lawrence,KS, USA, C. Deissenberg,Université de la Méditerranée, LesMilles, France, G. Feichtinger,Technical University of Vienna,Vienna, Austria

©2004 432 pages

ISBN 0-444-51433-3 Hardbound

Publication: January 2004

Price: EUR 105 / USD 105

International Symposia inEconomic Theory andEconometrics, Volume 14

The last fifteen or twenty yearshave been marked by fundamentaladvances in the sources ofcomplex behavior in micro- andmacro-economics, in the practicaland methodological implicationsof such behavior, and in themethods and tools appropriate tocope with them. Much of thesedevelopments have been drivenby the recognition and acceptanceby economists of approachesinitiated in other fields - such asnon-linear dynamics, statisticalphysics, network theory, biology,computer science, and the use ofcomputational methods asproblem-solving tools - giving riseto important and innovativeimpulses to economic thinking.The sixteen papers in this book —the fourteenth volume in theseries International Symposia inEconomic Theory and

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Econometrics - reflect fromvarious perspectives this recentevolution. They are the outgrowfrom a selection ofcommunications presented at theCOMPLEXITY2000 workshop heldin Aix en Provence, France, 4-6May 2000 - a workshop thatbrought together, fromtwenty-two nations, almostseventy economists,mathematicians, biologists andphysicists interested in complexphenomena. All papers werestrictly refereed in the intendedtradition of the series: to providejournal quality collections ofresearch papers of unusualimportance in areas of currentlyhighly visible activity within theeconomics profession.With its selection of articles, thebook presents an overview ofadvanced contributions tocomplexity in economics andsocial system, such as chaoticdynamics and multiple equilibria,agent-based models, applicationsof genetic algorithms,non-equilibrium macro-dynamics,information transmission, learningmechanisms. Although the papersaddress economic problems, theauthorship and the perspectivespresented are interdisciplinary andprovide therefore a number ofinnovative insights and solutionsto classical or new questions.

Contents: 1. Complex dynamics

in non-linear aggregated

models. Paper 1: A simplegrowth-cycle model displaying“Sil’nikov chaos” (L. Piscitelli, M.Sportelli). Paper 2: Real-financialinteraction: A reconsideration ofthe blanchard model with astate-of-market dependentreaction function (C. Chiarella, P.Flaschel, W. Semmler). Paper 3:

Complex remanence vs. simplepersistence: Are hysteresis andunit root processesobservationally equivalent? (B.Amable, et al.). Paper 4: Historydependence, multiple equilibriaand global dynamics in efficientintertemporal optimization models(C. Deissenberg et al.).2. Multi-agent economies.

Paper 5: On information-contagious behavior (N.J. Vriend).Paper 6: The origins of thedeadline: Optimizingcommunication in organizations(C.H. Papadimitriou,E. Servant-Schreiber).Paper 7: Organization ofinnovation in a multi-unit firm:Coordinating adaptive search onmultiple rugged landscapes (M.-H.Chang, J.E. Harrington, Jr.).Paper 8: Patterns of consumptionin a discrete choice model withasymmetric interactions (G. Iori,V. Koulovassipoulos).Paper 9: Interaction in aggregatedemand for investment andregime switching (A. Palestrini,D.D. Gatti, M. Gallegati).Paper 10: Speculative bubbles andfat tail phenomena in aheterogeneous-agent model(T. Kaizoji). Paper 11: Thedynamics of the linear randomfarmer model (R. Carvalho).3. Tatonnement, forecasting and

learning. Paper 12: Chaotic priceinstability implies consumer’sbenefit (A. Matsumoto). Paper 13:A dynamic non-tatonnementmacroeconomic model withstochastic rationing (F. Bignami,L. Colombo, G. Weinrich). Paper14: Expectational leads ineconomic dynamical systems (V.Boehm, J. Wenzelburger). Paper15: Dynamics of beliefs andlearning under a - processes - Thehomogeneous case (C. Chiarella,

X.-Z. He). Paper 16: Geneticlearning of Nash equilibria illicitdrug markets and prerequisites fora successful crackdown(D. Behrens, H. Dawid).

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Emotional andPhysiological Processesand Positive InterventionStrategies

Edited by P. Perrewé, FloridaState University, Tallahassee,FL, USAE-mail: [email protected]. Ganster, University ofArkansas, Fayetteville, AR, USAE-mail: [email protected]

©2003 420 pages

ISBN 0-7623-1057-X Hardbound

Publication: November 2003

Price: USD 90 / EUR 90

Research in Occupational Stressand Well Being, Volume 3

This is an annual research seriesdevoted to the examination ofoccupational stress, health andwell being, with particularemphasis on the multi-disciplinarynature of occupational stress. Theintent is to pull together thevarious streams of research froma variety of disciplines to bettercapture the significant bodies ofwork in occupational stress andwell being.We provide a multidisciplinary andinternational perspective thatgives a thorough and critical

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assessment of issues inoccupational stress and wellbeing. The theme for this volumeis: emotional and physiologicalprocesses and positiveintervention strategies.

Contents: Overview (P.L. Perrewé,D.C. Ganster). Performanceimpacts of appraisal and copingwith stress in workplace settings:the role of affect and emotionalintelligence (N.M. Ashkanasy etal.). The impact of display rulesand emotional labor onpsychological well being at work(R. Cropanzano et al.). Areas ofworklife: a structured approach toorganizational predictors of jobburnout (M.P Leiter, C. Maslach).Feeling vigorous at work? Theconstruct of vigor and the study ofpositive affect in organizations (A.Shirom). Social influence and jobstress: direct, intervening, andnon-linear effects (W.A.Hochwarter). Beyond self-report:advantages and problems ofobservational, physiological, andevent-based measures in researchon occupational stress (N.Semmer et al.). Eustress: anelusive construct, an engagingpursuit (D.L. Nelson, B.L.Simmons). Democracy at workand its relationship to health (T.Theorell). Executives: engines forpositive stress (J. Campbell Quicket al.). About the authors.

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Information Asymmetry

A Unifying Concept forFinancial & ManagerialAccounting Theories

By A.J. Cataldo II, OaklandUniversity, Michigan, USAE-mail: [email protected]

©2003 264 pages

ISBN 0-7623-0874-5 Hardbound

Publication: December 2003

Price: USD 90 / EUR 90

Studies in Managerial andFinancial Accounting, Volume 13

The 2001 Nobel Prize ineconomics highlighted theimportance of the role played byuncertainty and information.Akerlof, Spence and Stiglitzreceived the award for their workon markets with asymmetricinformation. The highly publicizedEnron/Andersen case has beenfollowed by a barrage ofscandalous allegations: ComputerAssociates; Dynegy; Haliburton;Microsoft; Calpine; PG&E; ReliantResources; Ex-CEO of ImCloneSystems; Head of Martha StewartLiving Omnimed; Cendant;Omnicom Group; Tyco; Merck;Rite Aid Corporation; frompre-2000; J.P. Morgan; WorldCom;Supervalu; Qwest; GeneralMotors; and Xerox. The aboverepresent only a sample of newsreleases for a five week period(May 20 through June 28, 2002).This monograph seeks to providea theoretical foundation andlinkage between financial andmanagerial accounting. Just asthe lines between the CPA-auditor

or the financial analyst andconsultants, underwriters, andmanagement have been blurredthrough the Enron audit failure, so,too, will the lines betweenresearch streams relating tomanagement (managementaccounting) and external parties(financial accounting) be lesseasily drawn.After providing the theoreticalfoundation for informationasymmetry in the first threesections, emphasis shifts to casestudies. Section four focuses oncase studies and issues relating tothe transmission of symmetricand asymmetric information onthe Internet.This monograph will be of greatestinterest to business researchers(financial/managerial accounting,economics and financialeconomics, marketing andmanagement), but also to thoseinterested in the related corporategovernance and public policyissues (political science and law).

Contents: Section and chapter

headings: List of figures, tablesand exhibits. Preface.Acknowledgements. Introduction.Agency Theory and

Principal-Agent Problems.Adverse Selection. Moral Hazard.The Efficient Markets

Hypothesis and Market

Efficiency. Public Information.Private Information. Theory

Integration: Information

Asymmetry. Summary andIntegration of Theory. Case

Studies. Detailed Case Study #1:PURCHASEPRO (NASDAQ NM:PPRO). Detailed Case Study #2:UNIVERSAL EXPRESS (OTC BB:USXP). Cases Listed on the SiliconInvestor (SI) Stock-Chat MessageBoard. Summary. Appendix

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Chapters. Appendix Chapter 7.1.Selected (January 2001 ThroughMay 2002) PURCHASEPRO NewsReleases & Articles. AppendixChapter 7.2. Illustrations ofAsymmetric Information:Successful Releases of PrivateMisinformation Leading to StockPPS Increases. Appendix Chapter8.1. Message Board Posts -Allegedly from the CEO ofUniversal Express. AppendixChapter 8.2. Selected (Januarythrough September 2001) USXPNews Releases & Articles.Appendix Chapter 8.3. Informationand Misinformation Signals in theform of Cybersmear. AppendixChapter 8.4. Market MakerManipulation (MMM). AppendixChapter 9.1. Non-RandomlySelected Summaries of 126Cases. Annotated bibliography.Acronyms. Glossary of selectedterms. Notes. References. Index.

JAI

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0762308745

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International BusinessNegotiations

2nd Edition

Edited by P. Ghauri, ManchesterSchool of Management, UMIST,Manchester, UKE-mail: [email protected]. Usunier, University ofLausanne, Switzerland

©2003 448 pages

ISBN 0-08-044292-7 Hardbound

Publication: October 2003

Price: EUR 111 / USD 111

ISBN 0-08-044293-5 Paperback

Publication: October 2003

Price: EUR 56 / USD 56

International Business andManagement Series

Today there is hardly anycompany that can claim that it isnot involved in internationalbusiness (IB). A huge body ofliterature is available oninternational business, but thereare very few publications on themost important aspect of IB,namely negotiations. The purposeof this book is to enhance ourunderstanding about the impact ofculture and communication oninternational businessnegotiations. Consequently toexplore the problems faced byWestern managers while doingbusiness abroad and providesome guidelines for internationalbusiness negotiations. The book isdivided in four parts. The first partexplains the nature of internationalbusiness negotiations. The secondpart deals with culture and its

aspect on international businessand negotiations. Part threediscusses negotiations fordifferent type of businesses andfinally, part four provides insightfulexamples from different parts ofthe world and provides concreteguidelines to handle cross-culturalnegotiations.

AUDIENCE

For students at Masters and MBAlevels as an aid in understandinginternational businessnegotiations and complexities ofdoing business abroad.

Contents: Series editors’ preface.Editors’ preface. List of tables andfigures. The contributors.Introduction. A framework forinternational businessnegotiations (P. Ghauri). Vis-à-vis:international businessnegotiations (J. Graham).Strategies and tactics ininternational businessnegotiations (R. Saner). Hownational culture, organizationalculture and personality impactbuyer-seller interactions (S. Kalé).The Impact of Culture on

International Business

Negotiations. Cultural aspects ofinternational businessnegotiations (J-C. Usunier).Hofstede’s dimensions of cultureand their influence on internationalbusiness negotiations (G.Hofstede, J-C. Usunier).International multilateralnegotiations and social networks(R.B. Money). The role of time ininternational businessnegotiations (J-C. Usunier). Therole of atmosphere in negotiations(P. Ghauri).Negotiating Different Type of

Projects. Negotiating sales,export transactions and agency

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agreements (J.B. McCall).Negotiating licensing agreements(V. Parker). Building trust ininternational alliances (A. Parkhe).Bolter Turbines, Inc. negotiationsimulation (J. Graham).Negotiating mergers andacquisitions in the EuropeanUnion: how to make offers tenderand workable (V. de Beaufort, A.Lempereur).Negotiating in Different Parts of

the World. The IBM-Mexicomicrocomputer investmentnegotiations (S. Weiss).Negotiating with Eastern andCentral Europe (P. Ghauri).Business negotiations betweenJapanese and Americans (J.Graham, Y. Sano). Negotiatingwith the Chinese: a process view(P. Ghauri, T. Fang).General Guidelines. Ethicalaspects of international businessnegotiations (J.-C. Usunier). Somegeneral guidelines for negotiatinginternational business (P. Ghauri,J-C. Usunier ). References. Authorindex. Subject index.

PERGAMON

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/008044292

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Internationalization ofResearch andDevelopment and theEmergence of Global R&DNetworks

Edited by M.G. Serapio, Jr.,University of Colorado at Denver,USAE-mail:[email protected] Hayashi, Rikko

University, Tokyo, JapanE-mail: [email protected]

©2003 220 pages

ISBN 0-7623-1059-6 Hardbound

Publication: November 2003

Price: USD 90 / EUR 90

Research in International Business(formerly known as Research inInternational Business andInternational Relations), Volume 8

Three important developmentsunderscore the internationalizationof R&D since the early 1990s.First, MNCs from North America,Europe, and Japan have increasedtheir cross-border investments inR&D. Second, the roles played bythe overseas R&D facilities ofthese MNCs have evolved fromprimarily acting as “technologytransfer agents from the parentcompany to the host country” tothat of a “resource for thedevelopment of technologies forthe local, regional, and worldmarkets.” Third, MNCs arebeginning to integrate theirresearch activities on a globalscale and a number of MNCs haveestablished global R&D networks.This volume sheds light on theinternationalization of R&D forresearch and technologymanagement and internationalbusiness scholars, industrial R&Dpractitioners, and governmentpolicymakers. Drawing oncontributions from NorthAmerican, European, andJapanese researchers, the volumeaddresses the abovementionedthree key developments andrelated topics on theinternationalization of R&D,including investment motivation,location decision, R&D networks,

and the management andorganization of R&D.

Contents: List of contributors.Preface (M.G. Serapio, Jr.,Takabumi Hayashi).Perspectives on the

Internationalization of R&D.

Internationalization of researchand development: empirical trendsand theoretical perspectives (M.G.Serapio, Jr. et al.). Knowledgeexchange and cross-borderinnovation in the multinationalcorporation (I. Zander, O. Solvell).Investment Motivation, Location

Decision, and Global R&D

Networks. Analysing thelocational pattern of internationalcorporate technological research(J. Cantwell, E. Kosmopoulou).Globalization and networking ofR&D activities by 19 electronicsMNCs (Takabumi Hayashi).Globalization of R&D: a survey offoreign companies in Japan andsome comparisons with foreigncompanies in the United States(Satoshi Iwata, D. Methe). Thelocation choices of R&D activitiesin Canadian multinationals(J. Niosi).Management and Organization

of International R&D.Differentiation, integration, andorganizational tension: someevidence from R&Dinternationalization by Japanesefirms (Kasuhiro Asakawa).Network centrality and poweramong nationally dispersedtechnology units (J. Medcof). NECResearch Institute after ten years:design considerations and lessonslearned (Mitsuhito Sakaguchi).

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The Japanese Finance

Corporate Finance andCapital Markets inChanging Japan

Edited by: J.J. Choi, TempleUniversity, Philadelphia, PA, USA,T. Hiraki, International Universityof Japan, Yamato-machi,Niigata-Ken, Japan

©2003 664 pages

ISBN 0-7623-1068-5 Hardbound

Publication: October 2003

Price: EUR 105 / USD 105

International Finance Review,Volume 4

Japan has always been an “oddman out” from the standpoint ofWestern norm or Western finance.It is a country that is as developedas any in the West. However, it isalso a country that possesses thesignificant institutional andcultural traits that separate it fromthe West. An important questionin finance is to what extent thebasic models of finance,developed with the Western“perfect market” view in mind,can be applied to Japan; orconversely, what criticaladjustments must be made tomake models amendable to thereality of Japanese finance.This book contains 21 substantivepapers that address variousaspects of Japanese finance. Thisis an attempt to bring themtogether under the same cover sothat the commonality andpeculiarity of Japanese financecan be more easily discernedacross different applications as

well as compared acrosscountries. Hence, despiteapparent differences in topics, thetheme is international andcomparative in nature throughout.

Contents: List of contributors.Part I: An overview and

comparative analysis. TheJapanese Finance: Is it unique?(J.J. Choi, T. Hiraki). An analysis ofthe relative performance ofJapanese and foreign moneymanagement (S.J. Brown et al.).The impacts of Japaneseprice-competitive IPO auctionsversus the U.S. underwriter-pricedIPOs (R.H. Pettway).Part II: Corporate Finance and

Control. The Japanese market forcorporate control and managerialincentives (J-.K. Kang, T. Yamada).Internal cash flows andinvestment decisions: Acomparative study of the US andJapan (R. Aggarwal, S. Zong). Thesupply of trade credit in Japanesefirms (R.L. Constand). IPOmechanisms: A comparison ofbook-building, discriminatory priceauctions (J. Beierlein, H.K. Kato).Part III: Equity and Derivative

Markets. The efficiency of theJapanese equity market (J.Nagayasu). Index-futures arbitragein Japan (Y.P. Chung, J.-K. Kang,S.G. Rhee). Price and volumeeffects associated with a changein the nikkei 225 index list: Newevidence from the big change onApril 2000 (H. Hanaeda, T. Serita).Did option markets anticipate thedecline in Japanese stock pricesin 1990? (N. Takezawa, N.Takezawa). An analysis ofJapanese return dynamicsconditional on United StatesMonday holiday closures (T.Hiraki, E.D. Maberly).Part IV: Banking and Bond

Markets. Disintermediation andbond market developments inJapan (P.S. Szilagyi, J.A. Batten).Bank stock returns, interest ratechanges, and the regulatoryenvironment: new insights fromJapan (J.P. Broussard, K.A. Kim,P. Limpaphayom). Is issuingsubordinated debt by Japanesebanks effective in the Japanesemarket? (A. Kobayashi).Comparison of the short-term andthe long-term characteristics ofthe Japanese and the US spotinterest rate (K. Wada).Part V: International Capital

Market Linkages and

Transactions. Information, tradingvolume and international stockmarket comovements (L. Gagnon,A. Karolyi). The time-varyingbehaviour of credit spreads on yeneurobonds (J.A. Batten, W.P.Hogan, S. Pynnonen).Determinants of the initialdecisions by Japanese firms toundertake foreign directinvestment (Y. Horiba, K. Yoshida).Part VI: Currency Prediction and

Exposure. Estimation andprediction of the Japanese Yen/USdollar rate using an adaptive timevarying model (A.S. Abutaleb, Y.Kumasaka, M.G. Papaioannou).Does the day-of-the-week effect inforeign currency marketsdisappear? Evidence from theYen/dollar market (N. Yamori, P.Mourdoukoutas). Recognition offoreign exchange risk in theJapanese stock market (J.J. Choi,T. Hiraki, N. Takezawa).

JAI

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Multinationals,Environment and GlobalCompetition

Edited by S.M. Lundan, Universityof Maastricht, The NetherlandsE-mail: [email protected]

©2003 210 pages

ISBN 0-7623-0966-0 Hardbound

Publication: December 2003

Price: USD 90 / EUR 90

Research in Global StrategicManagement, Volume 9

The purpose of this book is topresent leading researchconcerning the increasingstrategic importance ofenvironmental concerns within themultinational firm, and to explorethe implications of corporateenvironmental strategy on publicpolicy. The contributions presentempirical research that deals withthe simultaneous effects of theglobalization of markets and theemergence of environmentalconcerns as issues of corporatestrategy, either using across-national sample of firmswithin a global industry, or asample of multinationals from aparticular home country. Byconsidering the dynamics ofcorporate environmental behaviorexplicitly within the context ofglobal markets, the book makes aunique contribution to thediscussion about the impact ofmultinational activity. Thechapters provide a richunderstanding of the kinds ofinteractions that occur betweenmultinationals and regulators,multinationals and

non-governmental organizations,and multinationals and theircustomers. By explaining whatmotivates multinational firms tomake environmental investmentsand to improve theirenvironmental performance, thesestudies offer necessary input forthe formulation of well-informedpublic policy. As a consequence,this book provides essentialmaterial for advanced studentsand decision-makers interested inthe changing role of multinationalenterprises in the global economy.While being of broad interest toacademics in the field ofinternational business andstrategy, this volume alsoprovides interesting results toresearchers concerned with theability of national governments toregulate multinationals, howregulation affects multinationals,and how in turn multinationalconduct affects regulatorystandards.

Contents: Multinationals,environment and globalcompetition: a conceptualframework (S. Lundan). Degree ofinternationalization andenvironmental performance:evidence from US multinationals(J.J. Kennelly, E.E. Lewis).Environmental strategy choice andfinancial profitability: differencesbetween multinationals anddomestic firms in Belgium (K.Buysse, A. Verbeke).Environmental aspects of Danishforeign direct investment indeveloping countries: the role ofhome country factors in shapingthe global environmental practicesof Danish multinationals (M.W.Hansen). Internationalization andenvironmental reporting: the greenface of the world’s leading

multinationals (A. Kolk, Rob vanTulder). Environmentalself-regulation in the globaleconomy: the role of firmcapabilities (P. Christmann, G.Taylor). Multinationals, NGOs andregulation: Greenpeace and theglobal phase out of chlorinebleaching (S. Lundan).Multinationals and global climatechange: issues for the automotiveand oil industries (A. Kolk, D.Levy). Multinationals, theenvironment and the WTO: issuesin the environmental goods andservices sector and in climatechange mitigation (T.L. Brewer).

JAI

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0762309660

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New Venture Investment

Edited by A. Ginsberg, I. Hasan

©2003 295 pages

ISBN 0-444-51239-X Hardbound

Publication: December 2003

Price: EUR 95 / USD 95

New venture founders and theirsponsors seek to create economicvalue by finding andcommercializing new and betterways of doing things. Theircommon goal, which also definesthe purpose of the entrepreneurialprocess itself, requires a bettergrasp of the key elements thatinfluence the choices involved inattempting to create economicvalue under highly uncertainconditions. It also requires adeeper understanding of theconsequences of new ventureinvestment as well as the various

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contextual factors that influenceinvestment decisions and ventureoutcomes. When confronted witha particular decision makingproblem faced by entrepreneursand new venture investors,academic scholars analyze howand why the problem in questionis a special case of some theoryor model which they know. Inseeking to detect generalities andto make abstracted sense ofobserved realities, academicsgenerally classify the problem in away that is a natural consequenceof the specific discipline- orfield-based knowledge theypossess (Davidsson, 2002). Theexplanations that academicresearchers provide and thepredictions they make aretherefore likely to be framed interms of the types of variables,theoretical perspectives, levels ofanalysis, and researchmethodologies with which theyare familiar. In seeking to explorethe intellectual underpinnings ofnew venture investment, we havegathered and organized a set ofpapers that provide scholarlyanalysis of the choices involved innew venture investment as wellas the various contextual factorsthat influence investmentoutcomes. To insure a morerobust and hopefully interestingscholarly treatment of suchproblems, we sought to include avariety of interdisciplinary andinternational perspectives thatreflect a broad range of theoreticaland empirical approaches.

Contents: “New VentureInvestment: Choices andConsequences” (A. Ginsberg, I.Hasan). Asymmetry of informationand of beliefs in venture capital (Y.Landskroner, J. Paroush). Venture

capital investments and ‘Calcutta’auctions (S. Seshadri, Z. Shapira,C.L. Tucci). The entrepreneur’sinitial contact with a venturecapitalist. Why good projects maychoose to wait (T. Burglund, E.Johansson). How shouldentrepreneurs choose theirinvestors? (D. Leshchinskii). Inquest for equity partners: Thedeterminants of the goingpublic-large blockholder choice(M. Bagella, L. Becchetti, B.Martini). Exit decisions ofentrepreneurial firms: IPOs versusM&As (I. Arikan). Venture capitalin financial systems: historical andmodern perspectives (R. Sylla).Canadian labor sponsored venturecapital corporations: bain or boon?(D.J. Cumming, J.G. MacIntosh).“New” stock markets in Europe: A‘new’ exit for venture capitalinvestments (F. Bertoni, G.Giudici, P. di Milano). Post issueperformance of hot IPOs (A.Sandstrom, J. Westerholm). Isaccounting information relevant tovaluing European internet IPOs?(P. Knauff, P. Roosenboom, T. vander Goot). “DeliberateUnderpricing and Price Support:Venture Backed and Nonventuredbacked IPOs (B. Francis, I. Hasan,Ch. Hu).

