48
List of Contents Chemistry and Chemical Engineering BK Advances in Chemical Engineering, 29 ............................................. 5 BK Advances in Heterocyclic Chemistry, 86 ........................................... 5 BK Advances in Organometallic Chemistry, 50 ......................................... 6 BK Chromatography, 6th edition. Fundamentals and applications of chromatography and related differential migration methods ................................................... 6 BK Handbook of Lithium and Natural Calcium Chloride .................................... 7 BK Hydrocarbon Thermal Isomerizations .............................................. 8 BK Ion-Exchange Membrane Separation Processes, 9 .................................... 9 BK Nano and Micro Engineered Membrane Technology, 10 ................................ 9 BK Proteome Analysis .......................................................... 11 Earth and Planetary Sciences BK The Precambrian Earth ........................................................ 13 Life Sciences BK Advances in Antiviral Drug Design, Volume 4 ....................................... 16 BK Viral Hepatitis .............................................................. 17 NFP 395/1

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Page 1: List of Contents - AMiner€¦ · Organometallic Chemistry, 50 Robert West, University of Wisconsin, Madison, U.S.A. ©2004 464 pages ISBN 012031150X Hardbound Publication: February

List of Contents

Chemistry and Chemical Engineering

BK

Advances in Chemical Engineering, 29 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5

BK

Advances in Heterocyclic Chemistry, 86 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5

BK

Advances in Organometallic Chemistry, 50 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6

BK

Chromatography, 6th edition. Fundamentals and applications of chromatography and relateddifferential migration methods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6

BK

Handbook of Lithium and Natural Calcium Chloride . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7

BK

Hydrocarbon Thermal Isomerizations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8

BK

Ion-Exchange Membrane Separation Processes, 9 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9

BK

Nano and Micro Engineered Membrane Technology, 10 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9

BK

Proteome Analysis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11

Earth and Planetary Sciences

BK

The Precambrian Earth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13

Life Sciences

BK

Advances in Antiviral Drug Design, Volume 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16

BK

Viral Hepatitis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17

NFP 395/1

Page 2: List of Contents - AMiner€¦ · Organometallic Chemistry, 50 Robert West, University of Wisconsin, Madison, U.S.A. ©2004 464 pages ISBN 012031150X Hardbound Publication: February

Materials Science

BK

Application of Fracture Mechanics to Polymers, Adhesives and Composites, 33 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18

BK

Guidance and Control of Underwater Vehicles 2003 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18

Mathematics

MV

Handbook of the History of Logic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20

Medicine

JN

Journal of Radiology Nursing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22

JN

Journal of the American College of Radiology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22

CD

Oto-Rhino-Laryngology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23

Neuroscience

BK

Developments in Neuroscience . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29

BK

The Senescence-Accelerated Mouse (SAM): An Animal Model of Senescence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31

Physics and Astronomy

BK

Generalized Boltzmann Physical Kinetics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35

Social and Behavioural Sciences

BK

Contemporary Tourism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37

BK

Railroad Bankruptcies and Mergers from Chicago West: 1975-2001 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37

BK

Studies in Law, Politics, and Society . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38

BK

Terrorism and Counter-Terrorism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38

2/NFP 395

Page 3: List of Contents - AMiner€¦ · Organometallic Chemistry, 50 Robert West, University of Wisconsin, Madison, U.S.A. ©2004 464 pages ISBN 012031150X Hardbound Publication: February

Out of Print Titles

Progress in Medicinal Chemistry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40

Gas Fluidization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40

Animal Production and Environmental Health . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40

Investing in the Future . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40

Corporate and Industry Strategies for Europe. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40

NFP 395/3

Keyword Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41

Author Index. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43

Title Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44

Representatives’ Index. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45

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

Page 4: List of Contents - AMiner€¦ · Organometallic Chemistry, 50 Robert West, University of Wisconsin, Madison, U.S.A. ©2004 464 pages ISBN 012031150X Hardbound Publication: February

4/NFP 395

Page 5: List of Contents - AMiner€¦ · Organometallic Chemistry, 50 Robert West, University of Wisconsin, Madison, U.S.A. ©2004 464 pages ISBN 012031150X Hardbound Publication: February

Chemistry and ChemicalEngineering

BK�

Advances in ChemicalEngineering, 29

Molecular and Cellular

Foundations of Biomaterials

Edited By Michael Sefton, Intitute

of Biomaterials and Biomedical

Engineering, Department of

Chemical Engineering and Applied

Chemistry, University of Toronto.,Nicholas Peppas, Department of

Chemical and Biomedical

Engineering, and Division of

Pharmaceutics, The University of

Texas at Austin, Austin, TX

78712-0231

©2004 350 pages

ISBN 0120085291 Hardbound

Publication: April 2004

Price: £ 126 / USD 189

Advances in ChemicalEngineering, Volume 29

This latest volume in theAdvances in Chemical Engineeringseries, is a contemporary analysisof the preparation, structure andproperties of biomaterials withemphasis on the molecular designand material/polymer interactions.The book addressescell-biomaterials adhesion,biomaterials and gene therapy,protein adsorption , platelet andwhite cell activation processes,molecular design and surface

modification of novel biomaterials.