NORTH-HOLLAND

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/044451239X

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Research in Finance,Volume 20

Edited by A.H. Chen, SouthernMethodist University, Dallas,Texas, USA

©2003 339 pages

ISBN 0-7623-1073-1 Hardbound

Publication: December 2003

Price: EUR 95 / USD 95

Research in Finance, Volume 20

Eleven papers in this volumepresent some current interestingand important research in finance.Based upon the CAPM, Chen andKane show that double taxationand differential tax rates on apersonal and capital-gainsincome, affect corporate stockvalues and financial policies innonneutral ways. Senguptashows tax evasion decisions of amonopolist in a price-ceilingregulatory environment. In theirpaper, Osterberg and Thomsonempirically examine the impact ofstate-level deposit preferencelaws on resolution type and costsfor all operating FDIC-BIF insuredcommercial banks that wereclosed, or required FDIC financialassistance, from January 1986through December 1992. Peek andWilcox show that during periodsof international financial crises, orof domestic economic stress, thegovernment-sponsoredenterprises (GSEs) are well suitedto stabilize mortgage markets. Intheir paper, Chen, Robinson andSiems empirically show theassociation between banks’subordinated debt and their loansales activities and its

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implications in the transmissionmechanism of monetary policy.Also in this volume, Lin et al. usethe Granger causality test toexamine the linkage between theeuro exchange rate and themoney supply and GDP in the eurocommunity, as well as its impacton the UK exchange rate and theLondon stock exchange marketindex. In their paper, Kane andMuzere extend theDiamond-Dybvig model of bankruns to an open market economyand show that adding the centralbanks and the IMF, guaranteeswill reduce, but not eliminate thebanking as well as currencycrises. The paper by Chung et al.empirically shows the presence ofa long memory, property incurrency, future markets, anddiscusses its hedgingimplications. In their paper, Lee,Lee and Yu develop a valuationmodel for the pension benefitguarantees that incorporates theplan termination conditions aswell as a stochastic interest rate.In a case study, Hung et al.empirically show that the speciallydesigned dividends (SDD) havepositive signals in the TaiwanStock Exchange. Finally, in theirpaper, Guerard and Mark showthat the use of an R&D quadraticterm enhances the mean-varianceefficient portfolios and stockholderreturns.

Contents: List of contributors.Introduction. Impact of differentialand double taxation on corporatefinancial policies in an inflationaryworld (A.H. Chen, E.J. Kane). Priceceiling regulation of a tax evadingmonopolist (P. Sengupta). Depositpreference legislation and failedbanks’ resolution costs (W.P.Osterberg, J.B. Thomson).

Secondary mortgage markets,GSEs and the changing cyclicalityof mortgage flows (J. Peek, J.A.Wilcox). Increasing marketdiscipline on banks: subordinateddebt and bank loan sales (A.H.Chen, K.J. Robinson, T.F. Siems).Using zero-non-zero patternedvector autoregressive modelling totest for causality between moneysupply, GDP growth, the Londonstock market index and the euroexchange rate (E.J.Y. Lin, et al.).Fragile fixed exchange rates withbanking safety net guarantees(S.A. Kane, M.L. Muzere). Longmemory in currency futuresvolatility (C.-F. Chung, M-W.Hung, Y-H. Liu). Valuation ofpension benefit guarantees andtermination conditions (J.-P. Lee,S.-C. Lee, M.-T. Yu). Stockdividend announcement andinformation signaling theory: Thecase of Taiwan (K. Hung, C.-W.Duan, G.I. Nwanna). Theoptimization of efficient portfolios:The case for an R&D quatraticterm (J.B. Guerard, A. Mark).

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www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0762310731

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Research inOrganizational Behavior,Volume 25

Edited by B. Staw, University ofCalifornia - Berkeley, CA, USAE-mail: [email protected]. Kramer, Stanford University,CA, USAE-mail:[email protected]

©2003 354 pages

ISBN 0-7623-1054-5 Hardbound

Publication: November 2003

Price: USD 85 / EUR 85

Research in OrganizationalBehavior, Volume 25

This volume celebrates the firstquarter century of publishingResearch in Organizational

Behavior. From its inception,Research in Organizational

Behavior has striven to provideimportant theoretical integrationsof major literatures in theorganizational sciences, as well astimely examination andprovocative analyses of pressingorganizational issues andproblems.In keeping with this tradition, thecurrent volume offers an eclecticmix of scholarly articles thataddress a variety of importantquestions in organizational theoryand do so from a diverse range ofdisciplinary perspectives andtheoretical orientations. A numberof the chapters also directlyengage contemporary events anddilemmas of considerableimportance.

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Contents: Preface. Thenormalization of corruption inorganizations (B.E. Ashforth, V.Anand). Fair market ideology: itscognitive-motivationalunderpinnings (J.T. Jost et al.).Interpersonal sensemaking andthe meaning of work (A.Wrzesniewski et al.). Themessenger bias: a relationalmodel of knowledge valuation (T.Menon, S. Blount). Intragroupconflict in organizations: acontingency perspective on theconflict-outcome relationship(K.A. Jehn, C. Bendersky). Asocial identity model of leadershipeffectiveness in organizations (D.van Knippenberg, M.A. Hogg).Organizational perceptionmanagement (K.D. Elsbach).Unpacking country effects: on theneed to operationalize thepsychological determinants ofcross-national differences (J.Brockner).

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www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0762310545

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Spiritual Intelligence atWork

Meaning, Metaphor, andMorals

Edited by M. Pava, YeshivaUniversity, New York, NY, USAE-mail: [email protected]

Associate Editor P. Primeaux, StJohn’s University, Jamaica, NY,USA

©2003 308 pages

ISBN 0-7623-1067-7 Hardbound

Publication: December 2003

Price: USD 90 / EUR 90

Research in Ethical Issues inOrganizations, Volume 5

This volume contains articles andessays from internationallyrenowned authors and thinkersabout the relationship amongbusiness, business ethics,religion, and spirituality. Theauthors included in this bookrepresent multiple perspectivesincluding Christian, Jewish, Hindu,philosophical, and others.This volume will be of interest toboth academics and businesspractitioners who promote acontemporary re-integration ofbusiness and religious values andfor those concerned about thedangers inherent in this project.In the end, this volume suggeststhat in a pluralistic and democraticsociety the only justification forgoing back home again totraditional religious texts is to helpus all move forward together.If the real reason we’re invokingreligion in the public sphere is tostrengthen our own religiouscommunities and our ownidentities as members of particularreligious communities, we aremaking a fundamental error injudgement. The goal of alegitimate religiously groundedbusiness ethics can and must bethe desire to critique, enhance,and strengthen the democraticvalues and institutions of societyincluding business. These valuesinclude noncoercion,transparency, equal rights,pluralism, compromise, individualand communal responsibility, andmany others.

Contents: Introduction. The soul’shunger: spirituality in corporationsand in the teaching of businessethics (D. Koehn). Peter Druckerand Martin Buber: the germanicsearch for community and themeaning of the modern Americancorporation (M. Schwartz).Christian business ethics on theemployment relation: mapping theterrain (S. Herman). The spiritualcorporation: a pragmaticperspective (S. Rosenthal, R.Buchholz). Intelligent spirituality inbusiness: a Deweyan conception(M.L. Pava). The spirituality ofHarry Potter (P. Primeaux). Towarda spirituality for the contemporaryorganization: implications forwork, family and society (G.Cavanagh et al.). Discernment andstrategic decision making:reflections for a spirituality oforganizational leadership (A.L.Delbecq et al.). Calling: newcareers and spirituality.A reflective perspective fororganizational leaders andprofessionals (J.W. Weiss et al.).A Hindu perspective on spiritualityand management (A. Sharma).A comparative study of ethicaldecision-making amongstmanagers in large private-sectorUK companies (D. Bartlett).Analogical reasoning and the“public philosophy of business” (J.Roper). The risks of temptation: abook review of Peter Drucker’sThe Temptation to do Good (M.Schwartz).

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Engineering, Energy andTechnology

DY�

Elsevier’s Dictionary ofRefrigeration andCryogenics

English-Russian andRussian-English

By M. Rosenberg, Germantown,MD, USA, S. Bobryakov, Kiev,Ukraine

©2004 1008 pages

ISBN 0-444-51270-5 Hardbound

Publication: November 2003

approx. 30,000 terms in both

English-Russian and

Russian-English

Price: EUR 175 / USD 175

The utilization of refrigeration andcryogenics contributes tohigh-quality preservation andprocessing of foods, inenvironmental protection, and incase of emergencies.Refrigerating and cryogenicengineering enhance progress inmachine-building and automationof manufacturing processes, whilerefrigeration and cryogenics areincreasingly used in construction.Refrigerating engineering is thebackbone of the air-conditioningindustry.This dictionary covers all of theseaspects: it presents terminologythat is used in thermodynamicsand transport, as well asterminology depicting the use of

refrigeration and cryogenics in thechemical and mining industriesand in low-temperature physics. Itcontains basic terminology onrefrigerating machinery,heat-transfer processes andheat-exchange equipment,refrigerating plants, cold-storagewarehouses, refrigeratingcommercial equipment, and units.

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444512705

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Environmental Sciences

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Arsenic Exposure andHealth Effects V

Proceedings of the FifthInternational Conference onArsenic Exposure and HealthEffects, July 14-18, 2002, SanDiego, California

Edited by W.R. Chappell,C.O. Abernaty, R.L. Calderon,D.J. Thomas, EnvironmentalSciences Campus, University ofColorado at Denver, CO, USA

©2004 400 pages

ISBN 0-444-51441-4 Hardbound

Publication: February 2004

Price: EUR 150 / USD 150

The authoritative articles in thisbook represent the state-of-the-artin arsenic research. Arsenicexperts from around the world -participants in the FifthInternational Conference onArsenic Exposure and HealthEffects organized by the Societyfor Environmental Geochemistryand Health in 2002 - present theircritical findings. The authors sharetheir latest arsenic researchfindings in Occurrence,Epidemiology, Biomarkers andAnimal Models, Mode of Action,Mode of Action, Risk Estimation,Intervention and MedicalTreatment, and Water Treatmentand Remediation.As in past conferences, the firstreport of elevated arsenic

exposures in a new country wasgiven. The Conference introducedthe finding of arseniccontamination in Nepal andupdates of the arsenic problems inBangladesh, India, Vietnam areincluded.A vital contribution to arsenicstudy and policy making, thisvolume examines the globalimpact of the toxin and discussesarsenic in the environment,mechanisms of arsenicmetabolism and carcinogenesis,water treatment technology, andmedical care. Arsenic Exposureand Health Effects V offersinformed, challenging insights intoa highly important andcontroversial topic.

Contents: Occurrence &

Exposure. Groundwater arsenicexposure in India (D. Chakraborti,M.K. Sengupta et al.).Groundwater arseniccontamination in Nepal: A newchallenge for water supply sector(R.R. Shrestha, M.P. Shrestha etal.). Environmental impacts,exposure assessment and healtheffects related to arsenicemissions from a coal-fired powerplant in central Slovakia; theEXPASCAN study (I. Thornton,M.E. Farago et al.). Trivalentarsenic species: Analysis,stability, and interaction with aprotein (G. Jiang, X. Lu et al.).Arsenic in Yellowknife, NorthWest Territories, Canada (W.R.Cullen, E. Polishchuk et al.).Occurrence of public health andenvironmental hazards and

potential remediation ofarsenic-containing soils,sediments, surface water andgroundwater at the Lava CapMine NPL Superfund Site inNevada County, CA (G.F. Lee,A. Jones-Lee). Investigation ofarsenic release from sedimentmaterials to water phases (TranHong Con, Nguyen Thi Hanh etal.). Arsenic and heavy metalcontamination of rice, pulses andvegetables grown in Samtavillage, Bangladesh (M.G.M.Alam, E.T. Snow, A. Tanaka).Epidemiology. Criteria for casedefinition of arsenicosis (D.N.G.Mazumder). Arsenic exposurealters purine metabolism in rats,mice, and humans (L.M. Del Razo,E.A. García-Montalvo, O.L.Valenzuela). Risk analysis ofnon-melanoma skin cancerincidence in arsenic exposedpopulation (V. Bencko, J. Ramešet al.). Effect ofarsenic-contaminated drinkingwater on skin cancer prevalencein Wisconsin’s Fox River Valley (L.Knobeloch, H. Anderson).Biomarkers and Animal Models.

Alteration of GSH level, geneexpression and cell transformationin NIH3T3 cells by chronicexposure to low dose of arsenic(Yu Hu, Ximei Jin et al.).Laboratory and field evaluation ofpotential arsenic exposure frommine tailings to grazing cattle (J.C.Ng, S.L. Bruce, B.N. Nollerj). Doesarsenic require a carcinogenicpartner? (T.G. Rossman, A.N.Uddin et al.). Carcinogenicity ofdimethylarsinic acid and relevant

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mechanisms (M. Wei,H. Wanibuchi et al.).Mode of Action. Enzymology andtoxicology of inorganic arsenic(H.V. Aposhian, R.A. Zakharyan etal.). Structural proteomics ofarsenic transport anddetoxification (Z. Liu, R.Mukhopadhyay et al.). A novelS-adenosylmethionine-dependentmethyltransferase from rat livercytosol catalyzes the formation ofmethylated arsenicals (S.B.Waters, S. Lin et al.). Metabolismof arsenic and gene transcriptionregulation: Mechanism of AP-1activation by methylated trivalentarsenicals (Z. Drobná, I. Jaspers,M. Styblo). Effect of antioxidantson the papilloma response andliver glutathione modulationmediated by arsenic in Tg.ACtransgenic mice (K. Trouba, A.Nyska et al.). Application of filterarrays in the study of arsenictoxicity and carcinogenesis (JieLiu, Hua Chen et al.). Regulation ofredox and DNA repair genes byarsenic: Low dose protectionagainst oxidative stress? (E.T.Snow, Yu Hu et al.).Carcinogenicity of dimethylarsinicacid (DMA) (S.M. Cohen, C. Le etal.). Urinary speciation of sodiumarsenate in folate receptorknockout mice (O. Spiegelstein,X. Lu et al.). Some chemicalproperties underlying arsenic’sbiological activity (K.T. Kitchin,K. Wallace, P. Andrewes). Arsenicmetabolism in hyperbilirubinemicrats: distribution and excretion inrelation to transformation(K.T. Suzuki, T. Tomita et al.).Incorporating mechanistic insightsin a Pbpk model for arsenic(E.M. Kenyon, M.F. Hughes et al.).Intervention and Medical

Treatment. Natural historyfollowing arsenic exposure:

A study in an arsenic endemicarea of West Bengal, India (D.N.G.Mazumder, N. Ghose et al.).Saha’s grading of ARSENICOSISprogression and treatment (K.C.Saha). UNICEF and arsenicmitigation a report of the thirdphase work in Bangladesh (C.Davis). Normative role of WHO inmitigating health impacts ofchronic arsenic exposure in theSouth-east Asia Region (D.Caussy). Only painting tubewellsred or green, does not helparsenicosis patients (Q.Quamruzzaman, M. Rahman et al.).Water Treatment and

Remediation. “ArsenicSolutions” web platform of �50options for developing countries:Collaborative design andinnovation for the common good(S. Murcott). Investigation ofarsenic removing technologies fordrinking water in Vietnam (PhamHung Viet, Tran Hong Con et al.).Removing arsenic from drinkingwater: A brief review of somelessons learned and gaps arised inChilean water utilities (A.M.Sancha). Disposal of wastesresulting from arsenic removalprocesses (M.J. MacPhee, J.T.Novak, R.N. Mutter). Developmentof a low-waste technology forarsenic removal from water (J.Hlavay, K. Polyák et al.).An Overview of some US EPA

and Niehs Programs on Arsenic.

An update on some arsenicprograms at the US EPA (C.O.Abernathy, M. Beringer et al.).

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444514414

BK

Principles and Standardsfor the Disposal ofLong-lived RadioactiveWastes

By N. Chapman, C. McCombie,NAGRA, Wettingen, Switzerland

©2003 250 pages

ISBN 0-08-044192-0 Hardbound

Publication: September 2003

Price: EUR 140 / USD 140

Waste Management Series,Volume 3

This handbook is concerned withdeveloping principles andstandards for the safe disposal ofsolid radioactive wastes by burialdeep in the Earth’s crust.Radioactive wastes havefocussed thinking on long-termenvironmental protection issues inan unprecedented way.Consequently, the way in whichprinciples and standards are set,and the thinking behind this, is ofwider interest than to the nuclearfield alone. The issues are not just

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technical and scientific. There isalso a much wider philosophicalcontext to the debate, centeringon ethics, human values and theexpectations of society.In this handbook it is intended thatall theses issues are broughttogether, suggesting appropriateways forward in each area,culminating in a proposedstructure for safety regulations. Italso aims to provide a detaileddiscussion of some of the mostdifficult logical an ethical issuesfacing those wishing to dispose oflong-lived radioactive wastes.

Contents: 1. Introduction.2. The international database.3. Swiss experience in thedevelopment and application ofregulatory criteria.4. Ethical issues.5. Retrievability issues ingeological disposal.6. Institutional control andmonitoring.7. Performance measures.8. Siting requirements andregulations.9. Disruptive events.10. Time dependent aspects ofgeological disposal.11. Treatment of human intrustion.12. Accounting for uncertainty.13. Conclusions andrecommendations.14. References.

PERGAMON

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0080441920

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Life Sciences

BK�

Antiviral Nucleosides

Chiral Synthesis andChemotherapy

Edited by C.K. Chu, College ofPharmacy, University of Georgia,Athens, GA, USA

©2003 268 pages

ISBN 0-444-51319-1 Hardbound

Publication: December 2003

Price: EUR 135 / USD 135

• Up-to-date review on thechemistry and biology ofnucleosides

• Modern syntheticmethodology

• Comprehensive coverage ofantiviral nucleosides

This book summarizes the recentadvances in nucleosideschemistry and chemotherapy overthe past 10-15 years. It covers

recently discovered nucleosideantiviral agents, their therapeuticaspects and biochemistry, andalso extensive reviews on theirchiral synthesis.

Contents: 1. Recent Advances in

Antiviral Nucleosides. (G.Gumina, Y. Choi, C.K. Chu).Introduction. Structural features ofnucleosides as antiviral agents.2’-Deoxy nucleosides and relatedanalogs. 2’,3’-Dideoxy nucleosidesand related analogues.2’,3’-Unsaturated nucleosides andrelated analogues. Nucleosideswith a heterocyclic sugar ringmoiety. 3- or 4-Membered ringnucleosides. Acyclonucleosides.Ribofuranosyl nucleosides.References.2. Chiral synthesis of antiviral

nucleosides from carbohydrate

templates. (G. Gumina, S. Olgen,C.K. Chu). Introduction.4’-Thiofuranose nucleosides. Iso-and apio nucleosides. Oxathiolaneand dioxolane nucleosides.Cyclopentyl carbocyclicnucleosides. Cyclopropylcarbocyclic nucleosides.C-Nucleosides. Fluorinatednucleosides. Acyclonucleosides.Miscellaneous nucleosides.References.3. Oxathiolane and dioxolane

nucleosides: Synthesis and

antiviral activity. (G. Gumina, J.S.Cooperwood, C.K. Chu).Introduction. Oxathiolanenucleosides. Synthesis. Antiviralactivity. Combination therapy.Dioxolane nucleosides. Synthesis.Antiviral activity. References.

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444513191

BK�

Large Marine Ecosystemsof the World

Trends in Exploitation,Protection, and Research

Edited by G. Hempel, BremenMarketing GmbH, Bremen,Germany, K. Sherman,Narragansett Laboratory andOffice of Marine EcosystemStudies, NOAA-NMFS,Narragansett, RI, USA

©2003 440 pages

ISBN 0-444-51027-3 Hardbound

Publication: November 2003

Price: EUR 105 / USD 105

Large Marine Ecosystems,Volume 12

The Large Marine Ecosystems(LMEs) of the world annuallyproduce 95% of usable globalmarine biomass. LMEs arepresently being subjected tostresses from unsustainablefishing, climate change, coastaleutrophication, toxic algal bloomsand degradation of criticalhabitats, resulting in significantlosses of socioeconomic benefitsto coastal countries.The volume provides assessmentsof the changing states of selectedpolar, temperate and tropical

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LMEs using the case studymethod. From the studies ofchanges in biomass yields andenvironmental health, newinsights are provided on thecauses of the changes andactions presently underway toimprove the health andsustainability of LMEs.Twelfth in the series on LMEs (seehttp://www.lme.noaa.gov), thisbook is essential reading forscientists and students in marinerelevant fields, conservationists,marine resource managers, policymakers and others interested inthe fate of ocean ecosystems.

Contents: Series Editor’sintroduction. Acknowledgments.Editors’ introduction. Contributors.I. Polar and Boreal Sea LMEs.

1. The Antarctic Weddell Sea (G.Hubold). 2. Climate change in theSoutheastern Bering Sea andsome consequences for biota (J.D.Schumacher, N.A. Bond et al.). 3.Contemporary state and factors ofstability of the Barents Sea LargeMarine Ecosystem (G.G.Matishov, V.V. Denisov, S.L.Dzhenyuk). 4. The Scotian Shelf(K.C.T. Zwanenburg). 5.Assessment and sustainability ofthe U.S. Northeast ShelfEcosystem (K. Sherman, J.O’Reilly, J. Kane). 6. The YellowSea LME and mitigation action (Q.Tang). 7. The Baltic Sea (B.-O.Jansson). 8. Overfishing drives atrophic cascade in the Black Sea(G.M. Daskalov).II. Upwelling Current LMEs.

9. Interannual variability impactson the California Current LargeMarine Ecosystem (D.Lluch-Belda, D.B. Lluch-Cota, S.E.Lluch-Cota). 10. Sustainability ofthe Benguela: ex Africa simperaliquid novi (V. Shannon, M.

O’Toole). 11. Decadalenvironmental and ecologicalchanges in the Canary CurrentLarge Marine Ecosystem andadjacent waters: Patterns ofconnections and teleconnection(C.Roy, P. Cury). 12. TheHumboldt Current: Trends inexploitation, protection andresearch (M. Wolff, C.Wosnitza-Mendo, J. Mendo).III. Tropical LMEs. 13. The GreatBarrier Reef: 25 years ofmanagement as a Large MarineEcosystem. 14. Development offisheries in the Gulf of ThailandLarge Marine Ecosystem:Analysis of an unplannedexperiment (D. Pauly, R.Chuenpagdee). 15. A review andre-definition of the Large MarineEcosystems of Brazil (W. Ekau, B.Knoppers).IV. Mapping Natural Ocean

Regions and LMEs. 16. Mappingfisheries onto marine ecosystemsfor regional, oceanic and globalintegrations (R. Watson, D. Paulyet al.).V. Synopsis. 17. Synoptical Notes(G. Hempel).Index.

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444510273

BK�

Lipobiology

Edited by G. van der Vusse,Department of Physiology,Maastricht University,The Netherlands

©2004 724 pages

ISBN 0-444-51496-1 Hardbound

Publication: January 2004

Price: EUR 349 / USD 349

Advances in Molecular and CellBiology, Volume 33

This volume on lipobiologycontains 27 chapters dealing witha selected number of subjects oflipid homeostasis in the eukaryoticcells and mammalian body. Itfocuses on subjects in the field oflipobiology characterised by newinsights in underlying regulatorymechanisms. Special attention ispaid to proteins involved in lipidtransfer and enzymes in lipidmetabolism and the regulation ofexpression of genes encoding forlipid handling proteins.

Contents: 1. Introduction: Briefoverview on the volume onlipobiology (G.J. van der Vusse). 2.Intestinal uptake and transport offatty acid (P. Besnard). 3. Plasmaalbumin as fatty acid carrier (S.Curry). 4. Cellular uptake of longchain free fatty acids (P. Berk). 5.Role of FATP in parenchymal cellfatty acid uptake (W. Stremmel).6. Uptake of fatty acids byparenchymal cells: role ofFAT/CD36 (J.F.C. Glatz). 7.Properties and physiologicalsignificance of fatty acid bindingproteins (F. Spener). 8. Long chainacyl-CoA esters and acyl-CoA

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binding protein (ACBP) in cellfunction (J. Knudsen). 9. Physicalaspects of fatty acid transportbetween and through biologicalmembranes (J.A. Hamilton). 10.Computational modeling ofcardiac fatty acid uptake andutilization (M. Musters). 11.Regulation of fatty acid oxidationby Malonyl CoA in cardiac muscle(G. Lopaschuk). 12. Alterations inmuscular fatty acid handling indiabetes (J. Luiken). 13. Fatty acidmetabolism in cardiachypertrophy and failure (H.Taegtmeyer). 14. Physiologicalsignificance of uncouplingproteins-3; a role in fatty acidhandling? (P. Schrauwen). 15.Defects in mitochondrial andperoxisomal fatty acid oxidation(R.J.A. Wanders). 16.Transcriptional regulation ofcellular fatty acid homeostasis (M.van Bilsen). 17. Triacylglycerolmetabolism in adipose tissue (K.Frayn). 18. Phospholipidbiosynthesis in lipobiology (D.Choy). 19. Membranephospholipid asymmetry (E.M.Bevers, P. Comfurius, R.F.A.Zwaal). 20. Regulation of cPLA2

activity. 21. Mammalianphospholipase C (M. Schmidt).22. Mammalian phospholipase D -properties and regulation (J.H.Exton). 23. Metabolism andphysiological functions ofsphingolipids (J. Ohanian).24. Essential fatty acidmetabolism during pregnancy andearly human development(G. Hornstra). 25. Phospholipidtransfer protein andatherosclerosis (R. de Crom).26. PPAR and atherosclerosis(B. Staels). 27. The role of thesteroidogenic acute regulatory(StAR) protein inintramitochondrial cholesterol

transfer and steroidogenesis(D.M. Stocco).

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444514961

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Non-Neuronal Cells of theNervous System:Function and Dysfunction

Part I: Structure,Organization, Developmentand RegenerationPart II: Biochemistry,Physiology andPharmacologyPart III: PathologicalConditions

Volume edited by L. Hertz,Gilmour, Ontario, Canada

©2003 1316 pages

ISBN 0-444-51451-1 Hardbound

Publication: December 2003

Price: EUR 450 / USD 450

Advances in Molecular and CellBiology, Volume 31

The brain, and the rest of thenervous system, consists of nervecells (neurons) and non-neuronalcells (glial cells), which by faroutnumber the neurons, but in thepast have received much lessattention.This began to change about 30years ago with the realization thatglial cells carry out very importantfunctions, generally incollaboration with the nerve cells.Evidence is now starting toaccumulate that glial cells,especially astrocytes andmicroglia, may be major (in somecases the main) players in amultitude of neurological andmental diseases, and that differenttypes of glial cells interact not onlywith nerve cells but also witheach other and with cells liningbrain tissue and controllingexchange of nutrients and othercompounds between the brainand the rest of the body.Understanding of theseinteractions during normalfunction and in disease states ishampered by the fact that generalknowledge of cellular interactionsduring brain function is limited.These books present an attemptto remedy this situation. In thefirst two volumes, basicinformation about cell types andbiochemical and physiologicalinteractions between these cellsis provided by leading experts inthe field, and in the last partemerging evidence of theimportance of such cellularinteractions in several of the mostimportant neurological and mentaldiseases is presented by leadingresearchers working actively inthe field in question.

Contents: Part I. Structure,

Organization and Development.

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1. Cytoarchitectonics ofnon-neuronal cells in the nervoussystem (J.R. Wolff. T.I. Chao).2. Oligodendrocyte phenotypicaland morphological heterogeneity:a reexamination of old concepts inview of new findings (S. Szuchet,M.A. Seeger). 3. Regulation of cellcycle progression in astrocytes(Y. Naktsuji, R.H. Miller). 4. Role ofneuron-glia interactions (F.C.Alcantara Gomes, S.K. Rehen).5. Cells lining the ventricularsystem: evolving conceptsunderlying developmental eventsin the embryo and adult (F.G.Szele, S. Szuchet). 6. Theperisynaptic astrocyte process asa glial compartment -immunolabelling for glutaminesynthetase and other glial markers(A. Derouiche). 7. The astrocyticsyncytium (E. Scemes, D.C.Spray). 8. Structural plasticity ofnon-neuronal cells in thehypothalamo-neurohypophysealsystem: in the right place at theright time (A. Salm, A.E. Ayoub,B.E. Lally). 9. Glial-neuronal-endothelial interactions and theneuroendocrine control of GnRHsecretion (V. Prévot, S. DeSerrano, C. Estrella).10. Meninges and perivasculatureas mediators of CNS plasticity(F. Mercier, G.I. Hatton).11. Mechanisms of infiltration ofimmune cells, bacteria andviruses through brain endothelium(P.O. Couraud, X. Nassif,S. Bourdolos). 12. Hydrocephalusdisorders: their biophysical andneuroendocrine impact on thechoroids plexus epithelium (C.E.Weaver, J.A. Duncan et al.).13. Schwann cell interactions withaxons and CNS glial cells duringoptic nerve regeneration (M.

Dezawa). 14. Control of microglialactivity by protectiveautoimmunity (M. Schwartz).15. Roles of retinal macroglia inmaintaining the stability of theretina (J. Stone, K. Valter).16. Function and dysfunction ofenteric glia (T.C. Savidge, J.Cabarrocas, R.S. Liblau).Part II. Biochemistry,

Physiology and Pharmacology.

1. A role of lactate released fromastrocytes in energy productionduring neural activity? (E.L.Roberts Jr., C.P. Chih). 2.Principles of the measurement ofneuroglial metabolism using invivo 13C spectroscopy (R.Gruetter). 3. Ion, transmitter anddrug effect on energy metabolismin astrocytes (L. Hertz, L. Peng et

al.). 4. Role of astrocytes inhomeostatis of glutamate andGABA during physiologicalpathophysiological conditions (A.Schousboe, H.S. Waagepetersen).5. Contributions of astrocytes toischemia-induced neuronaldysfunction in vivo (A. Haberg, U.Sonnewald). 6. Differentialvulnerability of oligodendrocytesand astrocytes tohypoxic-ischemic stresses (H.Marrif, B.H.J. Juurlink).7. Astrocytic receptors andsecond messenger systems (E.Hansson, L. Rönnbäck).8. Transactivation in astrocytes asa novel approach forneuroprotection (L. Pengj). 9. Roleof glial cells in cholesterolhomeostasis in the brain (J.L. Ito,S. Yokoyama). 10. Non-neuronalcells in the nervous system:sources and targets ofneuroactive steroids (R.C.Melcangi, I. Azcoitia et al.).11. Expression of neurotrophic

factors and cytokines and theirreceptors on astrocytes in vivo (T.Nakagawa, J.P. Schwartz).12. The nitric oxide/cyclic GMPpathway in CNS glial cells (A.Garcia, M.A. Baltrons).13. Potassium homeostasis in thebrain at the organ and cell level(W. Walz). 14. Potassium andglia-derived slow potential shiftsin relation to behaviour (P.Laming). 15. Regulation of Ca2+

stores in glial cells (G. Scapagnini,T.J. Nelson, D.L. Alkon). 16.Decoding calcium wave signaling(A.H. Cornell-Bell, P. Jung, V.Trinkaus-Randall).17. Mathematical modeling ofintracellular and intercellularcalcium signaling (J.W. Shuai, S.Nadkarni, P. Jung). 18. pHregulation in non-neuronal braincells and interstitial fluid (M.O.Bevensee, S.D. McAlear). 19. AVPeffects and water channels innon-neuronal CNS cells (Y. Chen,M. Spatz).Part III. Immunology and

Pathology. 1. Alexander disease:a primary disease of astrocytes(L.F. Eng, Y.L. Lee). 2. Glil reactionand reactive glia (M. Kalman).3. Glial heme oxygenase-1 in CNSinjury and disease (H. Schipper).4. Astrocytes and microglia inAlzheimer’s disease (S.W.Barger). 5. Non-neuronal cellsinteractions in HIV-1-associateddementia (A. Ghorpade, H.E.Gendelman). 6. Glycoprotein gp120-mediated astrocyticdysfunction (E.Z. Kovacs, B.A.Bush, D.J. Benos). 7. The role ofastrocytes and microglia impersistent pain (V. Raghavendra,J.A. DeLeo). 8. Pathogenic role ofglial cells in Parkinson’s disease(S. Przedborski, J.E. Goldman).

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9. Upregulation of peripheral-type(mitochdrial) benzodiazepinereceptors in hyperammonemicsyndromes: consequences forneuronal excitability (M. Bélanger,S. Ahboucha et al.). 10. Role ofthe cytokine network in majorpsychoses (N. Müller, M.J.Schwarz). 11. Shared effects of allthree conventional anti-bipolardrugs on the phosphoinositidesystem in astrocytes (L. Hertz, Y.Chen et al.). 12. Glial cell loss inmood disorders and schizophrenia(L. Price). 13. Non-neuronal cellsin the nervous system: functionand dysfunction (P. Werner, E.Brand-Schieber, C.S. Raine).14. Role of glia in Prion disease(D.R. Brown, J. Sassoon).15. Schwann cells in diabeticneuropathy (A.P. Mizisin).16. Müller cells in retinopathies(A. Bringmann, M. Francke,A. Reichenbach).

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444514511

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Recent Advances inPsychology and Aging

Edited by P. Costa, I.C. Siegler,Laboratory of Personality andCognition, National Institute ofAging, Gerontology ResearchCenter, Baltimore, MD, USA

©2003 268 pages

ISBN 0-444-51495-3 Hardbound

Publication: December 2003

Price: EUR 135 / USD 135

Advances in Cell Aging andGerontology, Volume 15

The psychology of agingdeveloped as an importantsub-specialty that was recognizedwith the founding of Psychologyand Aging by the AmericanPsychological Association in1985. Of the many advances inthe past 18 years, the main onemay be that aging content hasbecome a regular part ofmainstream psychology.The chapters in this volume giveevidence of the importance ofaging content and issues inmainstream psychologicalresearch, including cognitiveneuroscience.

Contents: 1. Recent advances inpsychology and aging:Introduction (P. Costa Jr,I. Siegler).2. Aging and the seven sins ofmemory (D.L. Schacter).3. Age-related changes in visualattention (D.J. Madden).4. Studies of aging, hypertensionand cognitive functioning: Withcontributions from theMaine-Syracuse Study(M.F. Elias).5. A life-span view of emotionalfunctioning in adulthood and oldage (L.L. Carstensen).6. Personality and self-esteemdevelopment across the life span(K. Trzesniewski).7. The evolving concept ofsubjective well-being: Themultifaceted nature of happiness(E.F. Diener).

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444514953

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Materials Science

BK�

14th Wear of Materials

By P.J Blau, Oak Ridge NationalLaboratory, TN, USA, R.G Bayer,Ohio State University, Colombus,OH, USA

©2003 1800 pages

ISBN 0-08-044301-X Hardbound

Publication: September 2003

Price: EUR 350 / USD 350

• Over 200 peer-reviewedpapers including hot topicssuch as biomaterials andnano-tribology

• Keeping you up-to-date withthe latest research fromleading experts

• Includes communicationsand case studies

The 14th International Conferenceon Wear of Materials took place inWashington, DC, USA, 30 March -3 April 2003. These proceedingscontain over two-hundred peerreviewed papers containing thebest research, technicaldevelopments and engineeringcase studies from around theworld. Biomaterials andnano-tribology receive specialattention in this collectionreflecting the general trends in thefield. Further highlights include afocus on the new generation ofinstrumentation to probe wear atincreasingly small scales.Approximately ninetycommunications and casestudies, a popular format for the

academic community have alsobeen included, enabling theinclusion of the most up-to-dateresearch.

AUDIENCE

For tribologists and lubricationengineers, mechanical engineers,production engineers andindustrial designers, materialsscientists in metals, polymers andceramics, physicists and chemistsin surface analysis.

Contents:

Abrasive Wear, Erosive Wear,Fretting Wear, Wear Modeling andAnalytical Techniques, Metals andAlloys, Metal-Matrix Composites,Ceramics, Polymers andPolymeric Composites, Thin Filmsand Nanocomposites, PlatedLayers and Thick Coatings,Bio-Implants and RestorativeMaterials, Durability ofEngineering Components, MaterialForming and Machining.

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/008044301X

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The Local ChemicalAnalysis of Materials

Edited by J. Martin, Departmentof Materials, University of Oxford,Oxford, United Kingdom

©2003 236 pages

ISBN 0-08-043936-5 Hardbound

Publication: October 2003

Price: EUR 120 / USD 120

Helping to solve the problems ofmaterials scientists in academiaand industry, this book offersguidance on appropriatetechniques of chemical analysis ofmaterials at the local level, downto the atomic scale. Comparisonsare made between varioustechniques in terms of the natureof the probe employed. Thedetection limit and the optimumspatial resolution is alsoconsidered, as well as the rangeof the atomic number that maybeidentified and the precision,methods of calibration, whereappropriate. The local ChemicalAnalysis of Materials is amplyillustrated allowing the reader tosee typical results. It includes acomparative table of techniques toaid selection for analysis and atable of acronyms, particularlyvaluable in this jargon-riddled area.

AUDIENCE

Academic and IndustrialResources in Materials Science.

Materials Science

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Contents: Atom ProbeMicroanalysis, X-Ray Probes forSurface Analysis, Infra-red andUltra-Violet Proves for SurfaceAnalysis, ION Beam Probes forSurface Analysis, MaterialsAnalysis by Electron Beam, TheChoice of Technique

PERGAMON

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0080439365

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Recrystallization andRelated AnnealingPhenomena (2nd Edition)

Edited by F.J. Humphreys,Department of Materials Science,University of Manchester,Manchester, United Kingdom

©2003 600 pages

ISBN 0-08-044164-5 Hardbound

Publication: October 2003

Price: EUR 150 / USD 150

• Fully revised and up-to-date,the 2nd edition highlightsthe significant progressmade recently in thisimportant area of research

• Detailed coverage, muchmore comprehensivetreatment than is found intextbooks on physicalmetallurgy

• Bridges the gap betweentheory and practice byexamining the application ofquantitative, physicallybased models to metalforming processes

The strengthening of deformedmaterials is of both technologicalimportance and scientific interest

and Recrystallization and RelatedAnnealing Phenomena fulfils theinformation needs of materialsscientists in both industry andacademia. The phenomena havebeen most widely studied inmetals, although they occur in allcrystalline materials such as thenatural deformation of rocks andthe processing of technicalceramics. Research is mainlydriven by the requirements ofindustry, and where appropriate,the book discusses the extent towhich we are able to formulatequantitative,physically-basedmodels which can be applied tometal-forming processes. Thesubjects treated in the book are allactive research areas, forming amajor part of at least four regularinternational conference series.The book begins with treatmentsof the deformed state and thestructure and properties of grainboundaries, which provide a basisfor later chapters of - recovery,recrystallization and grain growth,which are the major topics of thebook. Specific chapters areincluded on ordered materials,two-phase alloys, annealingtextures and annealing during andafter hot working. This editiontakes into account the significantrecent progress made in severalareas including the understandingof the deformed state,characterisation ofmicrostructures by electronbackscatter diffraction (EBSD),and modelling and simulation ofannealing. Other subjects givenincreased coverage because oftheir importance, includedeformation to very large strains,and continuous recrystallization.

Contents:

Introduction; the deformed state;

deformation textures; thestructure and energy of grainboundaries; the mobility andmigration of boundaries; recoveryafter deformation; recrystallizationof single-phase alloys;recrystallization of orderedmaterials; recrystallization oftwo-phase alloys; the growth andstability of cellularmicrostructures; grain growthfollowing recrystallizationrecrystallization textures; hotdeformation and dynamicrestoration; continuousrecrystallization during and afterlarge strain deformation; control ofrecrystallization; computermodeling and simulation ofannealing

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0080441645

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Tribochemistry ofLubricating Oils

By Z. Pawlak, Utah State HealthLaboratory, Salt Lake City, USAE-mail: [email protected]

©2003 384 pages

ISBN 0-444-51296-9 Hardbound

Publication: October 2003

Price: EUR 175 / USD 175

Tribology Series, Volume 45

• Assists scientists, engineersand researchers in thedevelopment of a new highperformance lubricant

• An essential review of thestate of knowledge intribochemistry

Materials Science

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• The first book publishedrelated to tribochemistry oils

This latest title takes a new andunconventional look at engine oilas a micellar system. It is the firstbook of its kind to focus on thetribochemistry of oils and is thusan essential resource to practicingscientists and engineers in thepetroleum industry and to allinterested in the development of asuperior high performancelubricant.Guaranteeing its broad appeal thebook gives an invaluable review ofthe state of knowledge in therapidly growing area oftribochemistry. The concept ofmiscelles is clearly explainedalong their application to stimulatethe quality of engine oil, improvefuel efficiency and maintainadequate wear protectionformulation. This represents afresh approach to the formation ofanti-wear tribofilms. A new look atengine design trends is givenfurther assisting engineers in thedevelopment of a superiorlubricant.

AUDIENCE

Practicing scientists, engineers,petroleum industry laboratories,practicing tribochemists andtribologists.

Contents: INTRODUCTION TO

THE TRIBOCHEMISTRY

CONCEPT LUBRICATION

CHEMISTRY

The Role of Lubricants in EnginesLubricant AdditivesTribochemical Interactions ofAdditivesSynthetic Engine OilsLubricant Requirements andSpecificationsProblems

MICELLAR STRUCTURE OF

LUBRICATING FORMULATIONS

Reverse Micelles in TribochemicalProcessesMicellar Solubilization inLubricationTribochemistry of Hard-CoreReverse MicellesTribochemical Interactions ofAcid-Base ChemistriesProblemsTRIBOCHEMICAL NATURE OF

ANTIWEAR FILMS

Tribochemical Characterization ofAntiwear FilmsThe Chemistry of TribofilmFormationTechniques for Evaluation of MetalSurfacesProblemsSURFACE TRIBOCHEMISTRY OF

ACTIVATED PROCESSES

Chemical Nature of MetalSurfacesCatalytic Activity of RubbingSurfacesTribochemical Reactions onSurfacesOrganomolybdenum Compoundsin Surface Engines ProtectionProblemsANALYTICAL TECHNIQUES IN

LUBRICATING PRACTICES

Evaluation of the Degradation ofLubricantsEngine Oil Condition MonitoringOil Acidity and BasicityEngine Oil Evaluation TestsProblemsENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES

Recyclability, Biodegradability andToxicityClean Air and Energy Efficient CarsProblemsLUBRICATING OILS - RELATED

ACRONYMS AND TERMS

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444512969

Materials Science

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Mathematics

BK�

Perturbation Theory forMatrix Equations

By M. Konstantinov, University ofArchitecture, Sofia, Bulgaria,D. Wei Gu, University of Leicester,Department of Engineering,Leicester, UK, V. Mehrmann,Institut für Mathematik, Berlin,Germany, P. Petkov, TechnicalUniversity of Sofia, Department ofSystems and Control, Bulgaria

©2003 428 pages

ISBN 0-444-51315-9 Hardbound

Publication: June 2003

Price: EUR 125 / USD 125

Studies in ComputationalMathematics, Volume 9

The first book devoted to the

perturbation analysis of matrix

algebraic equations

• The first book in this field• Can be used by a variety of

specialists• Material is self-contained• Results can be used in the

development of reliablecomputational algorithms

• A large number of examplesand graphical illustrationsare given

• Written by prominentspecialists in the field

The book is devoted to theperturbation analysis of matrixequations. The importance ofperturbation analysis is that itgives a way to estimate theinfluence of measurement and/orparametric errors in mathematicalmodels together with the roundingerrors done in the computationalprocess. The perturbation boundsmay further be incorporated inaccuracy estimates for thesolution computed in finitearithmetic. This is necessary forthe development of reliablecomputational methods,algorithms and software from theviewpoint of modern numericalanalysis.In this book a general perturbationtheory for matrix algebraicequations is presented. Local andnon-local perturbation bounds arederived for general types of matrixequations as well as for the mostimportant equations arising inlinear algebra and control theory.A large number of examples,tables and figures is included inorder to illustrate the perturbationtechniques and bounds.

AUDIENCE

Scientists, Specialists andPostgraduate Students in AppliedMathematics, ScientificComputing and ControlEngineering, Developers ofMathematical Software

Contents: 1 Introduction.2 Perturbation problems.3 Problems with explicit solutions.4 Problems with implicit solutions.5 Lyapunov majorants.6 Singular problems.7 Perturbation bounds.8 General Sylvester equations.9 Specific Sylvester equations.10 General Lyapunov equations.11 Lyapunov equations in controltheory.12 General quadratic equations.13 Continuous-time Riccatiequations.14 Coupled Riccati equations.15 General fractional-afineequations.16 Symmetric fractional-afineequations.A Elements of algebra andanalysis.B Unitary and orthogonaldecompositions.C Kronecker product of matrices.D Fixed point principles.E Sylvester operators.F Lyapunov operators.G Lyapunov-like operators.H Notation.References.Index.

NORTH-HOLLAND

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444513159

Mathematics

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Medicine

BK�

CARS 2003 - ComputerAssisted Radiology andSurgery

Proceedings of the 17thInternational Congress andExhibition, London, 25 - 28 June2003

Edited by H.U. Lemke, ComputerGraphics and Computer AssistedMedicine, Technical UniversityBerlin, Berlin Germany,K. Inamura, Faculty of Medicine,Osaka University, Osaka, Japan,M.W. Vannier, Department ofRadiology, University of Iowa,Iowa City, U.S.A, A.G. Farman,Department of Diagnosis andGeneral Dentistry, University ofLouisville, Louisville, U.S.A,K. Doi, Department of Radiology,University of Chicago Hospitals,Chicago, U.S.A, J.H.C. Reiber,Department of Radiology, Leiden

University Medical Center, Leiden,The Netherlands

©2003 1448 pages

ISBN 0-444-51387-6 Hardbound

Publication: June 2003

Price: EUR 240 / USD 240

International Congress Series,Volume 1256

This volume once again comprisesthe papers presented at the 17thInternational Congress ofComputer Assisted Radiology andSurgery that was held in Londonbetween 25 and 28 June 2003.After many years of research anddevelopment in the application ofcomputer and communicationtechnology in radiology andsurgery, progress in theseendeavours has finally come tofruition: PACS is at the forefrontand has achieved a high level ofacceptance in clinical settings.This can be observed in manysmall and large scale PACSrealisations.In recent times, however, thetraditional focus of PACS medicalworkstation design directedtowards radiology is shifting toother clinical disciplines,specifically surgery. In the visionexpressed by H.K. Huang in thePrelude of these CARSproceedings, PACS based imaginginformatics is providing thefoundation for image assistedapplications, not only forcomputer assisted diagnosis, buteven more so in surgery. In thisyear’s CARS, this is reflected in a

large increase (32% as comparedto CARS 2002) in the number ofabstracts submitted for themesrelating to computer assistedsurgery (CAS). It can be expectedthat CAS will proceed in itsdevelopment to reach, in the nottoo distant future, the level ofmaturity and acceptance of PACSand thereby will enhance theeffectiveness of physicians andthe welfare of patients.

AUDIENCE

Physicians from clinical research,practicing specialists in diagnosticradiology, nuclear medicine,radiation oncology, orthopedicsand surgery, radiologicaltechnicians, medical computerspecialists, dentistry and oralsurgery

Contents: Preface.Acknowledgement. Prelude.

Medical imaging.