AUDIENCE

Chemical engineers, materialsscientists, bioengineers, biologistsand biomedical scientists.

Contents: The new biomaterials.Cell-material interactions.Polymeric biomaterials for nerveregeneration.Structural and dynamic responseof neutral and intelligent networksin biomedical environments.Biomaterials and gene therapy.Surface-erodible biomaterials fordrug delivery.

ACADEMIC PRESS

http://books.elsevier.com

BK�

Advances in HeterocyclicChemistry, 86

Alan Katritzky, University of

Florida, Gainesville, U.S.A.

©2004 368 pages

ISBN 0120207869 Hardbound

Publication: April 2004

Price: £ 107 / USD 160

Advances in HeterocyclicChemistry, Volume 86

Established in 1960, Advances inHeterocyclic Chemistry is thedefinitive serial in the area - one of

great importance to organicchemists, polymer chemists, andmany biological scientists.Written by established authoritiesin the field, the comprehensivereviews combine descriptivechemistry and mechanistic insightand yield an understanding of howthe chemistry drives theproperties.

AUDIENCE

Organic Chemists, biologists,biochemists.

Contents: 1. OxidativeAmino-dehydrogenation of Azines,H.C. van der Plas; 2.Conformational Analysis ofSaturated Heterocyclic6-Membered Rings, ErichKleinpeter; 3. Fluorine-containingHeterocycles. Part 1. Synthesis byIntramolecular Cyclization, GeorgiiG. Furin; 4. Polyvalent IodineCompounds in heterocyclicSynthesis, Gerald F. Koser; 5.Organometallic Complexes ofPyridines and BenzannulatedPyridines, Alexander Sadimenko.

ACADEMIC PRESS

http://books.elsevier.com

BK

Chemistry and Chemical Engineering

NFP 395/5

Page 6: List of Contents - AMiner€¦ · Organometallic Chemistry, 50 Robert West, University of Wisconsin, Madison, U.S.A. ©2004 464 pages ISBN 012031150X Hardbound Publication: February

Advances inOrganometallicChemistry, 50

Robert West, University of

Wisconsin, Madison, U.S.A.

©2004 464 pages

ISBN 012031150X Hardbound

Publication: February 2004

Price: £ 120 / USD 170

Advances in OrganometallicChemistry, Volume 50

Almost all branches of chemistryand material science nowinterface with organometallicchemistry - the study ofcompounds containingcarbon-metal bonds. This widelyacclaimed serial containsauthoritative reviews that addressall aspects of organometallicchemistry, a field which hasexpanded enormously since thepublication of Volume 1 in 1964.

AUDIENCE

Academic and industrial inorganicand organic chemists.

Contents: Hydrazide-basedHypercoordinate SiliconCompounds (Daniel Kost, InnaKalikhman). Transition MetalComplexes Bearing aPhosphenium Ligand(Hiroshi Nakazawa). New directsyntheses oforganosiliconcompounds (Il Nam Jung and BokRyul). Transition Metal ComplexesContaining All-Carbon Ligands(Michael Bruce).

ACADEMIC PRESS

http://books.elsevier.com

BK�

Chromatography, 6thedition. Fundamentalsand applications ofchromatography andrelated differentialmigration methods

Part A: Fundamentals and

techniques

Edited By E. Heftmann, Orinda,

CA, USA

©2004 490 pages

ISBN 0-444-51107-5 Hardbound

Publication: March 2004

Price: EUR 245 / USD 245

Journal of ChromatographyLibrary, Volume 69

Chromatography has emerged asthe most important and versatileanalytical method. The book is notonly an updated version ofHeftmann’s classical text, but itcovers areas of future importance,such as microfluidics andcomputer resources. Under hisexperienced guidance, authoritiesin each field have contributed theirpractical experience to anintegrated treatment of modernmicro analysis. In Part A thetheoretical basis of individualseparation methods is explainedand the technical aspects areillustrated. It includes the theory ofgas and liquid chromatography aswell as specific chromatographictechniques, such assize-exclusion, planar, ion, andaffinity chromatography as well asvarious electrokinetic separationtechniques. Microfluidics arecovered for the first time and

useful sources of analyticalinstruments are listed andevaluated.