3D-Gd-enhanced MR angiography(MRA) for establishing venousthrombo-embolic disease: onestop shop imaging of pulmonaryarteries, vena cava, pelvic andboth lower extremity veins in 30minutes (M. Aschauer et al.). Theinfluence of beam-pitch,reconstruction slice-thickness,and kernels on 3D-visualisation of16-MSCT data (R. Irwan et al.).Helical CT of the cervical spineinjury: is there any role for plainfilms? (H.J. Lee et al.).Performance evaluation of the firstmodel of 4D CT-scanner (M.Endoet al.). Image processing

and 3D visualization. Automatic

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path searching for interactivenavigation support within virtualmedical 3D objects (H. Noser, Ch.Sten, P. Stucki). Segmentationand virtual exploration oftracheobronchial trees (D. Mayeret. al.). 3D-segmentation and finiteelement modelling of spinesegments (J. Kaminsky et al.).New display mode foremphasizing concentration of foldpatterns in virtual gastrocsocpy(S. Watanabe et al.). Remotevisualisation of patient data in theoperating theatre duringhepatopancreatic surgery (R.F.McCloy, N.W. John). Novelprojection views for simplifiedreading of thorax CT scans withmultiple pulmonary nodules (V.Dicken et al.). Laser projectionaugmented reality system forcomputer-assisted surgery (N.D.Glossop, Z. Wang).Atlas-based processing. Fromresearch to clinical practice:Cerefy brain atlas story (W.L.Nowinski). Matching system ofthe Schaltenbrand’s brain atlas (L.Lausuch et al.).Computer-assisted bone ageassessment - databaseadjustment (E. Pietka). 3-Dinteractive atlas of human toothanatomy (A.K. Rao et al.).Atlas-based determination ofanatomical landmarks to supportthe virtual planning of hipoperations (J. Ehrhardt, H.Handels,S.J. Pöppl).Computer assisted radiation

therapy. 3D tomographicreconstruction from portal imagingfor patient positioning (M.Mitschke et al.). A testenvironment for ultrasound-basednavigation in radiation therapy (S.Riesner, D. Golias, A.Schweikard). Registration of CTand MRI volume data of the liver

(T. Böettger et al.). SCULPTER:fast evidence based 3D anatomysculpting in radiotherapy bycomputerised topologicalself-mapping (C. Moore et al.).Skin respiratory motion trackingfor stereotactic radiosurgery usingthe CyberKnife (S. Dieterich et al.).Confidence-based automatedtracking of small gold seeds insingle frame amorphous siliconmegavoltage images P.Whitehurst et al.).Workstations and education.

Virtual surgical tele-simulations inophthalmology (A.A. NavarroNewball et al.). A Virtual surgicaltelesimulation in micrographicdermatologic surgery (J.A. Vélezet al.). Interactive graphicalanimation of human knee jointmovements (T. Pröll, R. Riener, R.Burgkart). Noise of LCD displaysystems (H. Roehrig et al.).Experiences with a workstationprototype for softcopy readingwithin the Bavarianmammography re-certificationprogramme (J. Riesmeier et al.).Image processing and display.

Automated analysis for therespiratory kinetics with thescreening dynamic chestradiography using a flat-paneldetector system (R. Tanaka et al.).Perfomance of image-intensifierequipped X-ray systemsfor-three-dimensional imaging (V.Rasche et al.). Ahigh-performance computingservice over the Internet fornonrigid image registration (F. Inoet al.). Intraoperative soft tissue3D reconstruction with a mobileC-arm (D. Ritter, M. Mitschke, R.Graumann). Fast semi-automaticstereoradiographic reconstructionof scoliotic spines usingmulti-scale image processing andstatistical geometric models (V.

Pomero et al.). Personalized 3Dreconstruction of proximal femurfrom low-dose digital biplanarradiographs (A. Le Bras et al.).Spatial relationship between theinterhemispheric fissure plane andthe head symmetry plane (Q. Hu,W.L. Nowinski). X-ray bonefracture subtraction usinggeodesic active contour andmathematical morphologyoperations (Y. Jiang). Improvingthe performance of HopfieldNeural Network to segmentpathological liver color images. (R.Sammouda, M. Sammouda).Extraction of bronchus regionsfrom 3D chest X-ray CT images byusing structural features ofbronchus (T. Kitasaka et al.).Cerebrovascular segmentation forMRA data using level sets (H.Hassan, A.A. Farag). Optimisedstatistical deformable surfacemodels with manifold embedding(P. Horkaew, G.Z. Yang).Integrating patient-oriented dataprocessing into the PREPaRevirtual hospital using XMLtechnology (Tschirley, K. Köchy, S.Mäle). Development of an intuitivegraphical user interface for volumerendering of multidetector CT data(H. Shin et al.).Image management and

communication. Telepresenceover satellite (G.Graschew et al.).Improving the legal and regulatoryclimate for telemedicine ande-health (N. Terry). Recentprogress in digital cameratechnology, and the digitization ofX-ray films (M.K. Choong et al.).Iconic representation forprogressive transmission ofmedical images (Y. Sun, D.Pycock). The virtual microscopefor routine pathology based on aPACS system for 6 Gb images (K.Saeger et al.). Field trial of mobile

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digital telemammography phase I- installation and testing ofequipment (J. Gitlin et al.).Implementation of ISO17799 andBS7799 in picture archiving andcommunications system: localexperience in implementation ofBS7799 Standard (C.K. Tong etal.). Organizing security andprivacy enforcement in medicalimaging technology (JointNEMA/COCIR/JIRA Security andPrivacy Committee, D. Gobuty).Remote servicing of medicalequipment under HIPAA - asolution approved by the jointNEMA/COCIR/JIRA Security andPrivacy Committee (JointNEMA/COCIR/JIRA Security andPrivacy Committee, W. Leetz).7th Annual Conference of the

International Society for

Computer Aided Aurgery.

Surgical simulation and

education. An Efficient modellingand simulation of soft tissuedeformation using mass-springsystems (A. Duysak, J.J. Zhang,V. Ilankovan). On constitutivemodeling of soft tissue for thelong-term prediction ofcranio-maxillofacial surgeryoutcome (E. Gladilin et al.).Three-dimensional finite elementmodelling for soft tissues surgery(Y. Tiller et al.). A procedure forcomputing patient-specificanatomical models for finiteelement-based surgical simulation(M.A. Audette et al.). Draw andcut: intuitive 3D osteotomyplanning on polygonal bonemodels (S. Zachow et al.).Real-time structural analysis forpreoperative surgical planning (S.Olson et al.). Evaluation ofdifferent pathology generationstrategies for surgical trainingsimulators (R. Sierra, M. Bajka, G.Székely). Virtual 3D planning and

guidance of mandibular distractionosteogenesis (M. Meehan et al.).Automated CT-based 3D surgicalplanning for total hip replacement:a pilot study (M. Nakamoto et al).Volumetric three-dimensional realtime image rendering for surgicalplanning and virtual simulation inintracranial procedures (A.Gharabaghi et al.).Surgical navigation. Highperformance computing forparallel rendering in surgicalautostereoscopic display andnavigation (N. Sakai et al.).Stereoscopic augmented realityfor operating microscopes (M.Aschke et al.). 3D graphical userinterface for computer assistedsurgery (E. Samset, E. Gjesteland,M. Soeter). Anatomicalimage-based rigid registrationbetween fluoroscopic X-ray andCT: methods comparison andexperimental results (L.Joskowicz, D. Knaan). Boneregistration with 3D CT andultrasound datasets (B. Brendel etal.). Rigid registration of 3Dultrasound data of brain tumours(M.M.J. Letteboer, M.A.Viergever, W.J. Niessen). Adevice for optimal registration innavigated procedures near thepetrous bone (Ch. Tiesenhausen,O. Schwerdtner, T. Lüth). Theregistration of magneticnavigation system for surgery (J.Shimada et al.). Breakdown oftracking accuracy forelectromagnetically guidedabdominal interventions (J. Tang,K. Cleary). New calculationmethod of image similarity forendoscope tracking based onimage registration in endoscopenavigation (D. Deguchi et al). Nextgeneration’s navigation systems(R. Marmulla et al.). Navigation ofthe spine - a new chance for

education and training (A. Hoelzlet al.). The impact of auditivefeedback on neuronavigation(P.W.A. Willems et al.).Surgical robotics and

instrumentation. A robot-assistedsystem for long boneintramedullary distal locking:concept and preliminary results (L.Joskowicz et al.). Forces andtorques during robotic needleinsertion to human vertebra (K.Matsumiya et al.). Interactivelocalisator for percutaneousinterventions (G. Kronreif et al.).NeuroArm: an MR compatiblerobot for microsurgery (G.R.Sutherland, P.B. McBeth, D.f.Louw). Micromanipulator system(NeuRobot): clinical application inneurosurgery (K. Hongo et al.).Development of an automaticfocusing system for a preciselaser ablation system inneurosurgery (E. Aoki et al.).Development of multi-DOF brainretract manipulator for minimallyinvasive neurosurgery (J.Okamoto et al.). AnMR-compatible master-slavemanipulator with interchangeablesurgical tools (F. Tajima et al.).Measurement of force acting onsurgical instrument forforce-feedback to master robotconsole (S. Shimachi et al.). TheNASA Smart Probe Project forreal-time multiple microsensortissue recognition: update (R.Andrews et al.). RoboPoint - anautoclavable interactive miniaturerobot for surgery andinterventional radiology (D.Schauer, A. Hein, T.C. Lueth). Theapplication accuracy of thePathFinder neurosurgical robot(P.S. Morgan et al.).Validation of medical IPD.Validation of medical volumevisualization: a literature review

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(A. Pommert, K.-H. Höhne).Knowledge structure undtemplates for informationelements in validation proceduresin CARS (M. Strauss, H.U.Lemke).Computer assisted

neurosurgery. Neuropathplanner-automatic path searchingfor neurosurgery (T. Fujii et al.).The significance of theelectromagnetic field system inthe microneurosurgicalmanagement of brain tumors withthe Zeiss opmi microscope (M.El-Khashab). First clinical resultsof intraoperative high-fieldmagnetic resonance imagingsupported by neuronavigation (Ch.Nimsky et al.). Development of ahydraulic-driven flexiblemanipulator for neurosurgery (H.Okayasu et al.). Mobileintraoperative MRI inneurosurgery at 1.5 T (G.R.Sutherland, P.B. McBeth, D.F.Louw). Iterative neuronavigationusing 3D ultrasound - a feasibilitystudy (D. Lindner et al.).Computer assisted ENT surgery.Image-guided otologic surgery (R.Labadie et al.). A novel robotsystem for fully automatedparanasal sinus surgery(J. Wurm et al.).Computer assisted orthopaedic

surgery. Computer-aided traumasurgery: preliminary report of 32cases (Th. Gautheron, M. Coutier).Efficacy of fully 3D monomodalinterface in pre-operative planningof total hip replacement (C.Zannoni et al.). The MEPUCconcept adapts the c-armfluoroscope to image-guidedsurgery (N. Suhm et al.). A 3-Dsimulation of focused ultrasoundpropagation for extracorporealshock wave osteotomy (Y. Ukai etal.). Registration of the tibia in

robot-assisted total kneearthroplasty using surfacematching. (K. Denis et al.).Minimal invasive thoracic

abdominal surgery. Limitationsfor manual and telemanipulatorassisted motion tracking anddexterity for endoscopic surgery(S. Jacobs et al.).Remote-controlled laparoscopemanipulator system, Naviot ™, forendoscopic surgery (T. Yasunagaet al.). Planning of anatomicalresections and in situ ablations inoncologic liver surgery (A.Littmann et al.). An interactiveaugmented reality 3D visualizationsystem for destroying liver tumorusing cryoablation (I. Balasinghamet al.). Augmented reality for safercoronary artery bypass(L. Aurdal et al.).Rapid prototyping. An interfacefor the data exchange betweenCAS and CAD/CAM systems (T.Wu et al.). Deformable templatesfor pre-operative computer-aideddesign and fabrication of largecranial implants (D. Dean, K.-J.Min). Skull bone reconstructionafter hemicraniectomy with aprefabricated implant (H. Eufingeret al.). Experiments forexamination of precision (in CAS)(M. Wehmöller et al.).Image-based biomimetricapproach to design and fabricationof tissue engineered bone (U.Meyer et al.).Workshop on Information

Technology in Medicine -

Collaborative Research Center

414. Clinical application of new3D and 4D visualization andquantication tools for cardiacdiagnosis and therapy (I. Wolf etal.). Heat exchange duringcardiopulmonary bypass (T.M.Schmidt et al.).Multidetector-computed

tomography for coronary arteryoperation planning: evaluation ofthe method (J. Albers et al.).Creating high quality models ofthe skull using iterative modellingand area of interests (S. Däuber etal.). Elastic deformation forautomated planning of surgicalinterventions (D. Schorr et al.).Location decision for a robotmilling complex trajectories incraniofacial surgery (E. Engel etal.). Risk analysis for a reliable andsafe surgical robot system (W.Korb et al.). Projector-basedvisualization for intraoperativenavigation: first clinical results (H.Hoppe et al.). Preclinicalevaluation of an augmented realitysystem for craniofacial surgery (T.Salb et al.).3rd International Workshop on

Haptic Devices in Medical

Applications. Toward newdesigns of haptic devices forminimally invasive surgery (S.Payandeh, T. Li). Virtualendoscopy with force feedback - anew system for neurosurgicaltraining (C. Trantakis et al.).Biopsy navigator: a smart hapticinterface for interventionalradiological gestures (G. Marti etal.). Measuring grasping andcutting forces for reality-basedhaptic modeling (G. Thholey etal.).21st International EuroPACS

Meeting. Teleradiology.Implementing a secureteleradiology dystem using theinternet (A. Alaoui et al.). Safeteleradiology: informationassurance as project planningmethodology (J. Collmann et al.).Common gateway interfacing anddynamic jpeg techniques forremote handheld (C. Tong, K.K.Chan, C.K. Wong).PACS strategies and

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applications. Business processanalysis for diagnostic imaging (C.Sprengel, J. Schwarzer, I. Kaden).Distributed measurement andreporting system for surgicalplanning (A. Giachetti et al.). Useof PACS system for navigatedneurosurgery andneuroendoscopy (Z. Novak et al.).Systems integration.Large-Scale Hospital InformationSystem in clinical practice (E.Pietka). Embedded systems forsigning medical images using theDICOM standard (M. Kroll et al.).Maintaining database consistencyin an integrated, heterogeneousHIS-RIS-PACS environment (S.Nissen-Meyer, L. König, M.Reiser). Multi-Detector CT and 3Dimaging in a multi-vendor PACSenvironment (P.M.A. van Ooijen,R. Witkamp, M. Oudkerk).Electronic health record. Astrategy for a wireless patientrecord and image data (R.Andrade et al.). Web-baseddistribution of radiological imagesfrom PACS to EPR (H. Münch etal.). An integrated accessinterface to multimedia EPR (C.Costa et al.). A grammar-basedspeech user interface generatorfor structured reporting (J. vonBerg). A flexible, multi-modalitystructured reporting system basedon medical and networkingstandards (B. Baumgartner,T. Jensen).Integrating the health care

enterprise. Extending the IHEinitiative to Europe: experiences(M. Eichelberg et al.). PACS as adriver for integrating healthcaresystems (W. Leodolter, K.Kocever). Picture archiving andcommunication system in China:the development, problem, andintegrating strategy with IHE (H.Fu et al.).

5th international workshop on

computer-aided diagnosis.

Special session on breast CAD.Computer aided detection forscreening memography (S.Astley). An evaluation of CAD formammography in the context of amulti-professional screeningservice (P. Taylor et al.). Doesincorrect computer promptingaffect human decision making? Acase study in mammography (E.Alberd et al.). GPCALMA, amammographic CAD in a GRIDconnection (G.L. Masala et al.).Automated detection methods forarchitectural distortions aroundskinline and within mammarygland on mammograms (T.Matsubara et al.). The accuracy ofgeometric approximation of themamilla in mammograms (F.Georgsson, C. Olsén).Special Session on Thoracic

CAD. Computer aidedsegmentation of pulmonarynodules: automated vasculaturecutoff in thin- and thickslice CT (R.Wiemker et al.). Detection ofsmall nodules from 3D chest X-rayCT images based on shapefeatures (Y. Mekada et al.).Automated lung segmentation andcomputer-aided diagnosis forthoracic CT scans (S.G. Armato,H. MacMahon). Correspondenceof lung nodules in sequential chestCT images for quantification of thecurative effect (T. Kusanagi et al.).Model-based detection of lunglesions in CT exams (R.A. Kaucicet al.). A unified approach fordetection, visualization, andidentification of lung abnormalitiesin chest spiral CT scans (A.A.Farag et al.). Intelligent computeraided diagnosis system for hestradiography (J.S. Jin et al.).Special session on 3D CAD.Computer-aided diagnosis via

model-based shape analysis:cardiac (M. Sonka). Computeraided polyp detection in CTcolonography using an ensembleof support vector machines (A.K.Jerebko et al.). Lung structurerecognition - a further study ofthoracic organ recognitions basedon CT Images (X. Zhou et al.).Automated global matching oftemporal thoracic helical CTstudies: feasibility study (M.N.Gurcan et al.). Automaticdetection of calcifications in theaorta from abdominal CT scans (I.Isgum, B. van Ginneken).Automated volume measurementsof pulmonary emphysema on 3Dchest CT images (T. Hara et al.).CAD system for quantitativeevaluation of chronic obstructivepulmonary disease based on 3-DCT image (K. Mori et al.).Development of computer-aideddiagnosis system for 3Dmulti-detector row CT images oflivers (A. Shimizu et al.).Compute-aided differentiation offocal liver lisease in MR imaging(X. Zhang et al.).2003 International symposium

on cardiovascular imaging.

Invasive coronary imaging. 4Ddeformation field of coronaryarteries from monoplane rotationalX-ray angiography C. Blondel etal.). 3D coronary reconstructionfrom calibrated motion-compensated 2D projections (B.Movassaghi et al.). Mutualinformation based respirationdetection (B. Martin-Leung et al.).An image matching approachapplied in the control of the caseof endovascular prothesispositioning (Y. Lahfi et al.).Automatic tuning of left ventricularsegmentation of MR images usinggenetic algorithms (E. Angelie et al.).

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Quantitative coronary

angiography and altrasound.Automatic stent border detectionin intraVascular ultraSoundimages (J. Dijkstra et al.).Integrated system for quantitativeanalysis of coronary plaque viadata fusion of biplane angiographyand intravascular ultrasound (M.E.Olszewski et al.).Left Ventricular Function by

Echocardiography. Analysis oftexture alterations in myocardiumon echocardiographic images (V.Punys et al.).Non-invasive cardiovascular

imaging - clinical approach - an

ESCR Symposium. Threedimensional coronary arteryreconstruction using fusion ofintravascular ultrasound andbiplane angiography FotiadisAdvances in cardiovascular

MRI and CT - a NASCI

symposium. Multi-view activeappearance models for consistentsegmentation of multiple standardviews: application to long andshort-axis cardiac MR images(B.P.F. Lelieveldt et al.). Detectionof left ventricular epi-andendocardial borders using coupledactive contours (L.J. Spreeuwers,M. Breeuwer). The detection ofnormal, ischemic and infarctedmyocardial tissue using MRI (M.Breeuwer et al.). Measuringmyocardial deformations from MRdata using information-theoreticnon rigid registration (C. Petitjeanet al.). Design of a dynamiccardiac MR phantom for theevaluation of cardiac MR systems(S. Khan et al.).Advances in cardiovascular

MRI and MSCT - A NASCI

symposium. New techniques forvisualizing and evaluating leftventricular performance (B.Wuensche, A.A. Young).

Predictive cardiac motionmodelling and correction (N. Ablittet al.). A first order Lagrangianbased variational approach for 3Dflow vector field restoration (B.S.Carmo). Evaluation ofHessian-based filters to enhancethe axis of coronary arteries in CTimages (S.D. Olabarriaga, W.Niessen, M. Breeuwer).9th Computed Maxillofacial

Imaging Ccongress.

Instrumentation advances and

concerns. Effect of visible light onphoto-stimulated-phosphorimaging plates (R. Molteni). Theeffect of dose reduction on thediagnoses on small structuralsizes in 2 dimensional imaging (M.Thoms). Computer-aidedmaxillofacial radiographicdiagnosis: impact of variations inscintillator and acquisition mode(T.T. Farman et al.).New approaches to 3D and 4D

imaging. Initial performancemeasurements of the first clinicalprototype of DentoCAT(TM) - aCone Beam CT scanner fordentomaxillofacial Imaging (P.Sukovic). Generation of 3D solidmodel from 3DX multi imagemicro CT (methods andapplication) (A. Yamada et al.).Midfacial imaging using digitalvolume tomography (M. Heilandet al.). ACRO 4D: universalanalysis for four dimensionaldiagnosis, 3D planing andsimulation in orthognathic surgery(R. Olszewski et al.).Image-guided implantology.Navi-X - a planning and treatmentsystem for dental implantologybased on navigated projectionimages (D. Szymanski, T. Lueth,A. Hein). Denta Scan Vs DentalVox: comaprison among 104implant sites using two softwaretecniques (T. Sansoni et al.).

Image-guided craniofacial

surgery. Segmentation andvisualization of the inner structureof craniofacial hard tissue (C.Kober, R. Sader, H.-F. Zeilhofer).Clinical validation of individualtemplates in cranialreconstruction. (G. Janssens etal.). CRANIO - computer assistedplanning for navigated and robotassisted surgery on the skull (A.Popovic et al.).CARS@Cambridge. Seeing andunderstanding 3-d medical imagesthrough 2-d renditions (K.D.Toennies). Poster session (46papers).7th annual conference of the

international society for

computer aided surgery.

Frameless stereotaxy andneuronavigation (M. Engelhardt etal.). Neuronavigation intransspenoidal surgery of pituitaryadenomas (M. Engelhardt et al.).Application of the cranialnavigation software duringanterior cervical discectomy - afeasability study (W. Folkers etal.). Development of HitchcockNavigation System forintraoperative open MRI (H.Taniguchi). Integration of MRspectroscopy into neuronavigationfor stereotactic definition of tumorinfiltration zone (O. Ganslandt etal.). Three-dimensionalreconstruction of the knee frombiplanar X-rays Clinical evaluation,a review of seven pathologicalcases (L. NodéLanglois et al.).Optimal femoral head contoursegmentation in CT images usingdynamic programming (G. Marti,P.-Y. Zambelli, C. Baur). A newsystem for completely MR-basedcomputer-assisted orthopaedicsurgery (S. Burkhardt et al.).Determination of 3D kinematics ofknee joints: a new in vivo

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technique (M. Siebert). A newpassive holding device assistingfracture reduction (D. Schmucki etal.). A CT-free hip navigationsystem using an anteroposteriorplain radiograph of the hip (W.Yamanashi et al.). Visualization offemorotibial contact area in totalknee arthroplasty under in vivoconditions (T. Yamazaki et al.).Computer-assisted analysis of thelocus of the dynamic loading axison the knee joint (H. Kawakami etal.). Automatic computation ofreposition parameters of fracturedlong bones based on CT-analysis(S. Winkelbach, R. Westphal, T.Gösling). A computer-assistedcurved-bladed Tuke Saw forspherical osteotomy (T. Koyamaet al.). A new optimizationfunction for force feedback intelemanipulation (G. De Gersem,F. Tendick, H. Van Brussel). Ahaptic device for a web-basedtraining system for interventionalradiology procedures (M. Xin etal.). Haptic rendering through adynamic atomic unit approach:towards nonlinear, viscoelastic,anisotropic behavior (T.Kesavadas, A. Chanda). Cinicalevaluation of the operationplanning system KasOp using the“phantom” - new aspects of pre-and intraoperativecomputer-assisted surgery (C.Haag et al.). A hapticsensor-actuator-system based onultrasound elastography andelectrorheological fluids for virtualreality applications in medicine(W. Khaled et al.).Three-dimentional photography forcalculating pre- and post-operativevolume in breast surgery (A.K.Rao et al.). Micro CT-based finiteelement analysis: an enhancedfollow-up tool for bone remodellingaround threaded implants. (S.V.N.