AUDIENCE

Professional scientists that wishan in-depth understanding of thevarious separation sciencedisciplines.

Contents: 1 Theory ofchromatography (V.L. McGuffin)1.1 Introduction 1.2 Resolution 1.3Principles of solute-zonedispersion 1.4 Principles ofsolute-zone separation 1.5Optimization of chromatographicseparations 1.6 Summary 2Column liquid chromatography(R.M. Smith) 2.1 Introduction 2.2Equipment for liquid-phaseseparations 2.3 Stationary-phasematerials 2.4 Detection 2.5Separation methods 2.6 Liquidchromatography in samplepreparation 2.7 High-temperatureseparations 2.8 Miniaturization 2.9Large-scale separations 3 Affinitychromatography (F.B. Anspach)3.1 Introduction 3.2Chromatographic operations 3.3Affinity interactions at solidinterfaces 3.4 Affinity ligands 3.5Summary 4 Ion chromatography(C.A. Lucy and P. Hatsis) 4.1Introduction 4.2 Instrumentation4.3 Selectivity in ionchromatography 4.4 Samplepreparation 4.5 Future directions 5Size-exclusion chromatography (J.Silberring, M. Kowalczuk, J.Bergquist, A. Kraj, P. Suder, T.Dylag, M. Smoluch, J.-P. Chervet,and J. Ekman) 5.1 Introduction 5.2Theory 5.3 Columns 5.4 Mobilephase 5.5 Detectors 5.6Calibration 5.7 Applications 6Planar chromatography (Sz.Nyiredy) 6.1 Introduction 6.2Classification of planar

Chemistry and Chemical Engineering

6/NFP 395

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chromatographic techniques 6.3Principles of planarchromatographic methods 6.4Principal factors in planarchromatography 6.5Instrumentation 6.6 Qualitativeand quantitative analysis 6.7Preparative planarchromatography 6.8 Specialplanar chromatographictechniques 6.9 Comparison ofvarious planar chromatographictechniques 6.10 Trends in planarchromatography 7 Electrokineticchromatography (E. Kenndler andA. Rizzi) 7.1 Introduction 7.2Electro-osmotic flow in open andpacked capillaries 7.3Electrochromatography withstationary phases 7.4Electrokinetic chromatographywith pseudo-stationary phases 7.5Electrically driven vs.pressure-driven chromatography7.6 Conclusions 8 Gaschromatography (P.J. Marriott)8.1 Introduction 8.2 Basicoperating variables 8.3 Enhancedand fast separations 8.4 Sampleintroduction 8.5 Detection 9Capillary zone electrophoresis(P.G. Righetti, A. Bossi, L.Castelletti, and B. Verzola) 9.1Introduction 9.2 The instrument9.3 The capillary 9.4 How tomodulate the electro-osmotic flow9.5 The buffers 9.6 Modes ofoperation 9.7 Micellarelectrokinetic chromatography 9.8Biosensors 9.9 Conclusions 10Combined techniques (W.M.A.Niessen) 10.1 Introduction 10.2Coupled columns 10.3Chromatography/spectrometry10.4 Liquid chromatography/massspectrometry 11 Microfabricatedanalytical devices (A. Guttmanand J. Khandurina) 11.1Introduction 11.2 Capillaryelectrophoresis on microchips

11.3 Applications 11.4 Systemintegration 11.5 Modeling bycomputational fluid dynamics 12Instrumentation (R. Stevenson)12.1 High-performance liquidchromatography 12.2 Gaschromatography 12.3 Thin-layerchromatography 12.4Supercritical-fluid chromatography12.5 Flash chromatography 12.6Electrophoresis 12.7Electrochromatography 12.8Future developments

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444511075

BK�

Handbook of Lithium andNatural Calcium Chloride

By Donald Garrett, Saline

Processors, Inc., Ojai, California,

U.S.A.

©2004 460 pages

ISBN 0122761529 Hardbound

Publication: May 2004

Price: £ 134 / USD 200

This book is concerned with twomajor industrial minerals: Lithiumand Calcium Chloride. The geologyof their deposits is first reviewed,along with discussions of most ofthe major deposits and theories oftheir origin. The commercialmining and processing plants arenext described, followed by areview of the rather extensiveliterature on other proposedprocessing methods. The moreimportant uses for lithium andcalcium chloride are next covered,along with their environmentalconsiderations. This is followed bya brief review of the production

statistics for each industry, andsome of their compounds’ phasedata and physical properties.