Jaecques et al.). Design andmanufacturing of customisedmaxillofacial prostheses (D.Serban et al.). Ultrasound-basednavigation of robotic drilling at thelateral skull base (Ph.A. Federspilet al.) Accuracy of CT-lessnavigation in locating therotational hip centre in TKAintroducing a mechanical model(M.L.R. Schwarz et al.).Development of three-dimensionalnavigation system updated withintraoperative MRI (Y. Muragaki etal.). Accuracy assessmentprotocols for electromagnetictracking systems (D. Frantz et al.).Automatic 3D localization offiducial markers for framelessstereotactic navigation (G. Lixu, T.Peters). Viewpoint-correctedprojection in a distributed setting(J. Tysseng, E. Samset).Augmented reality-guided systemfor brain surgery (J.-I. Park et al.).A temporal calibration method forfreehand 3D ultrasound system: apreliminary result (M. Nakamotoet al.). Projection model andcalibration method for obliqueviewing- endoscope (T.Yamaguchi et al.). Orientationaccuracy of a magnetic trackingdevice for image-guidedinterventions (G. Corral et al.). Linklength optimisation of a medicalrobot in minimally invasivesurgery (R. Konietschke et al.).Fracture reduction using atelemanipulator with hapticalfeedback (R. Westphal et al.).Motion compensation inrobot-assisted surgery (O.J. Elle etal.). Computer-controlledpneumatic chisel driver forprecision bone cutting (K. Sasakiet al.). Robust visual tracking ofmultiple surgical instruments forlaparoscopic surgery (A.Nishikawa et al.). Reduction of

insertion resistance by means ofrotation with spiral-ribbed impellerfor catheters and endoscopes (K.Yoshinaka, T. Semoto, K. Ikeuchi).Developing a computerizedsimulator for EndoscopicUltrasound (EUS) (S. Petra et al.).Smooth cutting in nonlinear softtissue model (S. Seifert et al.). Asystem for preoperative planningof soft tissue and bone implants(O. Burgert et al.). Development ofvirtual tools with intelligentattributes for neuro-endovascularintervention (T. Kesavadas et al.).Inguinal herniotomy planning andsimulation using virtual reality (P.Gasson, R.J. Lapeer, Karri).Surgical operation planning - anapplication for 3D-geometryspecification (M. Wehmöller, H.Knop, H. Eufinger). A web-basedsystem for computer-assistedsurgical planning using Java (X.Zhou et al.).21st International EuroPACS

eeting. Development of secureapplications using small medicalinstitutions (K. Haneda, T.Toyama). Interface HIS/RIS andPACS using HL7 and Non-HL7 intwo hospitals (D.-H. Lim, S.-W.Choi, S.-C. Park). Preliminaryevaluation of a PACS in the ClinicaUniversitaria of Navarra (Spain)(I.G. Crespo et al.). Teleradiologyin practice - our experience withteleconsultation of CTexaminations (R. Chrzan et al.).5th International Workshop on

Computer-aided Diagnosis.

Automatic segmentation of smallpulmonary nodules on multidetector-row CT images (R.Tachibana et al.). Lung nodulesrecognition in chest X-ray CTimages using subspace method(G. Fukano et al.). Genetic featureselection of SVM: application toGGO discrimination on lung HRCT

Medicine

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(X. Chen, T.-G. Zhuang). The CADinterface in breast screening:effect of image scale and detailupon transcription accuracy(J.W. Hatton et al.).2003 International Symposium

on Cardiovascular Imaging.

Three-dimensional rotationalangiography - new technology inthe diagnostics of vascularsystem (A. Urbanik et al.).Non-ECG gated 3D-rotationalcoronary angiography (B.Movassaghi et al.). An accuratecoronary modeling procedureusing 2D calibrated projectionsbased on extracted 3D vesselcenterlines (B. Movassaghi et al.).A 3D cardiovascular model forbrachytherapy planning based onbiplane angiography andintravascular ultrasound (F.Weichert, M. Wawro, C. Wilke).Semi-automated Matlab®-basedsoftware for the analysis of firstpass myocardial perfusion images(M. Fenchel et al.). The effect ofspatio-temporal contraction forceon various hyperelastic ventriclemodels (W. Sediono, O. Dössel).The clinical evaluation of themordern technology of computerin echocardiography (Q. Wang etal.). Noninvasive automatedmeasurement of vascular lumenusing multislice CT: basic phantomstudy (K. Matusmoto et al.).9th Computed Maxillofacial

Imaging Congress. Further studyon development of a noveltomography using magnification.(S. Hokari et al.). Impact of inverseand emboss algorithms on thediagnostic outcomes using the OP100 D digital panoramic system(M. W. Broadbent et al.).Application of optical 3D imagingin exophthalmometry (E. Nkenkeet al.). The use of magneticresonance to visualize posterior

occlusion in temporomandibularjoint (S. Sztuk et al.). Navigatedcontrol in dental implantology(D. Szymanski, T.C. Lueth).Author index.

Keyword index.

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444513876

Medicine

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Neuroscience

CD�

Encyclopedia ofNeuroscience, ThirdEdition

Edited by G. Adelman,Massachussetts Institute ofTechnology, Cambridge, MA,USA, B.H. Smith, The DreyfusHealth Foundation of The RogosinInstitute, New York, NY, USA

©2003

ISBN 0-12-044266-3 CD-ROM

Pre-publication price:

EUR 75 / USD 75 (Valid until 01

February 2004)

Price: EUR 99.95 / USD 99.95

The Encyclopedia of

Neuroscience CD-ROM isdesigned to make theneurosciences readily accessibleto both the specialist andnon-specialist reader. Thislandmark work, with its broadscope and interdisciplinarycoverage, has become anessential reference and learningtool for everyone involved in thestudy of the brain and how itmediates behavior.This 3rd Edition CD-ROM has beenfurther expanded and significantlyupdated, in most cases by theoriginal authors. The Encyclopediarepresents the culmination of amassive international effort topresent the neurosciences in oneconcise source, and includescontributions from renownedexperts in their respective fields

from around the world, includingseveral Nobel Prize winners. 18%of the approximately 900 entriesare new, 60% are completelyrevised and updated.

AUDIENCE

Neuroscientists, students, andrelated researchers working inperipheral fields of science.

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0120442663

BK�

Movement Disorders

Edited by M. Hallett, HumanMotor Control Section, NINDS,NIH, Bethesda, MD, USA

©2003 650 pages

ISBN 0-444-50725-6 Hardbound

Publication: November 2003

Price: EUR 225 / USD 225

Handbook of ClinicalNeurophysiology, Volume 1

The book is the firstcomprehensive description of theclinical neurophysiology ofmovement disorders. Whilemovement disorders is a rapidlygrowing field, and clinicalneurophysiology can be helpful,only single articles or selective orbrief reviews have so farappeared. The book, as all booksin the handbook series, isarranged with a set of detailed

chapters on technique and aseparate set of chapters ondisorders. An international team ofauthors has been selected toprovide the most expertdescriptions.

Contents: Editorial. List ofContributors.Section I. Overview.

1. Movement disorders: overview(M. Hallett).Section II. Techniques.

2. Electromyography (M. Hallett).3. EEG (MEG)/EMG correlation (H.Shibasaki, T. Nagamine).4. Electrocorticography in motorcontrol and movement disorders(A. Ikeda). 5. Somatosensoryevoked responses (F. Mauguière).6. Coherence, cortico-cortical (C.Gerloff, C. Braun, M. Hallett).7. Coherence, cortico-muscular (T.Mima, M. Hallett, H. Shibasaki).8. Transcranial magneticstimulation (U. Ziemann).9. Movement disorders surgery:microelectrode recording fromdeep brain nuclei (W.D. Hutchison,J.O. Dostrovsky, A.M. Lozano). 10.Polysomnography and relatedprocedures(S. Chokroverty).11. Microneurography and motordisorders (D. Burke, S.C.Gandevia, V.G. Macefield).12. Imaging (S.T. Grafton).13. Accelerometry (R.J. Elble).14. Kinesiology (C. Dohle, H.-J.Freund). 15. Reaction time as anindex of motorpreparation/programming andspeed of response initiation(M. Jahanshahi). 16. Spinal

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reflexes (M.K. Floeter). 17. Cranialnerve reflexes: anatomicalpathways, recording techniquesand normative data (M. Aramideh,G. Cruccu, B.W. Ongerboer deVisser). 18. Startle and prepulseeffects (J. Valls Solé).19. Long-latency reflexesfollowing stretch and nervestimulation (G. Deuschl).20. Posturography (B.R. Bloem,J.E. Visser, J.H.J. Allum). 21. Gaitanalysis (K.R. Kaufman).Section III. Diseases and

Treatments. 22. Physiologic andenhanced physiologic tremor (R.J.Elble). 23. Essential tremor andprimary writing tremor (P.G. Bain).24. Clinical neurophysiology andpathophysiology of parkinsoniantremor (G. Deuschl, U. Fietzek etal.). 25. Uncommon tremors (C.H.Lücking, B. Hellwig). 26. Diseasesand treatments: Parkinson’sdisease (J.C. Rothwell).27. Parkinson-plus conditions(J. Valls Solé, F. Valldeoriola).28. Dystonia (R. Kaji).29. Stiffness with continuousmotor unit activity (P. Brown).30. Hyperekplexia (P. Brown).31. Cerebellar ataxias (M.-U.Manto). 32. The clinicalneurophysiology of myoclonus(J.N. Caviness). 33. Tics (M.Hallett). 34. Electrophysiologicalinvestigations in cranialhyperkinetic syndromes(M. Aramideh, J. Valls Solé et al.).35. Choreas, hemiballismus,dyskinesias, athetosis (A.Berardelli, A. Currà). 36. Restlesslegs syndrome and periodic limbmovements (W. Hening).37. Hemiparesis (P.M. Rossini,F. Pauri). 38. Movementdisorders: spasticity (R. Benecke).39. Psychogenic movementdisorders (M. Hayes, P.D.Thompson). 40. Other gait

disorders (L. Sudarsky). 41. Focalinjection therapy (J.-M. Gracies,D.M. Simpson). 42. Deep brainstimulation in Parkinsons disease:technique and prospective, factsand comments (A.L. Benabid, S.Chabardes et al.).Section IV. Research Studies in

Normal Subjects and Patients.

43. Research studies in normalsubjects and patients: current andfuture (J.C. Rothwell).Section V. The Future. 44. Futureclinical applications of clinicalneurophysiology in movementdisorders (G. Deuschl, M. Hallett).Subject Index.

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444507256

Neuroscience

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Physics and Astronomy

BK�

Free Electron Lasers 2002

Proceedings of the 24thInternational Free Electron LaserConference and the 9th FEL UsersWorkshop, Argonne, Illinois,U.S.A., September 9-13, 2002

Edited by K.-J. Kim, ArgonneNational Laboratory, Argonne,Illinois, USA, S.V. Milton, ArgonneNational Laboratory, Argonne,Illinois, USA, E. Gluskin, ArgonneNational Laboratory, Argonne,Illinois, USA

©2003 726 pages

ISBN 0-444-51417-1 Hardbound

Publication: August 2003

Price: EUR 95 / USD 95

This book contains theProceedings of the 24thInternational Free Electron LaserConference and the 9th FreeElectron Laser Users Workshop,which were held on September9-13, 2002 at Argonne NationalLaboratory. Part I has beenreprinted from Nucl. Instr. andMeth. A 507 (2003), Nos. 1-2.

Contents: PrefaceConference CommitteesFEL 2002 ExhibitorsSponsors2002 International Free ElectronLaser Prize WinnersConference photosPart I.Section 1. FEL Prize and New

LasingChaos studies on the super-ACOfree electron laser, M.E. CouprieTwo-color experiments withinfrared lasers, J.M. OrtegaFirst SASE and seeded FEL lasingof the NSLS DUV FEL at 266 and400nm L. DiMauro, A. Doyuran,W. Graves, R. Heese, E.D.Johnson, S. Krinsky, H. Loos, J.B.Murphy, G., Rakowsky, J. Rose,T. Shaftan, B. Sheehy, J. Skaritka,X.J. Wang and L.H. Yu

Section 2. FEL TheorySome issues and subtleties innumerical simulation of X-rayFELs, W.M. FawleyMOPA optical klystron FELs andcoherent harmonic generation, G.Dattoli, L. Giannessi and P.L.OttavianiHigh-gain FEL on the coherentBremsstrahlung of a relativisticelectron beam in a crystal, H.K.Avetissian, A.L. Khachatryan andG.F. MkrtchianUse of dynamical undulatormechanism to produce shortwavelength radiation in volumeFEL (VFEL), V.G. Baryshevsky andK.G. BatrakovOperation of an optical klystronwith small dispersion, S. BensonSimulations of high-power freeelectron lasers with stronglyfocused electron and opticalbeams, J. Blau, V. Bouras, A.Kalfoutzos, G. Allgaier, T. Fontana,P.P. Crooker and W.B. ColsonThe free electron laser interactionwith a short-Rayleigh-lengthoptical mode, W.B. Colson, J.Blau and R.L. Armstead

A study of the stability of ahigh-power free electron laserutilizing a short Rayleigh length,P.P. Crooker, T. Campbell, W.Ossenfort, S. Miller, J. Blau andW. ColsonElectron trajectories in a helicalfree-electron laser with or withoutan axial guide field, J.T. Donohueand J.L. RullierIncreasing superradiant pulsepeak power by using electronenergy chirp, N.S. Ginzburg, I.V.Zotova, R.M. Rozental, A.S.Sergeev, M. Kamada, K. Kurihara,H. Shirasaka, R. Ando and K.KamadaSpontaneous and amplifiedradiation at the initial stage of aSASE FEL, Z. Huang and K.-J. KimChaotic behaviour in a realizablehelical-wiggler field, S.-K. Namand K.-B. KimDynamics of low couplingparameter free-electron laseroscillator, H. Nishiyama, M.Asakawa, Y. Tsunawaki, M. Heya,K. Awazu and K. ImasakiFormation of an FEL field withuniform and constant phase dueto the slippage effect, N.Nishimori, R. Hajima, R. Nagai andE.J. MineharaCorrelation function equation forthe SASE FEL, O.A. Shevchenkoand N.A. VinokurovReal-time animation ofsynchrotron radiation, T. ShintakeApplication of volume diffractiongrating for TeraHertz lasing involume FEL (VFEL), V.G.Baryshevsky, K.G. Batrakov andV.I. StolyarskyA 3D particle tracking technique

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for FEL start-up and saturationeffects, M.J. de Loos, C.A.J. vander Geer, S.B. van der Geer, A.F.G.van der Meer, D. Oepts and R.WunschStatistical properties of radiationfrom SASE FEL driven by shortelectron bunches, E.L. Saldin, E.A.Schneidmiller and M.V. YurkovCoherence properties of theradiation from SASE FEL, E.L.Saldin, E.A. Schneidmiller andM.V. YurkovStatistical properties of radiationpower levels from a high-gainfree-electron laser at and beyondsaturation, C.B. Schroeder, W.M.Fawley and E. Esarey

Section 3. High-Power,Long-Wavelength FELsFirst demonstration ofenergy-recovery operation in theJAERI superconducting linac for ahigh-power free-electron laser, R.Hajima, T. Shizuma, M.Sawamura, R. Nagai, N.Nishimori, N. Kikuzawa and E.J.MineharaPossibility of a high-power,high-gain FEL amplifier, D.C.Nguyen and H.P. FreundUpgrade of a compact FIR FELdriven by a magnetron-basedmicrotron for the wavelengthrange of 100?300 ?m, Y.U. Jeong,G.M. Kazakevitch, B.C. Lee, S.O.Cho, J. Yoo, N.G. Gavrilov andV.V. KubarevFour-channel planar FEM forhigh-power mm-wave generation(theoretical and experimentalproblems), A.V. Arzhannikov, V.T.Astrelin, V.B. Bobylev, N.S.Ginzburg, V.G. Ivanenko, P.V.Kalinin, S.A. Kuznetsov, N.Yu.Peskov, P.V. Petrov, A.S. Sergeev,S.L. Sinitsky and V.D. StepanovA simulation study on energyrecovery from spent electron

beams in an S-band linac, K.Masuda, S. Matsumura, T. Kii, H.Ohgaki, T. Yamazaki, K. Nagasakiand K. YoshikawaProgress of the volume FEL (VFEL)experiments in millimeter range,V.G. Baryshevsky, K.G. Batrakov,A.A. Gurinovich, I.I. Ilienko, A.S.Lobko, P.V. Molchanov, V.I.Moroz, P.F. Sofronov and V.I.StolyarskyElectron beam dynamics througha return-arc and a decelerationpath of the JAERI energy-recoverylinac, R. Hajima and E.J. MineharaVariable-energy microtron-injectorfor a compact wide-band FIR freeelectron laser, G.M. Kazakevitch,Y.U. Jeong, B.C. Lee, N.G.Gavrilov and M.N. KondaurovDesign studies of IR-FEL systemat IAE, Kyoto University, H.Ohgaki, I. Tometaka, K. Yamane,T. Kii, K. Masuda, K. Yoshikawaand T. YamazakiSpectral measurements of thesecond harmonic of the SASE FELradiation at APS, V. Sajaev and Z.HuangRegime of non-resonant trappingin an FEM-amplifier, A.V. Savilov,I.V. Bandurkin and N.Yu. PeskovSubmillimeter moderatelyrelativistic free-electron maser,A.V. Savilov, N.Yu. Peskov andA.K. KaminskyMagnetic field analysis of hybridhelical wiggler with multiple polesper period, Y. Tsunawaki, N.Ohigashi, M. Asakawa, K. Imasakiand K. Mima

Section 4. FEL TechnologiesMirrors issues for FELs, D. GarzellaStudy of the transverse coherenceat the TTF free electron laser, R.Ischebeck, J. Feldhaus, Ch. Gerth,E. Saldin, P. Schmuser, E.Schneidmiller, B. Steeg, K.Tiedtke, M. Tonutti, R. Treusch

and M. YurkovPermanent magnet systems forfree-electron lasers, S.C.Gottschalk, D.H. Dowell and D.C.QuimbyRadiation exposure and magneticperformance of the undulatorsystem for the VUV FEL at theTESLA Test Facility Phase-1 after3 years of operation, J. Pfluger, B.Faatz, M. Tischer and T. VielitzMagnetic measurements andtuning of the LCLS prototypeundulator, I.B. Vasserman, S.Sasaki, R.J. Dejus, O.A. Makarov,E.R. Moog, E.M. Trakhtenberg andN.A. VinokurovDesign of the Jefferson Lab IRUpgrade FEL optical cavity, M.D.Shinn, G.R. Baker, C.P. Behre, S.V.Benson, M.E. Bevins, L.A.Dillon-Townes, H.F. Dylla, E.J.Feldl, J.F. Gubeli, R.D. Lassiter,F.D. Martin and G.R. NeilEvidence for transversedependencies in COTR andmicrobunching in a SASE FEL,A.H. Lumpkin, Y.C. Chae, J.W.Lewellen, W.J. Berg, M. Borland,S.G. Biedron, R.J. Dejus, M.Erdmann, Z. Huang, K.-J. Kim, Y.Li, S.V. Milton, E.R. Moog, D.W.Rule, V. Sajaev and B.X. YangFEL research and development atthe SLAC sub-picosecond photonsource, SPPS, L. Bentson, P.Bolton, E. Bong, P. Emma, J.Galayda, J. Hastings, P. Krejcik, C.Rago, J. Rifkin and C.M. SpencerFirst beam measurements at thephoto injector test facility at DESYZeuthen, R. Bakker, M.v. Hartrott,E. Jaeschke, D. Kramer, J.P.Carneiro, K. Flottmann, P. Piot, J.Ro?bach, S. Schreiber, K.Abrahamyan, J. Bahr, I. Bohnet,V. Djordjadze, U. Gensch, H.J.Graboschi, Z. Li, D. Lipka, A.Oppelt, B. Petrossyan, F. Stephan,P. Michelato, C. Pagani, D.

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Sertore, V. Miltchev, I. Tsakov, A.Liero, H. Redlin, W. Sandner, R.Schumann, I. Will, R. Cee, M.Krassilnikov, S. Setzer and T.WeilandRecent advances inhigh-brightness electron guns atAES, H. Bluem, A.M.M. Todd,M.D. Cole, J. Rathke and T.SchultheissElectro-optic sampling of singleelectron beam bunches ofultrashort duration, P.R. Bolton,J.E. Clendenin, D.H. Dowell, P.Krejcik and J. RifkinInvestigation of short pulse effectsin IR FELs and new simulationresults, V. Asgekar, G. Berden, M.Brunken, L. Casper, H. Genz, M.Grigore, C. He?ler, S.Khodyachykh, A. Richter andA.F.G. van der MeerUndulator system for the VUV FELat the TESLA test facility phase-2,J. Pfluger, U. Hahn, B. Faatz andM. TischerProposal for the edge-focusingwiggler for SASE, G. Isoyama, M.Fujimoto, R. Kato, S. Yamamotoand K. TsuchiyaAdvanced photocathodesimulation and theory, K.L.Jensen, D.W. Feldman and P.G.O’SheaDesign and study of FIR FELdevice using S-band linac atFEL-SUT, H. Koike, M. Sobajima,V.M. Popik, M. Yokoyama, F. Oda,M. Kawai, K. Toyoda, H. Kurodaand K. NakaiObservations of z-dependentmicrobunching harmonicintensities using COTR in a SASEFEL, A.H. Lumpkin, S.G. Biedron,R.J. Dejus, W.J. Berg, M. Borland,Y.C. Chae, M. Erdmann, Z. Huang,K.-J. Kim, Y. Li, J.W. Lewellen,S.V. Milton, E. Moog, V. Sajaevand B.X. YangConstruction of compact FEM

using solenoid-induced helicalwiggler, N. Ohigashi, Y.Tsunawaki, M. Fujita, K. Imasaki,K. Mima and S. NakaiThe dispersion relation for acylindrical Cherenkov free electronmaser, C. Petichakis, R.A. Stuart,C.C. Wright, A.I. Al-Shamma’aand J. LucasImprovement of KHI FEL device atFEL-SUT, M. Yokoyama, F. Oda, K.Nomaru, H. Koike, M. Sobajima,M. Kawai, H. Kuroda and K. Nakai

Section 5. Storage Ring FELsNew results and prospects forharmonic generation in storagering FELs, V.N. LitvinenkoThe UV European FEL at ELETTRA:towards compatibility of storagering operation for FEL andsynchrotron radiation, G. DeNinno, M. Trovo, M. Danailov, M.Marsi, E. Karantzoulis, B. Diviacco,R.P. Walker, R. Bartolini, G.Dattoli, L. Giannessi, L. Mezi, M.E.Couprie, A. Gatto, N. Kaiser, S.Gunster and D. RistauLongitudinal detuning for anSRFEL, C.A. Thomas, J.I.M.Botman, C. Bruni, D. Garzella, M.E.Couprie, G. De Ninno and G.DattoliSuper-ACO FEL oscillation withlongitudinal to transverse coupledbeam dynamics, C. Bruni, G.L.Orlandi, D. Garzella, G. De Ninno,M.E. Couprie, R. Bartolini, C.Rippon and G. DattoliQ-switching operation of theUVSOR-FEL, M. Hosaka, M. Katoh,A. Mochihashi, J. Yamazaki, K.Hayashi, Y. Takashima and H.HamaImprovement of the field quality inthe helical wigglers for the OK-5VUV FEL at Duke, S.F. Mikhailov,V.N. Litvinenko, N.G. Gavrilov,O.A. Shevchenko, N.A. Vinokurovand P.D. Vobly

Self-consistent harmonicgeneration in storage ring FELs, C.Rippon, R. Bartolini, G. Dattoli, L.Giannessi, M.E. Couprie and D.Garzella

Section 6. High-BrightnessElectron BeamsOverview of high-brightness,high-average-currentphotoinjectors for FELs, S.J.RussellFemto-seconds kilo-ampereelectron beam generation, X.J.Wang and X.Y. ChangFirst operation of asuperconducting RF-gun, D.Janssen, H. Buttig, P. Evtushenko,M. Freitag, F. Gabriel, B.Hartmann, U. Lehnert, P. Michel,K. Moller, T. Quast, B. Reppe, A.Schamlott, Ch. Schneider, R.Schurig, J. Teichert, S.Konstantinov, S. Kruchkov, A.Kudryavtsev, O. Myskin, V.Petrov, A. Tribendis, V. Volkov, W.Sandner, I. Will, A. Matheisen, W.Moeller, M. Pekeler, P.v. Stein andCh. HaberstrohTheory and simulation of CSRmicrobunching in bunchcompressors, Z. Huang, M.Borland, P. Emma and K.-J. KimRF Photoelectric injectors usingneedle cathodes, J.W. Lewellenand C.A. BrauSlice emittance measurements atthe SLAC gun test facility, D.H.Dowell, P.R. Bolton, J.E.Clendenin, P. Emma, S.M.Gierman, W.S. Graves, C.G.Limborg, B.F. Murphy and J.F.SchmergeLongitudinal emittancemeasurements at the SLAC guntest facility, D.H. Dowell, P.R.Bolton, J.E. Clendenin, S.M.Gierman, C.G. Limborg, B.F.Murphy, J.F. Schmerge and T.Shaftan

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Bunch length and phase stabilitymeasurements at the TESLA testfacility, Ch. Gerth, J. Feldhaus, K.Honkavaara, K.D. Kavanagh, Ph.Piot, L. Plucinski, S. Schreiber andI. WillImprovement of electron beamproperties by reducingback-bombardment effects in athermionic RF gun, T. Kii, K.Yamane, I. Tometaka, K. Masuda,H. Ohgaki, K. Yoshikawa and T.YamazakiThe SPARC project: ahigh-brightness electron beamsource at LNF to drive a SASE-FELexperiment, D. Alesini, S.Bertolucci, M.E. Biagini, C.Biscari, R. Boni, M. Boscolo, M.Castellano, A. Clozza, G. Di Pirro,A. Drago, A. Esposito, M. Ferrario,V. Fusco, A. Gallo, A. Ghigo, S.Guiducci, M. Incurvati, P. Laurelli,C. Ligi, F. Marcellini, M. Migliorati,C. Milardi, L. Palumbo, L.Pellegrino, M. Preger, P.Raimondi, R. Ricci, C. Sanelli, F.Sgamma, B. Spataro, M. Serio, A.Stecchi, A. Stella, F. Tazzioli, C.Vaccarezza, M. Vescovi, C.Vicario, M. Zobov, E. Acerbi, F.Alessandria, D. Barni, G. Bellomo,I. Boscolo, F. Broggi, S. Cialdi, C.DeMartinis, D. Giove, C. Maroli, V.Petrillo, M. Rome’, L. Serafini, E.Chiadroni, G. Felici, D. Levi, M.Mastrucci, M. Mattioli, G. Medici,G.S. Petrarca, L. Catani, A.Cianchi, A. D’Angelo, R. Di Salvo,A. Fantini, D. Moricciani, C.Schaerf, R. Bartolini, F. Ciocci, G.Dattoli, A. Doria, F. Flora, G.P.Gallerano, L. Giannessi, E.Giovenale, G. Messina, L. Mezi,P.L. Ottaviani, L. Picardi, M.Quattromini, A. Renieri, C.Ronsivalle, L. Avaldi, C. Carbone,A. Cricenti, A. Pifferi, P. Perfetti, T.Prosperi, V.R. Albertini, C.Quaresima and N. Zema

VUV FEL driven RF gun, B. Faatz,A.A. Fateev, K. Flottmann, D.Nolle, Ph. Piot, E.L. Saldin, H.Schlarb, E.A. Schneidmiller, S.Schreiber, D. Sertore, K.P.Sytchev and M.V. YurkovResults of beam parametermeasurement of the ELBE electronaccelerator after commissioning,J. Teichert, A. Buchner, P.Evtushenko, F. Gabriel, U. Lehnert,P. Michel and J. VoigtlanderStability of the LEBRA infraredFEL, K. Yokoyama, I. Sato, K.Hayakawa, T. Tanaka, Y.Hayakawa, K. Kanno, T. Sakai, K.Ishiwata and E. Hashimoto

Section 7. High-Gain,Short-Wavelength FELsDemonstration of gain saturationand controlled variation of pulselength at the TESLA test facilityFEL, J. RossbachStudy of the statistical propertiesof the radiation from a VUV SASEFEL operating in the femtosecondregime, V. Ayvazyan, J.-P.Carneiro, P. Castro, B. Faatz, A.A.Fateev, J. Feldhaus, Ch. Gerth, V.Gretchko, B. Grigoryan, U. Hahn,K. Honkavaara, M. Huning, R.Ischebeck, U. Jastrow, R.Kammering, J. Menzel, M. Minty,D. Nolle, J. Pfluger, Ph. Piot, L.Plucinski, K. Rehlich, J. Rossbach,E.L. Saldin, H. Schlarb, E.A.Schneidmiller, S. Schreiber, R.Sobierajski, B. Steeg, F. Stulle,K.P. Sytchev, K. Tiedtke, R.Treusch, H. Weise, M. Wendt andM.V. YurkovMultiple-beam free-electronlasers, H.P. Freund, D. Douglasand P.G. O’SheaDesign considerations for theLCLS, C. LimborgStatus of SPring-8 compact SASEsource FEL project, T. Shintake, T.Tanaka, T. Hara, K. Togawa, T.

Inagaki, Y.J. Kim, T. Ishikawa, H.Kitamura, H. Baba, H. Matsumoto,S. Takeda, M. Yoshida and Y.TakasuBunching and exotic undulatorconfigurations in SASE FELs, G.Dattoli, A. Doria, L. Giannessi andP.L. OttavianiObservation of SASE andamplified seed of the DUV-FEL atBNL, A. Doyuran, W. Graves, R.Heese, E.D. Johnson, S. Krinsky,H. Loos, J. Murphy, G.Rakowsky, J. Rose, T. Shaftan, B.Sheehy, J. Skaritka, X.J. Wangand L.H. YuSimulation studies of a possiblemulti-stage XFEL at ELETTRA,W.M. Fawley, W.A. Barletta, C.J.Bocchetta and R. BonifacioSimulation of prebunching infree-electron lasers, H.P. Freund,P.G. O’Shea and J. NeumannCharacteristics of the fundamentalFEL and the higher harmonicgeneration at LEBRA, Y.Hayakawa, I. Sato, K. Hayakawa,T. Tanaka, K. Yokoyama, K. Kanno,T. Sakai, K. Ishiwata, K. Nakaoand E. HashimotoCharacteristic measurements ofhigher harmonics generated in theSASE-FEL process, R. Kato, M.Fujimoto, T. Igo, S. Isaka, T.Onishi, S. Furukawa, S. Okuda, S.Suemine and G. IsoyamaTime-resolved measurement of aself-amplified free-electron laser,Y. Li, J. Lewellen, Z. Huang, V.Sajaev and S.V. MiltonResults of the VISA SASE FELexperiment at 840nm, A. Murokh,R. Agustsson, M. Babzien, I.Ben-Zvi, L. Bertolini, K. van Bibber,R. Carr, M. Cornacchia, P. Frigola,J. Hill, E. Johnson, L. Klaisner, G.Le Sage, M. Libkind, R. Malone,H.-D. Nuhn, C. Pellegrini, S.Reiche, G. Rakowsky, J.Rosenzweig, R. Ruland, J.

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Skaritka, A. Toor, A. Tremaine, X.Wang and V. YakimenkoRadiation effects studies at theAdvanced Photon Source, M.Petra, P.K. Den Hartog, E.R. Moog,S. Sasaki, N. Sereno and I.B.VassermanPulse length control in an X-rayFEL by using wake.elds, S.Reiche, P. Emma and C. PellegriniScheme for time-resolvedexperiments based on the use ofstatistical properties of the thirdharmonic of the SASE FELradiation, W. Brefeld, B. Faatz, J.Feldhaus, M. Korfer, J. Krzywinski,T. Moller, J. Pfluger, E.L. Saldin,E.A. Schneidmiller, S. Schreiberand M.V. YurkovPump?probe experiments in thefemtosecond regime, combiningfirst and third harmonics of SASEFEL radiation, J. Feldhaus, T.Moller, E.L. Saldin, E.A.Schneidmiller and M.V. YurkovScheme for attophysicsexperiments at a X-ray SASE FEL,E.L. Saldin, E.A. Schneidmiller andM.V. YurkovMeasurements of nonlinearharmonic radiation and harmonicmicrobunching in a visible SASEFEL, A. Tremaine, X.J. Wang, M.Babzien, I. Ben-Zvi, M.Cornacchia, R. Malone, A.Murokh, H.-D. Nuhn, C. Pellegrini,S. Reiche, J. Rosenzweig, J.Skaritka and V. YakimenkoHigh gain free electron lasersdriven by .at electron beam, M.XieSimulations for theFERMI@ELETTRA proposal togenerate 40- and 10-nm coherentradiation using the HGHG scheme,L.H. Yu and J. WuImage charge undulator, Y. Zhang,Y. Derbenev and R. Li

Section 8. New Concepts and

ProposalsOverview of proposed VUV andsoft X-ray projects in the world, G.Dattoli and A. RenieriA cascaded optical klystron on anenergy recovery linac ? race trackmicrotron, M. Eriksson, L.-J.Lindgren, E. Wallen and S. WerinX-ray optics research for freeelectron lasers: study of materialdamage under extreme fluxes, J.Kuba, A. Wootton, R.M. Bionta, R.Shepherd, E.E. Fill, T. Ditmire, G.Dyer, R.A. London, V.N.Shlyaptsev, J. Dunn, R. Booth, S.Bajt, R.F. Smith, M.D. Feit, R.Levesque and M. McKernanX-ray Compton FEL based oncharged particles channeling in acrystal, H.K. Avetissian and G.F.MkrtchianOverview of FERMI@ELETTRA: aproposed ultra-bright coherentX-ray source in Italy, C.J.Bocchetta, D. Bulfone, F.Cargnello, M. Danailov, G. D’Auria,B. Diviacco, M. Ferianis, A.Gambitta, E. Karantzoulis, G. Loda,M. Lonza, F. Mazzolini, D. Morelli,G. Pangon, V. Smaluk, M.Stefanutti, M. Svandrlik, L. Tosi, G.Tromba, A. Vascotto, R. Visintini,R. Bakker, W.A. Barletta, W.M.Fawley, R. Bonifacio, S.G.Biedron, M.D. Borland, S.V.Milton, S. De Silvestri, R.P.Walker, J.H. Wu and L.H. YuFEL options for the proposed UKfourth generation light source(4GLS), M.W. Poole and B.W.J.Mc NeilFELICE-the free electron laser forintra-cavity experiments, B.L.Militsyn, G. von Helden, G.J.M.Meijer and A.F.G. van der MeerElectron beam modulation using alaser-driven photocathode, J.G.Neumann, P.G. O’Shea, D.Demske, W.S. Graves, B. Sheehy,H. Loos and G.L. Carr

Conceptual design of ahigh-brightness linac for soft X-raySASE-FEL source, D. Alesini, S.Bertolucci, M.E. Biagini, C.Biscari, R. Boni, M. Boscolo, M.Castellano, A. Clozza, G.D. Pirro,A. Drago, A. Esposito, M. Ferrario,V. Fusco, A. Gallo, A. Ghigo, S.Guiducci, M. Incurvati, P. Laurelli,C. Ligi, F. Marcellini, M. Migliorati,C. Milardi, L. Palumbo, L.Pellegrino, M. Preger, P.Raimondi, R. Ricci, C. Sanelli, F.Sgamma, B. Spataro, M. Serio, A.Stecchi, A. Stella, F. Tazzioli, C.Vaccarezza, M. Vescovi, C.Vicario, M. Zobov, E. Acerbi, F.Alessandria, D. Barni, G. Bellomo,C. Birattari, M. Bonardi, I. Boscolo,A. Bosotti, F. Broggi, S. Cialdi, C.DeMartinis, D. Giove, C. Maroli, P.Michelato, L. Monaco, C. Pagani,V. Petrillo, P. Pierini, L. Serafini, D.Sertore, G. Volpini, E. Chiadroni, G.Felici, D. Levi, M. Mastrucci, M.Mattioli, G. Medici, G.S. Petrarca,L. Catani, A. Cianchi, A. D’Angelo,R. Di Salvo, A. Fantini, D.Moricciani, C. Schaerf, R.Bartolini, F. Ciocci, G. Dattoli, A.Doria, F. Flora, G.P. Gallerano, L.Giannessi, E. Giovenale, G.Messina, L. Mezi, P.L. Ottaviani, L.Picardi, M. Quattromini, A.Renieri, C. Ronsivalle, L. Avaldi, C.Carbone, A. Cricenti, A. Pifferi, P.Perfetti, T. Prosperi, V.R. Albertini,C. Quaresima and N. ZemaSPARC project and SPARXproposal, A. RenieriPhoton ring multi-user distributionsystem for soft X-ray SASE FELlaboratory, J. Feldhaus, E.L.Saldin, E.A. Schneidmiller andM.V. Yurkov

Section 9. Recent Advances inExperimental TechniquesExtremely compact soft X-raylasers based on capillary

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discharges, J.J. Rocca, J.Filevich, E.C. Hammarsten, E.Jankowska, B. Benware, M.C.Marconi, B. Luther, A. Vinogradov,I. Artiukov, S. Moon and V.N.ShlyaptsevQuasi-optical highly sensitiveSchottky-barrier detector for awide-band FIR FEL, V.V. Kubarev,G.M. Kazakevitch, Y.U. Jeong andB.C. LeeRecent results with the highintensity �-ray facility, V.N.LitvinenkoProduction of high powerfemtosecond terahertz radiation,G.R. Neil, G.L. Carr, J.F. Gubeli III,K. Jordan, M.C. Martin, W.R.McKinney, M. Shinn, M. Tani, G.P.Williams and X.-C. Zhang

Section 10. Novel Results in FELApplications for Biology,Chemistry, Material Sciences, andMedicineUltrasensitive spectroscopy ofionic reactive intermediates in thegas phase performed with thefirst coupling of an IR FEL with anFTICR-MS, P. Maitre, S. Le Caer,A. Simon, W. Jones, J. Lemaire,H. Mestdagh, M. Heninger, G.Mauclaire, P. Boissel, R. Prazeres,F. Glotin and J.-M. OrtegaStatus report and biomedicalapplications of the institute of FEL,Osaka University, K. Awazu, M.Asakawa and H. HoriikeNovel process of isotopeseparation of silicon by use of IRFEL, K. Nomaru, A.V. Chernyshev,A.K. Petrov and H. KurodaFEL induced dynamics of smallmolecules on surfaces: N2O onNaCl(1 0 0), B. Redlich, L. van derMeer, H. Zacharias, G. Meijer andG. von HeldenSelf-trapped states in proteins,R.H. Austin, A. Xie, L. van derMeer, M. Shinn and G. Neil

Gelatin ablation wavelengthdependency in the range of5.6?6.7 ?m using a mid- infraredFree Electron Laser, M. Heya, Y.Fukami, H. Nagats, Y. Nishida andK. AwazuNon-linear infrared properties ofInAs/GaAs self-assembledquantum dots, S. Sauvage, P.Boucaud, T. Brunhes, F. Bras, G.Fishman, F. Glotin, R. Prazeres,J.M. Ortega, J.-M. Gerard, M.Broquier, C. Crepin and R.P.S.M.Lobo

Section 11. Pioneering ResultsObtained with VUV SASE FELsEnergy absorption of free rare gasclusters irradiated by intense VUVpulses of a free electron laser, J.Schulz, H. Wabnitz, T. Laarmann,P. Gurtler, W. Laasch, A.Swiderski, Th. Moller and A.R.B.de CastroAblation of various materials withintense XUV radiation, L. Juha, J.Krasa, A. Cejnarova, D.Chvostova, V. Vorlicek, J.Krzywinski, R. Sobierajski, A.Andrejczuk, M. Jurek, D. Klinger,H. Fiedorowicz, A. Bartnik, M.Pfeifer, P. Kubat, L. Pina, J.Kravarik, P. Kube?, Y.L. Bakshaev,V.D. Korolev, A.S. Chernenko, M.I.Ivanov, M. Scholz, L. Ryc, J.Feldhaus, J. Ullschmied and F.P.Boody

Section 12. Future Scientific andTechnological Applications atExisting and Planned FEL FacilitiesX-ray free electron laser forelectron?positron pair productionon the nuclei, H.K. Avetissian, A.K.Avetissian, G.F. Mkrtchian andKh.V. Sedrakian

Part II (Extended Abstracts: Thetext of these papers is includedonly in the book edition of the

proceedings, ISBN0-444-51417-1)

FEL TheoryPhysics of super pulses in storagering free-electron lasers, V.N.Litvinenko

High-order gain in a beam drivendielectric resonator, I.J. Owensand J.H. BrownellHigh-Power, Long-WavelengthFELsStatus of the Jefferson Lab IR/UVHigh Average Power light source,G.R. Neil, S.V. Benson, G. Biallas,J. Boyce, L.A. Dillon-Townes, D.Douglas, H.F. Dylla, R. Evans, A.Grippo, D. Gruber, J. Gubeli, C.Hernandez-Garcia, K. Jordan, M.Kelley, G. Krafft, R. Li, L.Merminga, J. Mammosser, J.Preble, M. Shinn, T. Siggins, R.Walker, G. Williams, B. Yunn andS. ZhangCyclotron autoresonance betweenultrarelativistic electron andfree-space mode radiation, M.Asakawa, T. Marusaki, H.Nishiyama, Y. Tsunawaki and K.ImasakiSelective properties of planarBragg reflectors and theirapplication for multichannelmasers, A.V. Arzhannikov, N.S.Ginzburg, P.V. Kalinin, A.S.Kuznetsov, N.Yu. Peskov, P.V.Petrov, A.S. Sergeev, S.L. Sinitskyand M. Thumm

FEL TechnologiesHOBICAT ? A horizontal testfacility for superconducting RFcavities, W. Anders and J.KnoblochDevelopment of dispensercathodes for RF photoinjectors,D.W. Feldman, M. Virgo, P.G.O’Shea and K.L. JensenA device for the enhancement of

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the micro-pulse peak power andthe shortening of the macro-pulseduration, H. Hazama, K. Nomaru,H. Kuroda and K. NakaiIntegrating a machine protectionsystem for high-current freeelectron lasers and energyrecovery linacs, T. Allison, J.Coleman, R. Evans, A. Grippo andK. JordanStatus of FEL-SUT, H. Kuroda, K.Nakai, M. Kawai and K. Nomaru“Optics-Free” FEL oscillators, V.N.LitvinenkoPositioning system for the LCLSUndulator, O.A. Makarov, V.G.Tcheskidov and E.M.TrakhtenbergA 100 kW, 1497 MHz, CWklystron for FEL driver accelerator,A. MizuharaMagnetic analysis of the arcdipoles for the JLAB 10 kW FreeElectron Laser upgrade, T.J.Schultheiss, V.A. Christina, J.W.Rathke, G.H. Biallas and D.R.DouglasTotal reflection mirrors for VUVFree Electron Lasers, B. Steeg, S.Jacobi, R. Sobierajski, C.Michaelsen and J. FeldhausCommissioning ofmulti-segmented undulators at theTESLA X-ray FEL, M. Tischer, P.Ilinski, U. Hahn, J. Pfluger and H.Schulte-SchreppingA transport and diagnostic systemfor the IR beam of ELBE, Th.Dekorsy, E. Grosse, M. Helm, W.Seidel, D. Wohlfarth, A. Wolf andR. Wunsch

Storage Ring FELsLaser heating and microwaveinstability in the SUPER-ACO FEL,G.L. Orlandi, D. Garzella, C. Bruni,C. Thomas, M.E. Couprie, R.Bartolini, C. Rippon, L. Giannessi,L. Mezi, G. Dattoli and M.Migliorati

Observation of the electron beamand free electron lasers in thecompact storage ring NIJI-IV, N.Sei, K. Yamada, M. Yasumoto, H.Ogawa and T. MikadoImproved performance of theNIJI-IV FEL throughring-impedance reduction, K.Yamada, N. Sei, H. Ogawa, M.Yasumoto and T. Mikado

High-Brightness Electron BeamsStatus of the UCLA PEGASUSInjector Laboratory, G. Andonian,S. Telfer, S. Reiche, J.B.Rosenzweig and P. FrigolaRF commissioning of the PhotoInjector Test Facility at DESYZeuthen, K. Abrahamyan, J. Bahr,I. Bohnet, S. Choroba, K.Flottmann, H.-J. Grabosch, M. v.Hartrott, R. Ischebeck, O. Krebs, Z.Li, D. Lipka, A. Oppelt, V. Peplov,B. Petrosyan, M. Pohl, J.Rossbach, S. Simrock, F. Stephan,T. Thon, R. Wenndorff and M.WindePhoto-field emission from needlecathodes, C.H. Boulware and C.A.BrauTransverse self-fields within anelectron bunch moving in an arc ofa circle, G. Geloni, J. Botman, J.Luiten, M. v.d. Wiel, M. Dohlus, E.Saldin, E. Schneidmiller and M.YurkovA fast method to estimate thegain of the microbunch instabilityin a bunch compressor, S. Reicheand J.B. RosenzweigCW RF cavity design forhigh-average-current photoinjectorfor high power FEL, S. Kurennoy,D. Schrage, R. Wood, L. Young, T.Schultheiss, V. Christina, M. Coleand J. Rathke

High-Gain, Short-Wavelength FELsThe SASE FEL at the TESLA TestFacility as user facility, B. Faatz

Electron beam diagnostics for TTFII, M. Wendt

New Concepts and ProposalsThe MIT Bates X-ray laser project,T. Zwart, M. Farkhondeh, E. Ihloff,R. Milner, S. Sobczynski, C.Tschalar, J.v.d. Laan, F. Wang, A.Zolfaghari and D.E. MonctonShort wavelength free electronlasers in 2002, W.B. ColsonAttempt to measure Smith-Purcellradiation, O.H. Kapp, Y.-e Sun,K.-J. Kim and A.V. Crewe�-Ray generation for nucleartransmutation research, D. Li, K.Imasaki, M. Aoki, S. Miyamoto, S.Amano, T. Mochizuki, M.Asakawa and S. IshiiOrdering and coherent radiation ofsuperdense bunches, R.V.Tumanian and L.A. GevorgianTemporal characterization ofultrashort electron beam bunch atthe Jefferson Lab FEL user facility,S. Zhang, S. Benson, J. Gubeli, G.Neil, M. Shinn and G. Williams

Novel Results in FEL Applicationsfor Biology, Chemistry, MaterialSciences, and MedicineUltrafast and nonlinearspectroscopy of semiconductorswith small energy photons, J.KonoPump/probe experiments with FELand SR pulses at UVSOR, M.Hosaka, T. Gejo, E. Shigemasa, E.Nakamura, S. Koda, M. Katoh, J.Yamazaki, K. Hayashi, K.Takashima and H. Hama

Pioneering Results obtained withVUV SASE FELsStructural changes at solidsurfaces irradiated withfemtosecond, intense XUV pulsesgenerated by TTF-FEL, R.Sobierajski, J. Krzywinski, A.Andrejczuk, B. Faatz, F. Felten, S.