AUDIENCE

Chemical engineers, metallurgicalengineers and geologists workingin academia and industry, andprivate scientists and consultants.

Contents: Part 1. LITHIUMGEOLOGY Brine Deposits ClaytonValley (Silver Peak), Nevada Salarde Atacama, Chile Salar deHombre Muerto, Argentina Salarde Uyuni, Bolivia Searles Lake,California Potential Deposits(Great Salt Lake, Utah; Salton SeaGeothermal Brine, California; DeadSea, Israel and Jordan; ChineseDry Lakes; Oil Field Waters;Others) Ore Deposits; Origin ofLithium Pegmatites CommercialLithium Minerals (Spodumene,Petalite, Lepidolite, Amblygonite,Eucryptite) Gwalia ConsolidatedLtd. (Greenbushes),WesternAustralia Bikita Minerals,Zimbabwe Tantalum Mining Corp.,Bernic Lake, Manitoba, CanadaNorth Carolina Tin-SpodumeneBelt, Chemetall FMC SmallerUnited States Deposits OtherDeposits (Canada, Brazil, Zaire,Namibia, China, Finland, Russia,Others) High-Lithium Clays(Hectorite); Other RocksPROCESSING History of theLithium Industry Brine Processing,Solar Ponds Clayton Valley (SilverPeak), Nevada; Chemetall Salar deAtacama, Chile; Chemetall Salarde Atacama, Chile; SQM Salar deHombre Muerto, Argentina; FMCSearles Lake, California; AmericanPotash & Chemical Co. ChineseLakes Various ProposedProcessing Methods (LiquidExtraction, Alumina Adsorption,

Chemistry and Chemical Engineering

NFP 395/7

Page 8: List of Contents - AMiner€¦ · Organometallic Chemistry, 50 Robert West, University of Wisconsin, Madison, U.S.A. ©2004 464 pages ISBN 012031150X Hardbound Publication: February

Others) Ore ProcessingGreenbushes, Australia; GwaliaBernic Lake, Canada; TancoZimbabwe; Bikita Minerals SouthCarolina; Chemetall (Foote) SouthCarolina; FMC (Lithium Corp.)American Lithium Chem.; BikitaLepidolite Quebec Lithium Corp.Other Operations (Black Hills,South Dakota; Yichun, China;Brazil; Namibia) Various ProposedProcesses Lithium Chemica1sTOXICOLOGY USES G1assCeramics Aluminum BatteriesGrease Other Uses (Metal, AirConditioning, Organic Compounds,Miscellaneous) INDUSTRYSTATISTICS CHEMISTRY, PHASEDATA, PHYSICAL PROPERTIESREFERENCES Part 2. NATURALCALCIUM CHLORIDE GEOLOGYCalcium Chloride DolomitizationBrine Michigan, USA VariousOther Dolomitization BrinesCalcium Chloride in Oil and GasField Brines Calcium Chloride inGeothermal Brines Deep SeaVents Red Sea Brines InlandGeothermal Brines MiscellaneousSprings Salton Sea GeothermalBrine Calcium Chloride Lakes TheDead Sea, Israel and JordanBristol and Cadiz Dry Lakes,California Lake Giulietti, Dallol SaltPan, Lake Asal Qarhan Lake,China; Kazakhstan Lakes LakeVanda and the Don Juan Pond,Antarctica Calcium ChlorideGroundwater Calcium ChlorideMinerals: Tachyhydrite DepositsSergipe, Brazil Congo ThailandOther Tachyhydrite OccurrencesCalcium Chloride Brine in MineralDeposits Reaction of CalciumChloride with Minerals ClayMinerals Soils PROCESSINGMichigan Dolomitization BrinesBristol and Cadiz Lakes GeneralProcessing Technology USES OFCALCIUM CHLORIDE Deicing Dust

Control, Soil CompactionConcrete, Oil and Gas BallastingFood Processing, Industrial DryingMiscellaneous TOXICOLOGY ANDSAFETY PRODUCTIONSTATISTICS PHASE DATA ANDPHYSICAL PROPERTIES PhaseData Physical PropertiesREFERENCES

ACADEMIC PRESS

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BK�

Hydrocarbon ThermalIsomerizations

Second Edition

By Joseph Gajewski, Department

of Chemistry, Indiana University,

Bloomington, IN 47405, USA

©2004 440 pages

ISBN 0122733517 Hardbound

Publication: March 2004

Price: £ 113 / USD 170

The second edition of this book

on fundamental chemical

processes.

Hydrocarbon Thermal

Isomerizations summarizesrearrangements which areinduced by heating neutralhydrocarbons under non-catalyticconditions in the vapor phase or innon-polar solution. This subjecthas attracted the interest ofmechanistic organic chemists andtheorists in the last quartercentury because it is one of thefew fields workable by state of theart techniques of both camps. Thiswork collects together most of thecrucial rate and stereochemicaldata in a single volume, along

with a critical analysis of each ofthese reactions. Unlike reviews orother books in this area that focuson reaction types, e.g..electrocyclic reactions, or Claisenrearrangements, this volume isorganized like the ChemicalAbstracts Formula Index, but withan important exception: all of therelevant derivatives of each parentcompound are discussed with theparent and not in their logicalformula index positions. As it isnot always obvious what is aparent material and what is aderivative, detailedcross-references are includedthroughout. An important aspectof this edition is the inclusion ofcalculational results that provideinsight, often more than wasanticipated, into these relativelysimple reactions

AUDIENCE

Mechanistic and theoreticalchemists, synthetic chemists,organometallic chemists,petroleum, and coal chemists.

Contents: 1. CH4

2. C2H2 - C2H6

3. C3H4 - C3H6

4. C4H4 - C4H8

5. C5H6-C5H10

6. C6H4-C6H10

7. C7H6-C7H12

8. C8H6-C8H14

9. C9H8-C9H14

10. C10H6-C10H16

11. C11H10-C11H16

12. C12H10 -C12H18

13. C13H10-C16H16

ACADEMIC PRESS

http://books.elsevier.com

BK

Chemistry and Chemical Engineering

8/NFP 395

Page 9: List of Contents - AMiner€¦ · Organometallic Chemistry, 50 Robert West, University of Wisconsin, Madison, U.S.A. ©2004 464 pages ISBN 012031150X Hardbound Publication: February

Ion-Exchange MembraneSeparation Processes, 9

By H Strathmann, Institut für

Chemische Verfahrenstechnik,

Universität, Stuttgart, Germany

©2004 360 pages

ISBN 044450236X Hardbound

Publication: January 2004

Price: EUR 199 / USD 199

Membrane Science andTechnology, Volume 9

Today, membranes and membraneprocesses are used as efficienttools for the separation of liquidmixtures or gases in the chemicaland biomedical industry, in waterdesalination and wastewaterpurification. Despite the fact thatvarious membrane processes, likereverse osmosis, are described ingreat detail in a number of books,processes involving ion-exchangemembranes are only described ina fragmented way in scientificjournals and patents; even thoughlarge industrial applications, likeelectrodialysis, have been aroundfor over half a century. Therefore,this book is emphasizing on themost relevant aspects ofion-exchange membranes. Thisbook provides a comprehensiveoverview of ion-exchangemembrane separation processescovering the fundamentals as wellas recent developments of thedifferent products and processesand their applications. Theaudience for this book isheterogeneous, as it includesplant managers and processengineers as well as researchscientists and graduate students.

The separate chapters are basedon different topics. The firstchapter describes the relevantElectromembrane processes in ageneral overview. The secondchapter explains thermodynamicand physicochemicalfundamentals. The third chaptergives information aboution-exchange membranepreparation techniques, while thefourth and fifth chapter discussesthe processes as unit operationsgiving examples for the design ofspecific plants.

AUDIENCE

Research scientists, graduatestudents, plant managers andprocess engineers in chemicalengineering, environmentalengineering, biotechnology,technical chemistry, chemicaltechnology, biotechnology, waterdesalination and waste watertreatment, pollution control etc.

Contents: Overview of

Ion-Exchange Membrane

Processes Historicaldevelopment. The structure ofion-exchange membranes.Ion-exchange membraneprocesses. Electrochemical and

Thermodynamic Fundamentals

Basic electrochemical relations.Basic thermodynamic relations.Transport of ions in solutions andmembranes. Preparation and

Characterization of

Ion-Exchange Membranes

Preparation of ion-exchangemembranes. Characterization ofion-exchange membranes.Operating Principle of

Electrodialysis and Related

Processes The principle ofconventional electrodialysis.Electrodialysis with bipolarmembranes. The principle of

diffusion dialysis. The principle ofcontinuous. The principle ofDonnan dialysis. Otherion-exchange separationprocesses. Ion-Exchange

Membrane Process and

Equipment Design Design ofelectrodialysis processes andequipment. Bipolar membraneelectrodialysis process design.Diffusion dialysis process andequipment design. Continuouselectrodeionization processdesign. Donnan dialysis processand equipment design. Otherion-exchange membraneprocesses. Applications of

Ion-Exchange Membrane

Separation Processes Practicalapplication of electrodialysis.Applications of bipolar membraneelectrodialysis. Practicalapplications of diffusion dialysis.Applications of continuouselectrodeionization. Practicalapplications of Donnan dialysis.Literature.