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Jacobi, L. Juha, M. Jurek, A.Kauch, D. Klinger, J.B. Pelka, E.Saldin, E. Schneidmiller, M.Sikora, B. Steeg and M. Yurkov

Future Scientific andTechnological Applications atExisting and Planned FEL FacilitiesResearch and development forX-ray optics and diagnostics onthe Linac Coherent Light Source(LCLS), R.M. Bionta, J. Arthur, H.Chapman, B. Craig, J. Klingmann,J. Kuba, R.A. London, L. Ott, D.Ryutov, R. Shepherd, V.Shlyaptsev and A. WoottonCurrent status and future plans forthe JAERI Superconducting rfLinac-based FEL facility, E.J.Minehara, R. Hajima, M.Sawamura, R. Nagai, N.Kikuzawa, N. Nishimori, T.Shizuma and T. YamauchiAuthor Index

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444514171

BK�

Modern Aspects of RareEarths and theirComplexes

By V.S. Sastri, Gloucester,Ontario, Canada, J.-C. Bünzli,Swiss Federal Institute ofTechnology, Lausanne,Switzerland, J.R. Perumareddi,Florida Atlantic University, BocaRaton, FL, USA, V. Ramachandra

Rao, Nagpur University,Mahasahtra, India,G.V.S. Rayudu, St. LukeUniversity, Chicago, IL, USA

©2003 956 pages

ISBN 0-444-51010-9 Hardbound

Publication: December 2003

Price: EUR 295 / USD 295

The rare earth elements form afascinating group, resemblingeach other very closely in bothphysical and chemical properties.The close similarity of thebehaviour of the elements led todifficulties in isolation of theelements in a state of high purity.Now that the separation andpurification of these elementshave been achieved, thechemistry and the industrialapplications of the rare earthelements are drawing theattention of many scientists in theworld, especially countries whichpossess vast reserves of rareearth minerals. Some of theapplications of mixed rare earthsare as metallurgical additives forferrous and non-ferrous metals,fluid cracking catalysts, lighterflints, polishing compounds inglasses, carbon arc cores forlighting and hydrogen absorbingalloys for rechargeable batteries.Some of the salient applications ofhigh-purity rare earth elements arecathode ray tubes, automotivecatalytic converters, permanentmagnets in computer technologyand sound systems, lasers,phosphors, electric motors, opticalfibres, and possible futureapplications such as in colouredpigments for plastics and paints,new catalysts, refrigerationsystems and solid oxide fuel cells.In order to use rare earthssuccessfully in variousapplications, a goodunderstanding of the chemistry ofthese elements is of paramountimportance. Nearly three to fourdecades have passed since titlessuch as The Rare Earths edited by

F.H. Spedding and A.H. Daane,The chemistry of the Rare EarthElements by N.E. Topp andComplexes of the Rare Earths byS.P. Sinha were published. Therehave been many internationalconferences and symposia on rareearths, as well as the series ofvolumes entitled Handbook ofPhysics and Chemistry of RareEarths edited by K.A. Gschneidnerand L. Eyring. Thus, there is aneed for a new title coveringmodern aspects of rare earthcomplexes along with theapplications.The authors studied in schoolsheaded by pioneers in rare earthchemistry, have a combinedexperience of one hundred andfifty years in inorganic chemistry,rare earth complex chemistry,nuclear and radiochemistry of rareearths and supramolecularchemistry. The presentmonograph is a product of thisrich experience.

Contents: 1. Introduction2. General aspects3. Stability of complexes4. Lanthanide complexes5. Structural chemistry oflanthanide compounds6. Organometallic complexes7. Kinetics and mechanisms ofrare earths complexation8. Spectroscopy of lanthanidecomplexes9. Photoelectron spectroscopy ofrare earths10. Lanthanide NMR shiftreagents11. Environmental ecologicalbiological aspects12. Applications

ELSEVIERwww.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444510109

BK

Physics and Astronomy

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Quark-Gluon Plasma:Theoretical Foundations

An Annotated ReprintCollection

Edited by J. Kapusta, Universityof Minnesota, School of Physicsand Astronomy, Minneapolis, MN,USA, B. Müller, Duke University,Department of Physics, Durham,NC, USA, J. Rafelski, Universityof Arizona, Department of Physics,Tucson, AZ, USA

©2003 836 pages

ISBN 0-444-51110-5 Hardbound

Publication: October 2003

Price: EUR 200 / USD 200

Introduction to and annotation

of the research literature

The purpose of this volume is totrace the development of thetheoretical understanding ofquark-gluon plasma, both in termsof the equation of state andthermal correlation functions andin terms of its manifestation in

high energy nuclear collisions.Who among us has not wonderedhow tall a mountain is on aneutron star, what happens whenmatter is heated and compressedto higher and higher densities,what happens when an objectfalls into a black hole, or whathappened eons ago in the earlyuniverse? The study ofquark-gluon plasma is related inone way or another to these andother thought provokingquestions. Oftentimes the mosteloquent exposition is given in theoriginal papers. To this end aselection is made of what are themost important pioneering papersin this field. The early 1950s wasan era when high energymultiparticle production in cosmicray interactions attracted theattention of some of the brightestminds in physics, and so it shouldbe no surprise that the firstreprinted papers deal with theintroduction of statistical modelsof particle production. The quarkmodel arose in the 1960s, whileQCD as such was recognized asthe theory of the stronginteractions in the 1970’s. Thebehavior of matter at hightemperatures and supranucleardensities became of wide interestin the nuclear and particle physicscommunities starting in the1970s, which is when the conceptof quark-gluon plasma becameestablished. The history of thefield has been traced up to theearly 1990s. There are threereasons for stopping at that pointin time. First, most of the keytheoretical concepts andformalisms arose before 1993,although many of them continueto be developed today andhopefully well into the future.Second, papers written after 1992

are much more readily availablethan those writen before due tothe advent of the World WideWeb and its electronic preprintdatabases and journals. Finally, inmaking this collection of reprintsavailable as hardcopy one islimited in the number of pages,and some papers in the presentselection should have beendeleted in order to make room forpost-1993 papers. For the samereason the subject focus must ofnecessity be limited, whichmeans that in this reprintcollection two wide subject areasare not addressed: the behavior ofnuclear matter under extremeconditions is not reported, nor isquark matter in neutron stars. Thebroad categories into which thematerial has been placed, reflectthe diverse studies of quark-gluonplasma and its manifestation.They are: phase-space models ofparticle production, perturbativeQCD plasma, lattice gauge theory,fluid dynamics and flow,strangeness, heavy flavor(charm), electromagnetic signals,parton cascade and minijets,parton energy loss and jetquenching, HanburyBrown—Twiss (HBT)interferometry, disoriented chiralcondensates, phase transitiondynamics and cosmology, andcolor superconductivity. Eachchapter is prefaced by anintroduction, which contains a listof significant papers which ismore complete than the reprintedpapers, though by no meansexhaustive. It also containscitations to most relevant paperspublished up to the date ofcompletion of this volume (fall2002). It is hoped that the shortreviews will help bring the readerup to date on the latest

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developments. The selection ofpapers cited in each chapter, andin particular the ones selected forreprinting, is solely theresponsibility of the Editors. It isbased on their best judgementand experience in this field datingback to the mid-1970s. In order tobe reprinted a paper must havebeen pioneering in the sense oforiginality and impact on the field.Generally they have been citedover a hundred times by otherpapers published in refereedjournals. The final selection wasreviewed and discussed amongthe Editors repeatedly. Justbecause a paper is not includeddoes not mean they do not knowof it or do not have a high regardfor it. All of the papers cited orreprinted are original researchcontributions. There are threeother types of publications listed.The first is a compilation of books.The second is a list of reviews,many of which contain asignificant amount of originalmaterial. The third is a list of theproceedings of the series of QuarkMatter meetings, the primaryseries of international conferencesin this field that is attended byboth theorists andexperimentalists.

Contents: Introduction

1. Phase Space Model of ParticleProductionHigh energy nuclear events, E.Fermi, Prog. Theor. Phys. (1950)On multiparticle production in asingle interaction process, I.Pomeranchuk, Proceedings ofUSSR Academy of Sciences(1951)Statistical thermodynamics ofstrong interactions at highenergies, R. Hagedorn, Suppl.

Nuovo Cimento (1965)On the hadronic mass spectrum,R. Hagedorn, Nuovo Cimento(1967)Strange anti-baryons fromquark-gluon plasma, J. Rafelski,Phys. Lett. B (1991)

2. Perturbative QCD PlasmaSuperdense matter: neutrons orasymptotically free quarks?, J.C.Collins and M.J. Perry, Phys. Rev.Lett. (1975)Fermions and gauge vectormesons at finite temperature anddensity. III. The ground-stateenergy of a relativistic quark gas,B.A. Freedman and L.D. McLerran,Phys. Rev. D (1977)Theory of hadron plasma, É.V.Shuryak, Zh. Eksp. Teor. Fiz.(1978) [Sov. Phys. JETP (1978)]Quantum chromodynamics at hightemperature, J.I. Kapusta, Nucl.Phys. B (1979)Infrared problem in thethermodynamics of the Yang-Millsgas, A.D. Linde, Phys. Lett. B(1980)Covariant calculations at finitetemperature: the relativisticplasma, H.A. Weldon, Phys. Rev.D (1982)Spectrum of elementary Fermiexcitations in quark-gluon plasma,V.V. Klimov, Yad. Fiz. (1981) [Sov.J. Nucl. Phys. (1981)]Soft amplitudes in hot gaugetheories: a general analysis, E.Braaten and R.D. Pisarski, Nucl.Phys. B (1990)

3. Lattice Gauge TheoryLattice models of quarkconfinement at high temperature,L. Susskind, Phys. Rev. D (1979)Quark liberation at hightemperature: a Monte Carlo studyof SU(2) gauge theory, L.D.McLerran and B. Svetitsky, Phys.

Rev. D (1981)Monte Carlo study of SU(2) gaugetheory at finite temperature, J.Kuti, J. Polónyi and K. Szlachányi,Phys. Lett. B (1981)The order of the deconfinementtransition in SU(3) Yang-Millstheory, T. Çelik, J. Engels and H.Satz, Phys. Lett. B (1983)On the existence of a phasetransition for QCD with three lightquarks, F.R. Brown, F.P. Butler, H.Chen, N.H. Christ, Z.-H. Dong, W.Schaffer, L.I. Unger, and A.Vaccarino, Phys. Rev. Lett. (1990)Remarks on the chiral phasetransition in chromodynamics,R.D. Pisarski and F. Wilczek, Phys.Rev. D (1984)

4. Fluid Dynamics and FlowOn multiple production of particlesduring collisions of fast particles,L.D. Landau, Izv. Akad. NaukSSSR, Physics Series (1953); inEnglish: L. D. Landau, CollectedPapers of L.D. Landau, edited byD. Ter Haar, Pergamon, Oxford(1965)Highly relativistic nucleus-nucleuscollisions: The central rapidityRegion, J.D. Bjorken, Phys. Rev. D(1983)Hydrodynamics of ultra-relativisticheavy ion collisions, G. Baym, B.L.Friman, J.-P. Blaizot, M. Soyeurand W. Czyz, Nucl. Phys. A (1983)Single particle distribution in thehydrodynamic and statisticalthermodynamic models ofmultiparticle production, F. Cooperand G. Frye, Phys. Rev. (1974)Evidence for a blast wave fromcompressed nuclear matter, P.J.Siemens and J.O. Rasmussen,Phys. Rev. Lett. (1979)Transverse momentum analysis ofcollective motion in relativisticnuclear collisions, P. Danielewiczand G. Odyniec, Phys. Lett. B

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(1985)Anisotropy as a signature oftransverse collective flow, J.-Y.Ollitrault, Phys. Rev. D (1992)

5. StrangenessStrangeness production in thequark-gluon plasma, J. Rafelskiand B. Müller, Phys. Rev. Lett.(1982) [Erratum (1986)]Quarkochemistry in relativisticheavy-ion collisions, T.S. Biró andJ. Zimányi, Phys. Lett. B (1982)How much strangenessproduction is there inultrarelativistic nucleus-nucleuscollisions?, J. Kapusta and A.Mekjian, Phys. Rev. D (1986)Time evolution of strange-particledensities in hot hadronic matter,P. Koch and J. Rafelski, Nucl.Phys. A (1985)Separation of strangeness fromantistrangeness in the phasetransition from quark to hadronmatter: possible formation ofstrange quark matter in heavy-ioncollisions, C. Greiner, P. Koch andH. Stöcker, Phys. Rev. Lett. (1987)

6. CharmJ/� suppression by quark-gluonplasma formation, T. Matsui andH. Satz, Phys. Lett. B (1986)Color screening anddeconfinement for bound states ofheavy quarks, F. Karsch, M.T.Mehr and H. Satz, Z. Phys. C(1988)

7. Electromagnetic SignalsDirect production of photons anddileptons in thermodynamicalmodels of multiple hadronproduction, E.L. Feinberg, NuovoCim. A (1976)Quark-gluon plasma and theproduction of leptons, photonsand psions in hadron collisions,É.V. Shuryak, Yad. Fiz. (1978)

[Sov. J. Nucl. Phys. (1978)]Muon pair production in very highenergy nucleus-nucleus collisionsK. Kajantie and H.I. Miettinen, Z.Phys. C (1982)Direct lepton production inhigh-energy collisions of nuclei, G.Domokos Phys. Rev. D (1983)Dilepton emission and the QCDphase transition in ultrarelativisticnuclear collisions, K. Kajantie, J.Kapusta, L. McLerran and A.Mekjian, Phys. Rev. D (1986)High-energy photons fromquark-gluon plasma versus hothadronic gas, J. Kapusta, P.Lichard and D. Seibert, Phys. Rev.D (1991) [Erratum (1993)]8. Quark-Gluon Plasma FormationMinijet production in high-energynucleus-nucleus collisions, K.Kajantie, P.V. Landshoff and J.Lindfors, Phys. Rev. Lett. (1987)The early stage of ultra-relativisticheavy ion collisions, J.-P. Blaizotand A.H. Mueller, Nucl. Phys. B(1987)Quark and gluon production inhigh-energy nucleus-nucleuscollisions, K.J. Eskola, K. Kajantieand J. Lindfors, Nucl. Phys. B(1989)HIJING: A Monte Carlo model formultiple jet production in pp, pAand AA collisions, X.-N. Wang andM. Gyulassy, Phys. Rev. D (1991)Dynamics of parton cascades inhighly relativistic nuclearcollisions, K. Geiger and B. Müller,Nucl. Phys. B (1992)Kinetic theory for plasmas withnon-abelian interactions, U. Heinz,Phys. Rev. Lett. (1983)9. Parton Energy LossJets as a probe of quark-gluonplasmas, D.A. Appel, Phys. Rev. D(1986)Jets in expanding quark-gluonplasmas, J.-P. Blaizot and L.D.McLerran, Phys. Rev. D (1986)

Gluon shadowing and jetquenching in A+A collisions at√s = 200A GeV, X.-N.Wang and M. Gyulassy, Phys.Rev. Lett. (1992)

10. Density InterferometryInfluence of Bose-Einsteinstatistics on the antiproton-protonannihilation process, G.Goldhaber, S. Goldhaber, W. Leeand A. Pais, Phys. Rev. (1960)Like particle correlations as a toolto study the multiple productionMechanism, G.I. Kopylov, Phys.Lett. B (1974)Pion interferometry of nuclearcollisions. I. Theory, M. Gyulassy,S.K. Kauffmann and L.W. Wilson,Phys. Rev. C (1979)Proton pictures of high-energynuclear collisions, S.E. Koonin,Phys. Lett. B (1977)Pion interferometry for explodingsources, S. Pratt, Phys. Rev. Lett.(1984)Pion interferometry of quark-gluonplasma, S. Pratt, Phys. Rev. D(1986)

11. Disoriented Chiral CondensateClassical states of the chiral fieldand nuclear collisions at very highEnergy, A.A. Anselm, Phys. Lett.B (1989)Soft-pion emission in high-energyheavy-ion collisions, J.-P. Blaizotand A. Krzywicki, Phys. Rev. D(1992)Static and dynamic criticalphenomena at a second orderQCD phase Transition, K.Rajagopal and F. Wilczek, Nucl.Phys. B (1993)

12. Phase Transition Dynamicsand CosmologyCosmic separation of phases, E.Witten, Phys. Rev. D (1984)Big bang nucleosynthesis and the

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quark-hadron transition, H.Kurki-Suonio, R.A. Matzner, K.A.Olive and D.N. Schramm,Astrophys. J. (1990)Bubble growth and droplet decayin the quark-hadron phasetransition in the early Universe, K.Kajantie and H. Kurki-Suonio,Phys. Rev. D (1986)Dynamics of the QCD phasetransition, L.P. Csernai and J.I.Kapusta, Phys. Rev. Lett. (1992)

13. Color SuperconductivitySuperconducting quark matter,B.C. Barrois, Nucl. Phys. B (1977)Superconductivity in quark matter,D. Bailin and A. Love, Nucl. Phys.B (1982)

Author index

ELSEVIER

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Social and Behavioural Sciences

BK�

Changing Life Patterns inWestern IndustrialSocieties

Edited by J.Z. Giele, BrandeisUniversity MS035, Waltham,MS, USAE-mail: [email protected]. Holst, German Institute forEconomic Research (DIW Berlin),GermanyE-mail: [email protected]

©2003 314 pages

ISBN 0-7623-1020-0 Hardbound

Publication: December 2003

Price: USD 90 / EUR 90

Advances in Life CourseResearch, Volume 8

Hardly any broad analyses exist tolink the vast contemporary changein life patterns both to changes inwomen’s lives (risingemployment, declining fertility,and changing use of time) and tochanges in men’s lives, the gendercontract, and the economy, aswell as to national social policies.This book shows not only similartrends across countries but alsothe likely direction of futurechange, particularly as related toeconomic growth, gender equity,and the well-being of families andchildren.The first chapter, an overview bythe editors, provides acomprehensive conceptual

framework for understanding howthe economic, sociological, andcultural changes have producednew individual life patterns.Succeeding chapters cover in PartI the connections betweencontemporary changes in livesand the changing global economy,the changing welfare state, andthe growth of personal choice; inPart II changing time use patternsof men and women; in Part III theinstitutional factors in employment,child care, law, and family thataffect life patterns of both sexes.The closing chapters in Part IVfocus on characteristics ofindividuals and occupations thatsupport the new work and familyroles.This book is written innon-technical language for publicpolicy makers, students in thesocial sciences, journalists, andresearchers who are interested in(a) aging and life-spandevelopment;(b) cross-national comparison ofchild and family well-being andtheir implications for governmentpolicy, social welfare programs,and the economy; and(c) women’s and gender studiesand gender mainstreaming

Contents: Preface - describes theorigins of the book and its relationto the Berlin Conference ofSeptember 2001 (J.Z. Giele,E. Holst).Structural Forces that Shape

Life Patterns. New life patternsand the changing gender contract

(J.Z. Giele, E. Holst). Thereconfiguration of work andemployment relations in theUnited States at the turn of thecentury (M.J. Piore). Welfareregimes in relation to paid workand care (J.C. Gornick, M.K.Meyers). Lifestyle preferencesversus patriarchal values: causaland non-causal attitudes(C. Hakim).The Changing Demographics of

Time Use. Time, work, and familyin the United States (S.M. Bianchi,M.J. Mattingly). Changing workand life patterns: examples of newworking time arrangements in theEuropean member states (J.Plantenga). Employment optionsof men and women in Europe (H.Bielenski, A. Wagner).Institutional Factors in an

International Perspective.Labor-market structures andwomen’s paid work: opportunitiesand constraints in the Swiss labormarket (M. Buchmann et al.).Work and family balance: a newchallenge for politics in France(M.-T. Letablier). The influence ofEuropean Union legislation onlabor market equality for women(S. Berghahn). The welfare stateand time allocation in Sweden,Denmark, France, and Italy (J.Bonke, E. Koch-Weser).The Role of Individual Agency

and Choice. Publishing and thenew media professions asforerunners of pioneer work andlife patterns (S. Betzelt, K.Gottschall). Economic relationsbetween women and men: new

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realities and the re-interpretationof dependence (A. Sorensen).Women and men as agents ofchange in their own lives(J.Z. Giele). Index.

JAI

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DY�

Elsevier’s Dictionary ofAcronyms, Initialisms,Abbreviations andSymbols

Second, Revised andEnlarged Edition

By Fioretta Benedetto Mattia,Milan, Italy

©2003 744 pages

ISBN 0-444-51241-1 Hardbound

Publication: September 2003

approx. 30,000 terms

Price: EUR 175 / USD 175

The dictionary will contain analphabetical listing ofapproximately 30,000 (thirtythousand) acronyms, initialisms,abbreviations and symbolscovering approximately 2,000fields and subfields ranging fromPelagic Ecology to AnthraxDisease, Artificial Organs toAlternative Cancer Therapies,Age-related Disorders to AuditoryBrainstem Implants, EducationalWeb Sites to Biodefense,Biomedical Gerontology to BrainDevelopment, Cochlear Implantsto Cellular Phones, ConstructedViruses to Copper Metabolism,Drug Discovery Programs toDrug-resistant Strains, Eugenics to

Epigenetics, Epilepsy Drugs toFertility Research, GeneticallyModified Foods/Crops to FuturisticCars, Genetic Therapies toGlycobiology, Herbicide-tolerantCrops to Heritable Disorders,Human Chronobiology to Humangene Therapies, ImmunizationPrograms to Lunar Research, LiverTransplantation to MicrochipTechnology, Mitochondrial Agingto Molecular Gerontology,Neurodegenerative Diseases toNeuropsychology of Aging,Neurosurgery to Next GenerationPrograms, Obesity Research toPrion Diseases, QuantumCryptography to ReemergingDiseases, Retinal Degeneration toRice Genome Research, SocialAnthropology to SoftwareDevelopment, SynchrotronResearch to VaccineDevelopments, RemoteUltrasound Diagnostics to WaterProtection, Entomology toChemical Terrorism and hundredsof others, as well asabbreviations/acronyms/initialisms relating to European Communityand U.S., Japanese andInternationalPrograms/Projects/Initiatives fromyear 2000 up to 2010 as well asWorld Bank Programs.

ELSEVIER

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MV�

Encyclopedia of PublicInternational Law

Published under the auspices ofthe Max Planck Institute forComparative Public Law andInternational Law

Consolidated Library Editionin Five Volumes

Edited by R. Bernhardt,Max-Planck-Institut füröffentliches Recht undVölkerrecht, Im Neuenheimer Feld535, D-69120 Heidelberg,GermanyThose subscribers whosecombined subscription to InitialEdition (12 instalments) andConsolidated Edition (5 volumes)was registered before 31December 1992, receive latter 5volumes, at no extra cost.

This Encyclopedia of PublicInternational Law is publishedunder the auspices of the MaxPlanck Institute for ComparativePublic Law and International Law,Heidelberg, Germany. It containssome 5,800 pages withapproximately 1,300 articles on allimportant international legalproblems and institutions as wellas the major decisions ofinternational courts and tribunals.This outstanding scholarlyundertaking involves more than460 specialist authors world-wide.The initial edition, publishedbetween 1981 and 1990 and nowout of print, consisted of twelveinstalments, each containing, onaverage, over 100 articles on aspecific subject area. The presentConsolidated Library Editionconsists of five volumes. VolumesI-IV list all articles arrangedalphabetically, withsupplementary notes and newbibliographical references, asnecessary. Volume V containscomprehensive indexes and lists.International law covers severalareas of paramount interest to allmankind, including the clashes ofinterest between powerful entities

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- States - and the attempts toresolve those conflicts throughlaw. The Encyclopedia presentsthe rules according to which theaffairs of nations in peace and warare governed; the development ofbonds of cooperation, especiallytoday in the form of internationalorganizations; and the existingcontrols and the controversial newfrontiers of the regulation of theuse of natural resources, includingthe sea, the air and even space.The Encyclopedia is not only asolid scholarly work of referencefor the diplomat or practitioner farfrom a comprehensiveinternational legal library, or forthe scholar who wishes to look upa specific point quickly and to finda concise answer to a question,but also a source of informationand education for the generalreader who wishes to readconcise and well-written articlescontributed by leading experts intheir fields. It offers theinterrelated whole of presentinternational law presented in agreat number of high qualitysubject articles whichcomplement each other.

©2003 5 Volume Consolidated

Edition

ISBN 0-7204-0131-3 Hardbound

Price: EUR 2,104 / USD 2,104

May only be ordered as a

complete set

NORTH-HOLLAND

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BK

Punishment, Politics andCulture

Edited by A. Sarat, AmherstCollege, MA, USAE-mail: [email protected]. Ewick, Clark University,Worcester, MA, USAE-mail: [email protected]

©2003 258 pages

ISBN 0-7623-1072-3 Hardbound

Publication: November 2003

Price: USD 90 / EUR 90

Studies in Law, Politics andSociety, Volume 30

This volume of Studies in Law,Politics, and Society presents adiverse array of articles by aninterdisciplinary group of scholars.Their work spans the socialsciences, humanities, and law.Those scholars examine law andculture, the complex intersectionsof law and policy, and the place ofreligious values in legal life. Thearticles published here exemplifythe exciting and innovative worknow being done ininterdisciplinary legal scholarship.