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/044450236X

BK�

Nano and MicroEngineered MembraneTechnology, 10

By CJM van Rijn, General

Manager Aquamarijn Research BV

©2004 396 pages

ISBN 0-444-51489-9 Hardbound

Publication: February 2004

Price: EUR 185 / USD 185

Membrane Science andTechnology, Volume 10

Chemistry and Chemical Engineering

NFP 395/9

Page 10: List of Contents - AMiner€¦ · Organometallic Chemistry, 50 Robert West, University of Wisconsin, Madison, U.S.A. ©2004 464 pages ISBN 012031150X Hardbound Publication: February

This book is about Nano andmicro engineered membranetechnology, an emerging newtechnological area in membranetechnology. Potential applicationscover a broad spectrum ofscience, such as micro and nanofiltration, gas separation, opticsand nanophotonics, catalysis,microbiology, controlled drugdelivery, nanopatterning, microcontact printing, atomisation,cross flow emulsification, etc. Abrief overview of filtrationmembranes and pore structures ispresented in chapter 1 and in thesubsequent chapter 2 an overviewis presented of conventional microperforation methods, like laserdrilling, electroforming, precisionetching etc. With microengineering techniques (chapter3), originating from thesemiconductor industry, it isrelatively easy to downscale andform submicron pores (down to100 nm) using photolithographicmethods, with e.g. contact masksand wafer steppers. In chapter 4some elementary fluid mechanicsrelated to fluid flow in conductsand single and multiple orifices ispresented covering analyticalmethods as well as computationalfluid dynamics. Much effort hasbeen put in strength andmaximum pressure load analysis(chapter 5) of perforated andunperforated membranes. Newanalytical expressions wereobtained that were verified by anumber of computer simulationsand many experiments. Aseparate chapter (chapter 6) hasbeen devoted to the pioneeringwork of manufacturing polymericperforated membranes because ofits potential future economicalimpact. Large scale microfiltrationapplications on e.g. skim milk and

lager beer are presented inchapter 7, whereas in chapter 8 amicro scale Lab-on-a-Chipmicrofiltration/fractionationdemonstrator is discussed.Nanotechnology and nanoengineered membranes is thefascinating topic of chapter 9,with typical examples asnanopatterning, nanophotonicsand nanomembrane technology.This book closes with novelpioneering applications onatomization (chapter 10) for deeppulmonary inhale and cross flowemulsification (chapter 11) for themanufacturing of e.g. functionalfoods and nano/micro emulsions.

AUDIENCE

Industry consultants andindividual scientists in the area ofchemical engineering, physicalchemistry, membrane technology,and material science.

Contents: Overview Membrane

Technology

Membrane Processes

• Filtration through size

exclusion

• Separation by

solution-diffusion process

• Separation by charge

Membrane Structures

• Ceramic membranes

• Polymeric membranes

• Nanocomposite

membranes

• Other membrane structures

Microperforation Methods

Wet etching of perforations inmetal foilsElectroforming of perforationsElectro perforationLaser cutting and drilling ofperforationsHot embossing

Micro Engineered Membranes

Introduction micro engineeringMEMS Silicon micro engineeringMicro engineered unperforatedmembranesMicro engineered perforatedmembranesSemiconductor lithography

Laser interference lithography

• Device fabrication with

short exposure time

• Short versus long exposure

times

Fabrication of microsieves withsilicon wafers

• Wet etching through the

pores

• Silicon Wafers

Fluid Mechanics

Fluid flow through a channel andan orificeFlow through rectangular andcircular orificesMembrane Deflection and

Maximum Pressure Load

Analytical pressure loadexpressionsExperimentsPerforated membranes andmaximum pressure loadPolymeric Membranes

Photolithographic polyimidemembranesHot moulding techniques

Phase separation micro moulding

• Moulding of micro array

and a microwell

• Flat sheet and tubular

polymeric structures

• Capillary polymeric

structures

Microfiltration Cross flowmicrofiltration of large particlesCross flow microfiltration ofpolydisperse suspensionsMicrofiltration of lager beer

Chemistry and Chemical Engineering

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Micro filtration and fractionation ofmilkMicrofiltration of blood-cellconcentratesMicroscreens for rapidmicrobiological detectionLab and Fab-on-a-Chip

Lab-on-a-Chip for particlefractionation Fab-on-a-Chipfor de-hydrogenation processNanotechnology and Nano

Engineered Membranes

Introduction Nanotechnology

Zeolites, self assembled molecularsieves

• Molecular sieves on

siliconnitride membranes

Patterning of

nanostructures

• Stencilling with nanosieves

Nanosieves for PhotonicStructures

• Silicon nitride photonic

crystals

• Alumina photonic crystals

Nano membrane separationtechnologyNano engineered biomembranes

• Biosensors Nanotubes

• Carbon nanotubes

• Templated nanotubes and

nanofiltration

• Nano printing and etching

Atomisation

Introduction theoryAtomisation with micro machinednozzlesMembrane Emulsification

CFD and membrane emulsificationAnalytical cross-flowemulsification model

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444514899

BK�

Proteome Analysis

Interpreting the Genome

Edited By David Speicher, The

Wistar Institute, Philadelphia, PA

19104

©2004 400 pages

ISBN 0-444-51024-9 Hardbound

Publication: April 2004

Price: EUR 165 / USD 165

This book explores the current

status of proteomics.

This book explores the currentstatus of proteomics, an excitingnew discipline, which is less than10 years old. This new field hasrapidly grown into a majorcommercial and researchenterprise with great prospects fordramatically advancing ourknowledge of basic biological anddisease processes. Thecontributors to this book are aninternational panel of proteomicsexperts, who review and discussthe current status of specifictechnologies and approaches.Proteomics represents an excitingnew way to pursue biological andbiomedical science at anunprecedented pace. Proteomicstakes a broad, comprehensive,systematic approach tounderstanding biology that isgenerally unbiased and notdependent upon existingknowledge. The majorcomponents of proteomics frombasic discovery using a range ofalternative analytical methods todiscovery validation and use forclinical applications are discussed.State-of-the-art protein profiling

methods include high resolutiontwo-dimensional gels,two-dimensional differential in-gelelectrophoresis, LC-MS andLC-MS/MS using accurate masstags, and protein identifications ofproteins from gels using massspectrometry methods arediscussed in depth. Otherchapters describe comprehensivecharacterization of proteomesusing electrophoreticprefractionation and analyses ofsub-proteomes based on specificposttranslational modificationsincluding the phospho-proteome,the glyco-proteome, and nitratedproteins. These conventionalproteome analysis chapters arecomplemented by discussion ofemerging technologies andapproaches such as affinity basedbiosensor proteomics as well asthe use of protein microarrays,microfluidics and nanotechnology.Strategies for improvingthroughput by automation are alsodiscussed. Additional chaptersaddress the application of currentproteome techniques to clinicalproblems and the availability ofprotein expression libraryresources for proteome studies.

AUDIENCE

Graduate and undergraduatestudents studying physical oranalytical chemistry techniqueslike mass spectrometry, analyticalseparation and electrophoresis;students in medicinal chemistrybiology, biochemistry, cell biology,genomics and other biologicalsciences. Scientists working inBiotech and Pharmaceuticalcompanies, university researchersin Biology, Life-Science andChemistry departments, and anyscientists working in institutionsconducting biomedical research.

Chemistry and Chemical Engineering

NFP 395/11

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Contents: Overview of proteomeanalysis.Protein profile comparisons ofmicroorganisms, cells and tissuesusing 2-D gels.Protein profiling using2-Dimensional Gel Electrophoresis(2D-DIGE) with multiplefluorescent tags.Electrophoretic prefractionation forcomprehensive analysis ofproteomes.Modification specific proteomicsapplied to protein glycosylationand nitration.Phosphoproteomics: Massspectrometry based techniquesfor systematic phosphoproteinanalysis.Protein identification by in-geldigestion and mass spectrometry.The use of accurate mass tagsbased upon high-throughputFourier transform ion cyclotronresonance mass spectrometry forglobal proteomic characterization.Clinical applications ofproteomics.Affinity-based biosensors,microarrays and proteomics.Protein expression libraryresources for proteome studies.Automation of proteome analysis.Micro- and nanotechnology forproteomics.