Contents: Revisiting the History

and Philosophy of Punishment.Pattern penitence: penitentialnarrative and moral reformdiscourse in nineteenth-centuryEngland (A. Kaladiouk). Foremostamong the prerogatives ofsovereignty: the power to punishand the death of comity inAmerican criminal law (K.Shoemaker). Punishment,institutions, justifications (L.Zaibert). Philosophical theories ofpunishment and the history of

prison reform (C. Sturr).Penal Practices in the Modern

State. Hitched to the post: prisonlabor, choice, and citizenship (K.McBride). Perhaps all pain ispunishment: communitycorrections and the hyperghetto(W. Lyons). How science matters:discourse on deterrence in a deathpenalty debate (T. Sasson).Representing Punishment.Executing sentences in Lolita andthe law (S. Sweeney). Thepsychic life of punishment (Kant,Nietzsche, Freud) (K. Mladek).Victim stories: documenting pain,punishment, person and power(A. Juhasz). Remote justice:tuning into small claims, race, andthe reinvigoration of civicjudgment (V. Karno).

JAI

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BK�

Reorganizing Health CareDelivery Systems

Problems of Managed Careand Other Models of HealthCare Delivery

Edited by J.J. Kronenfeld,Arizona State University, Tempe,AZ, USAE-mail: [email protected]

©2003 220 pages

ISBN 0-7623-1069-3 Hardbound

Publication: December 2003

Price: USD 90 / EUR 90

Research in the Sociology ofHealth Care, Volume 21

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This volume deals with thereorganizing of health caredelivery systems: problems ofmanaged care and other modelsof health care delivery. Issues ofhow to best organize a health caredelivery system are not new, butthe amount of interest in this topicin the US (as well as in othercountries) has grown in recentdecades. Reorganizing health caredelivery systems is a concern ofmany systems of the world, andthis volume contains some papersfrom countries other than the US,although the majority of thepapers do relate issues to the UShealth care delivery system. Whilemost papers relate to structuraland organizational factors, theimpact of individual patients is notneglected. The volume contains11 papers, organized into foursections. The sections cover, inorder, managed care issues andorganizational features, specialgroups of patients and healthissues, lessons from othercountries, and broader policyconcerns and health insurancereform.This book addresses importantthemes in medical sociology, withpapers that range from those withan explicit policy point of view tonarrower papers on more specificissues in health care delivery. Oneof the lessons of the past decadeis that no countries in the worldare completely satisfied with theirhealth care delivery systems nordo they believe they have resolvedthe tensions of how to provideaccess to all to high quality careat a reasonable cost. This volumecontributes to improving ourunderstanding of these issues andprovides a sociological focus forthe exploration of these issues.This makes the volume essential

reading for medical sociologistsand other social scientistsstudying health care deliveryissues. The information is alsohelpful for health servicesresearchers, policy analysts, andpublic health researchers.

Contents: Managed Care Issues

and Organizational Features.Surveys of members of healthcare insurance plans:methodological issues (D.J.Brogan). Organizational variationin the managed care industry inthe 1990s: implications forinstitutional change (D.L. Anthony,J. Banaszak-Holl). Education,managed health care experiences,and health outcomes (J.W. Grimmet al.). Do organizations have arole in patient compliance?Understanding interplay amongpatient compliance, providerdecision-making, andorganizational features of healthcare delivery systems (K. Lutfey).Special Groups of Patients and

Health Issues. “Inner Strength”and the “Existential Self”:improving managed care for HIV+ women through the integrationof nursing and sociologicalconcepts (J.A. Kotarba et al.).Paradigm tension in managementof chronic disease (N.G. Kutner).Delivering long term care in achanging environment: the impactof managed care in the UnitedStates (T.L. Scheid, D.L.Zablotsky). Lessons From Other

Countries. Making reform locally:general practitioners, health caremanagers and the ‘new’ Britishhealth service (K. Clegg Smith).Social capital, health status, andhealth services use among olderwomen in Almaty, Kazakhstan(T.T.H. Wan, B.Y.J. Lin). Broader

Policy Concerns and Health

Insurance Reform. Universalhealth care in the United States -the timing is right (E. Furlong). Lifeafter welfare in rural communitiesand small towns: planning forhealth insurance (K. Seccombe, R.Lockwood).

JAI

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BK�

Small Firms in Tourism

International Perspectives

Edited by R. Thomas, LeedsMetropolitan University, UKE-mail: [email protected]

©2003 354 pages

ISBN 0-08-044132-7 Hardbound

Publication: December 2003

Price: EUR 85 / USD 85

Advances in Tourism Research

This book provides a variedcollection of recent researchrelating to small businesses intourism. In doing so it reflects theeclecticism of interest and methodassociated with thisunder-researched andunder-theorised area ofinvestigation. Topics range fromthe potential contribution of smallfirms to achieving social oreconomic goals to understandingmore about business performanceand growth. As is common intourism research, disciplinaryboundaries are routinelytransgressed in the interests ofgaining greater illumination.Insights from a variety ofcountries are offered, sometimes

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as a result of trans-nationalcollaboration initiated specificallyfor this book.

AUDIENCE

For those engaged in tourismresearch relating to smallbusinesses, public policy andcommunity development. It willalso be of interest to final yearundergraduate and postgraduatestudents of tourism, and thosestudying small businesses moregenerally. Reflective policy-makerswill also find much of interest.

Contents: Preface. Internationalperspectives on small firms intourism: a synthesis (R. Thomas).Tourism, small firm developmentand empowerment inpost-apartheid South Africa (C.M.Rogerson). Factors affecting smallfirms in tourism: a Ghanaianperspective (W.C. Gartner).Government assistance fortourism SMEs; from theory topractice (S. Wanhill). Short-runoutput and employment effectsarising from assistance to tourismSMEs: evidence from Israel (A.Fleischer, D. Felsenstein). Riskylifestyles? Entrepreneurialcharacteristics of the NewZealand bed and breakfast sector(C.M. Hall, K. Rusher). Fromlifestyle consumption to lifestyleproduction: changing patterns oftourism entrepreneurship (G.Shaw, A.M. Williams). Successand growth in rural tourismmicro-businesses in Finland:financial or life-style objectives?(R. Komppula). The interaction ofcommunity and small tourismbusinesses in rural New Zealand(D. Keen). Whale watching: theroles of small firms in theevolution of a new Australianniche market (N. Scott, E. Laws).

Small firms and wine and foodtourism in New Zealand: issues ofcollaboration, clusters andlifestyles (C.M Hall). Qualityhomes, quality people: thechallenge of quality grading andassurance in smallaccommodation enterprises (P.A.Lynch, H. Tucker). Overcoming thegreen gap: improving theenvironmental performance ofsmall tourism firms in WesternAustralia (M. Schaper, J. Carlsen).Small firms and the principles ofsustainable tourism: the case ofcycle tourism (N.D. Morpeth).Accommodating the spiritualtourist; the case of religiousretreat houses (M. Shackley).Small firm performance in thecontext of agent and structure: across-cultural comparison in thetourist accommodation sector (A.Morrison, R.M. Teixeira). Copingwith resource scarcity: theexperience of UK tourism SMEs(M.M. Augustyn). Strategic andstructural variables ininternationalisation: the case ofSwiss tourism SMEs (A. Mungall,C. Johnson). Small tourism firmsin e-Europe: definitional,conceptual and contextualconsiderations (H. Matlay).

PERGAMON

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0080441327

BK�

Using Video in TeacherEducation

Edited by J. Brophy, MichiganState University, Lansing, USAE-mail: [email protected]

©2003 320 pages

ISBN 0-7623-1048-0 Hardbound

Publication: December 2003

Price: USD 90 / EUR 90

Advances in Research onTeaching, Volume 10

This book features contributionfrom people who have developedand used video in teachereducation. The focus is on videoas opposed to other technology(e-mail, etc.) and its use inteacher education. The video canbe stored on videotapes, CD-Rom,DVD, or computer drives, and itcan be used in either preservice orinservice teachereducation/professionaldevelopment programs.Contributors explain the nature ofthe video they use in their teachereducation programs or coursesand talk about how they use it,focusing in particular on principlesfor: (1) making the videos(decisions about how and what tocapture on video, the degree towhich the teaching should bescripted, whether it should beshown uninterrupted orsegmented and edited, and so on),and (2) principles for using thevideo in the teacher educationprogram (why and how it is usedat what points in the program,how viewings are structured andscaffolded by the teachereducator, and so on).

Social and Behavioural Sciences

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Contents: List of contributors.Introduction (J. Brophy). Newperspectives on the role of videoin teacher education (M. GamoranSherin). Quality visions andfocused imagination (T. Bliss, A.Reynolds). Using video to create avision for powerful discussionteaching in secondary socialstudies (D.E. Hess). Designing anddeveloping a video-case basedinteractive program for Englishlanguage arts teacher preparation(L. Campbell Stephens).Videocases in elementary scienceteacher preparation (S.K. Abell,K.S. Cennamo). For theenrichment of practicalknowledge: good practice anduseful theory for future primaryteachers (W. Oonk et al.).Designing a virtual K-2 classroomliteracy tour: learning together asteachers explore “best practice”(C.L. Rosaen et al.). Linking on-linevideo and curriculum to leveragecommunity knowledge (B.J.Fishman). Designing for teacherlearning: video-based curriculumdesign (D.M. le Fevre). Usingvideo as an object of inquiry formathematics teaching andlearning (N. Seago). Discussion (J.Brophy).

JAI

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0762310480

JN�

Body Image

An International Journal ofResearch

Editor in Chief: T.F. Cash, Ph.D.,Department of Psychology, OldDominion University, Norfolk,VA 23529, USATel: +1 757 683 4439Fax: +1 757 683 5087E-mail: [email protected]

Associate Editors: T. Pruzinsky,Ph.D., Quinnipiac University, USA,N. Rumsey, Ph.D., University ofthe West of England, UK,D.B. Sarwer, Ph.D., University ofPennsylvania School of Medicine,USA,L. Smolak, Ph.D., KenyonCollege, USA,J.K. Thompson, Ph.D., Universityof South Florida, USA,M. Tiggemann, Ph.D., FlindersUniversity, Australia,D. Veale, M.D., Royal Free andUniversity College MedicalSchool, UK,

2004 SUBSCRIPTION DATA

Volume 1 (4 issues)

ISSN 1740-1445 (Code 04057)

Subscription Price:

EUR 268 (for European

countries)

YEN 35,500 (for Japan)

USD 300 (for all countries

except Europe and Japan)

Body Image is an international,peer-reviewed journal thatpublishes high-quality, scientificarticles on body image and humanphysical appearance. Body Imageis a multi-faceted concept thatrefers to persons’ perceptions and

attitudes about their own body,particularly but not exclusively itsappearance. The journal invitescontributions from a broad rangeof disciplines-psychologicalscience, other social andbehavioral sciences, and medicaland health sciences. The journalpublishes original researcharticles, brief research reports,theoretical and review papers, andscience-based practitioner reportsof interest. Dissertation abstractsare also published online, and thejournal gives an annual award forthe best doctoral dissertation inthis field.Suitable topics for submission ofmanuscripts include:

• The effects of body imageand physical characteristics(e.g., body size,attractiveness, physicaldisfigurements or disorders)on psychologicalfunctioning, interpersonalprocesses, and quality of life

• Body image and physicalappearance in the full rangeof medical and allied healthcontexts

• Body image and physicalappearance in diversecultural contexts

• Validation of assessmentsof the multidimensional bodyimage construct

• Factors that influencepositive and negative bodyimage development

• Adaptive and maladaptivebody image processes andtheir clinically relevantconsequences onpsychosocial functioningand quality of life

• Relationship of body imageto behavioral variables (e.g.,

Social and Behavioural Sciences

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exercise and other physicalactivity, eating andweight-control behaviors,grooming andappearance-modifyingbehaviors, and socialbehaviors)

• Scientific evaluation ofinterventions to promotepositive body image or toprevent or treat body imagedifficulties and disorders.

FORTHCOMING PAPERS

The journal’s mission andperspectives on body image -past, present, and future, T.F. CashBody image assessment: Knowingwhat you want to measure, J.K.ThompsonBody image development duringyouth, L. SmolakBody image development acrossthe adult lifespan, M. TiggemannThe role of body image in theprevention of eating disorders, M.Levine and N. PiranObesity and body image, M.B.Schwartz and K.D. BrownellThe assessment of body imagequality of life in medical conditionsand contexts, T. PruzinskyBody image and physicaldisfigurement, N. Rumsey and D.HarcourtBody image and cosmeticsurgery, D.B. Sarwer and C.E.CrerandAdvances in cognitive behavioralconceptualization and treatment ofbody dysmorphic disorder, D.Veale

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/bodyimage

Social and Behavioural Sciences

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Author Index

NFP 392/75

Author Index

A

Abernaty, C.O., 33Adelman, George, 53

Anderson, D.A., 72Atwater, B.F., 19

B

Barnett, W.A., 22

Bayer, R.G, 41Benedetto Mattia, F., 68

Bernhardt, R., 68

Blau, P.J, 41

Bobryakov, S., 32Boeyens, J.C.A., 12

Brophy, J., 71

Brownell, K.D., 72Bünzli, J.-C., 62Butler, D.R., 17

C

Calderon, R.L., 33Cash, T.F., 72

Cataldo II, A.J., 24

Chapman, E., 72Chapman, N., 34

Chappell, W.R., 33

Chen, A.H., 29

Choi, J.J., 27

Chu, C.K., 36

Cossy, J., 5

Costa, P., 40

D

Dannhaeuser, N., 21

Davis, C., 72Deissenberg, C., 22Doi, K., 45

E

Ewick, P., 69

F

Faith, M.S., 72Farman, A.G., 45Feichtinger, G., 22

Foster, G.D., 72Franko, D.L., 72Freedman, M., 21

G

Gamo, T., 17Ganster, D.C., 23Gardner, R.M., 72Garner, D.M., 72Ghauri, P., 25

Giele, J.Z., 67

Gillespie, A.R., 19

Ginsberg, A., 28

Gleaves, D.H., 72Gluskin, E., 55Goni, G.J., 15

Grilo, C.M, 72Grogan, S., 72

H

Hallett, M., 53

Harcourt, D., 72Hasan, I., 28Hayashi, Takabumi, 26Heinberg, L.J., 72Hempel, G., 36

Hertz, L., 38

Heusser, C.J., 15

Hill, A.J., 72Hiraki, T., 27Holst, E., 67Humphreys, F.J., 42

I

Inamura, K., 45

J

Jaggi, B., 21Jain, S.K., 20

Jones, K., 5

Jones, R.C.F., 5

K

Kalick, S.M., 72Kapusta, J., 63

Katritzky, A.R., 5

Kim, K.-J., 55

Kiyak, H.A., 72Konstantinov, M., 44

Koo, J.Y.M., 72Kramer, R.M., 30Kronenfeld, J.J., 69

L

Lakhan, V.C., 14

Lemke, H.U., 45

Levine, M.P., 72Lundan, S.M., 28

M

Malanson, G.P., 17Martin Ginis, K., 72Martin, J., 41

McCabe, M.P., 72McCombie, C., 34McKinley, N.M., 72Mehrmann, V., 44Milton, S.V., 55Molander, G.A., 5

Müller, B., 63Murray, J.S., 10, 11

N

Neziroglu, F., 72

O

Olivardia, R., 72

P

Pava, M., 31

Pawlak, Z, 42

Paxton, S.J., 72Perrewé, P., 23

Perumareddi, J.R., 62Petkov, P., 44Phillips, K.A., 72Politzer, P.A., 10, 11

Pope, H.G., 72Porter, S.C., 19Primeaux, P., 31

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Pruzinsky, T., 72

R

Rafelski, J., 63Ramachandra Rao, V., 62Ramsden, C.A., 5

Rayudu, G.V.S., 62

Reiber, J.H.C., 45Ricciardelli, L.A., 72Rizzoli, P.M., 15Rosenberg, M., 32

Rothblum, E.D., 72Rumsey, N., 72

S

Sarat, A., 69

Sarwer, D.B., 72Sastri, V.S., 62

Schwartz, M.B., 72Scriven, E.F.V., 5

Serapio, Jr., M.G., 26

Sherman, K., 36Siegler, I.C., 40Singh, V.P., 20Smolak, L., 72Staw, B., 30

Striegel-Moore, R.H., 72

T

Taniguchi, M., 17

Tantleff-Dunn, S., 72Taylor, R.J.K., 5Theriault, J., 72Thomas, D.J., 33Thomas, R., 70

Thompson, J.K., 72Tiggemann, M., 72

U

Usunier, J-C., 25

V

van der Vusse, G., 37

Vandereycken, W., 72Vannier, M.W., 45Veale, D., 72

W

Wadden, T.A., 72Walsh, S.J., 17

Wang, K., 17Wei Gu, D., 44Werner, C., 21Wertheim, E.H., 72White, C.A., 72Wiederman, M.W., 72Wilfley, D.E., 72Williamson, D.A., 72Winzelberg, A.J., 72

Z

Zebrowitz, L.A., 72

Author Index

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Title Index

A

Advances in Coastal Modeling,Lakhan, V.C., 14

Advances in EnvironmentalAccounting and Management,Freedman, M., 21

Anthropological Perspectives onEconomic Development andIntegration, Dannhaeuser, N., 21

Antiviral Nucleosides, Chu, C.K., 36Arsenic Exposure and Health

Effects V, Chappell, W.R., 33

B

Body Image, Cash, T.F., 72

C

CARS 2003 - Computer AssistedRadiology and Surgery, Lemke,H.U., 45

Changing Life Patterns in WesternIndustrial Societies, Giele, J.Z.,67

Comprehensive OrganicFunctional GroupTransformations II, Katritzky,A.R., 5

E

Economic Complexity, Barnett,W.A., 22

Elsevier’s Dictionary of Acronyms,Initialisms, Abbreviations andSymbols, Benedetto Mattia,Fioretta., 68

Elsevier’s Dictionary ofRefrigeration and Cryogenics,Rosenberg, M., 32

Emotional and PhysiologicalProcesses and PositiveIntervention Strategies,Perrewé, P., 23

Encyclopedia of Neuroscience,Third Edition, Adelman, George,53

Encyclopedia of PublicInternational Law, Bernhardt,R., 68

Energetic Materials, Politzer, P.A.,10, 11

F

Free Electron Lasers 2002, Kim,K.-J., 55

I

Ice Age Southern Andes, Heusser,C.J., 15

Information Asymmetry, CataldoII, A.J., 24

Interhemispheric Water Exchangein the Atlantic Ocean, Goni,G.J., 15

International BusinessNegotiations, Ghauri, P., 25

Internationalization of Researchand Development and theEmergence of Global R&DNetworks, Serapio, Jr., M.G., 26

J

The Japanese Finance, Choi, J.J.,27

L

Land and Marine Hydrogeology,Taniguchi, M., 17

Large Marine Ecosystems of theWorld, Hempel, G., 36

Lipobiology, van der Vusse, G., 37The Local Chemical Analysis of

Materials, Martin, J., 41

M

Modern Aspects of Rare Earthsand their Complexes, Sastri,V.S., 62

Mountain Geomorphology -Integrating Earth Systems,Butler, D.R., 17

Movement Disorders, Hallett, M., 53Multinationals, Environment and

Global Competition, Lundan,S.M., 28

N

New Venture Investment,Ginsberg, A., 28

Non-Neuronal Cells of the NervousSystem: Function andDysfunction, Hertz, L., 38

P

Perturbation Theory for MatrixEquations, Konstantinov, M., 44

Principles and Standards for theDisposal of Long-livedRadioactive Wastes, Chapman,N., 34

Punishment, Politics and Culture,Sarat, A., 69

Q

Quark-Gluon Plasma: TheoreticalFoundations, Kapusta, J., 63

The Quaternary Period in theUnited States, Gillespie, A.R., 19

R

Recent Advances in Psychologyand Aging, Costa, P., 40

Recrystallization and RelatedAnnealing Phenomena (2ndEdition), Humphreys, F.J., 42

Reorganizing Health Care DeliverySystems, Kronenfeld, J.J., 69

Title Index

NFP 392/77

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Research in Finance, Volume 20,Chen, A.H., 29

Research in OrganizationalBehavior, Volume 25, Staw, B.,30

S

Small Firms in Tourism, Thomas,R., 70

Spiritual Intelligence at Work,Pava, M., 31

T

The Theories of Chemistry,Boeyens, J.C.A., 12

Tribochemistry of Lubricating Oils,Pawlak, Z, 42

U

Using Video in Teacher Education,Brophy, J., 71

W

Water Resources SystemsPlanning and Management,Jain, S.K., 20

14th Wear of Materials, Blau, P.J,41

Title Index

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REPRESENTATIVES’ INDEX

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Jonathan Bunkell+44 (0) 1865 314437, Mobile: +44 (0)7801 664914, Fax: +44 (0)1865 314519E-mail: [email protected] SALES TEAM

Mark Hunt, UK Sales Manager+44 (0) 1903 882725, Mobile: +44 (0) 7919 320202, Fax: +44 (0) 1903 882725E-mail: [email protected] McWhirter, Field Academic Manager - Scotland and Ireland+44 (0) 1786 841798, Mobile: +44 (0) 7711 225855, Fax: + 44 1786 841 798E-mail: [email protected] Saunderson, Trade & Academic Representative - Midlands and North+44 (0) 1423 561758, Mobile: +44 (0) 7768 348682E-mail: [email protected] Haden, Trade & Academic Representative - South and West+44 (0) 1922 411903, Mobile: +44 (0) 7768 348681E-mail: [email protected] Waggit, Trade & Academic Representative - Greater London and Home Counties+ 44 (0) 1865 314695, Mobile: +44 (0) 7876 035241, Fax: + 44 (0) 1865 314519E-mail: [email protected] ACCOUNTS

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REPRESENTATIVES’ INDEX

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EUROPEAN SALES TEAM

Rosanna Ramacciotti, European Sales Manager+39 (0) 49 612229, Mobile: +39 335 6011098, Fax: +39 (0) 49 8897019E-mail: [email protected] Anderson, Area Sales Manager - Germany, Austria & Switzerland+49 (0) 69 54890960, Mobile: + 49 (0) 172 682 0278, Fax: +49 (0) 69 54890961E-mail: [email protected] Wuerfl-Davidek, Sales Representative - Southern Germany, Austria & Switzerland+43 (0) 1 4942376, Mobile: +43 (0) 6764842341, Fax: +43 (0) 1 4943672E-mail: [email protected] Sanchez Gatell, Area Sales Manager - Southern Europe,+34 (0) 91 8060934, Mobile: +34 666511603, Fax: +34 (0) 91 8060935E-mail: [email protected] Flairbrother, Area Sales Manager - Benelux & Scandinavia+31(0) 20 4853848, Mobile: + 31 (0) 622808563, Fax: + 31 (0) 20 485 3844E-mail: [email protected] Leppiko, Academic & Trade Sales Representative - Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway & Sweden+31 (0) 20 485 3115, Mobile: +31 (0) 65 101 1048, Fax: +31 (0) 20 485 3844E-mail: [email protected] Janousek, Area Sales Manager - Eastern Europe+420 2 33544076, Mobile: + 420 (0) 602294014, Fax: + 420 2 335 44 076E-mail: [email protected] or [email protected] Balavoine Sales Representative - Italy, France & Greece+ 44 (0) 1865 314695, Mobile: TBC, Fax: + 44 (0) 1865 314519Email: [email protected] EAST & AFRICA

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REPRESENTATIVES’ INDEX

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ASIA SALES REPRESENTATIVES

ChinaElsevier (Singapore) Pte LtdAttn: Ms. Rose Wang, 502B, Canway Building, Nan Li Shi Road, West District, Beijing 100045, ChinaTel: +86 10 68021078 / 79, Fax: +8610 68021036, e-mail: [email protected] KongElsevier (Singapore) Pte Ltd, c/o Excerpta Medica Asia LtdAttn: Mr. Raymond Lee, 1601, 16F Leighton Centre, 77 Leighton Road, Causeway Bay, Hong KongTel: +852 28613788, Fax: +852 28613956, e-mail: [email protected], Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, NepalHead Office - New DelhiElsevierA Division of Reed Elsevier India Private LimitedAttn: Mr Ravindra Saxena, 17A/1 Main Ring Road, Lajpat Nagar IV, New Delhi – 110024, IndiaTel: +91 11 26447160-64, Fax: +91 11 26447156, e-mail: [email protected]

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REPRESENTATIVES’ INDEX

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