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444510249

Chemistry and Chemical Engineering

12/NFP 395

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Earth and Planetary Sciences

BK�

The Precambrian Earth

Tempos and Events

Edited by P.G. Eriksson,Department of Geology, University

of Pretoria, South Africa,W. Altermann, Centre

Biophysique Moleculaire

(Exobiologie), Centre National de

la Recherche Scientifique,

Orleans, France, D.R. Nelson,Geological Survey of Western

Australia, East Perth, WA,

Australia, W.U. Mueller, Sciences

de la Terre, Université du Québec,

Chicoutimi, Québec, Canada,O. Catuneanu, Department of

Earth and Atmospheric Sciences,

University of Alberta, Edmonton,

Alberta, Canada

©2004 800 pages (approx)

ISBN 0-444-51506-2 Hardbound

Publication: January 2004

Price: EUR 175 / USD 175

ISBN 0-444-51509-7 Paperback

Publication: January 2004

Price: EUR 98 / USD 98

Developments in PrecambrianGeology, Volume 12

In this book the editors strive tocover all primary (i.e. non-applied)topics in Precambrian geology in anon-partisan way, by using a largeteam of international authors topresent their datasets and highlydivergent viewpoints.The chapters address: celestial

origins of Earth and succeedingextraterrestrial impact events;generation of continental crustand the greenstone-granitedebate; the interaction of mantleplumes and plate tectonics overPrecambrian time; Precambrianvolcanism, emphasising komatiiteresearch; evolution and models forEarth’s hydrosphere andatmosphere; evolution of life andits influence on Precambrianocean chemistry and chemicalsedimentation; sedimentationthrough Precambrian time; theapplication of sequencestratigraphy to the Precambrianrock record. Each topic isintroduced and a non-partisanclosing commentary provided atthe end of each chapter. The finalchapter blends the majorgeological events and rates atwhich important processesoccurred into a synthesis, whichpostulates a number of “eventclusters” in the Precambrian whensignificant changes occurred inmany natural systems andgeological environments.

Contents: Preface (W.U. Mueller,W. Altermann et al.).1. The Early Earth (D.R. Nelson).

1.1 Introduction (D.R. Nelson). 1.2Earth’s formation and first billionyears (D.R. Nelson). 1.3 The earlyPrecambrian stratigraphic recordof large extraterrestrial impacts(B.M. Simonson, G.R. Byerly, D.R.Lowe). 1.4 Strategies for findingthe record of Archaean impactevents (D.H. Abbott, J.T.Hagstrum). 1.5 Commentary

(D.R. Nelson).2. Generation of Continental

Crust (D.R. Nelson, W.U.

Mueller). 2.1 Introduction (W.U.Mueller, D.R. Nelson). 2.2 Isuaenigmas: illusive tectonic,sedimentary, volcanic and organicfeatures of the �3.7 Ga Isuagreenstone belt, southwestGreenland (J.S. Myers). 2.3Geochemical diversity in volcanicrocks of the �3.7 Ga Isuagreenstone belt, southern WestGreenland: implications for mantlecomposition and geodynamicprocesses (A. Polat, A.W.Hofmann, P.W.U. Appel). 2.4Abitibi greenstone belt platetectonics: the diachronous historyof arc development, accretion andcollision (R. Daigneault, W.U.Mueller, E.H. Chown). 2.5 Graniteformation and emplacement asindicators of Archaean tectonicprocesses (T.E. Zegers). 2.6Diapiric processes in theformation of Archaean continentalcrust, East Pilbaragranite-greenstone terrane,Australia (A.H. Hickman, M.J. VanKranendonk). 2.7 Early Archaeancrustal collapse structures andsedimentary basin dynamics (W.Nijman, S.T. de Vries). 2.8 Crustalgrowth rates (N.T. Arndt). 2.9Commentary (D.R. Nelson, W.U.Mueller).3. Tectonism and Mantle

Plumes through Time (P.G.

Eriksson, O. Catuneanu). 3.1Introduction (P.G. Eriksson, O.Catuneanu). 3.2 Precambriansuperplume events (K.C. Condie).3.3 Large igneous province record

Earth and Planetary Sciences

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through time (R.E. Ernst, K.L.Buchan, A. Prokoph). 3.4 Episodiccrustal growth during catastrophicglobal-scale mantle overturnevents (D.R. Nelson). 3.5 Anunusual Palaeoproterozoicmagmatic event, the ultrapotassicChristopher Island Formation,Baker Lake Group, Nunavat,Canada: Archaean mantlemetasomatism andPalaeoproterozoic mantle (B.L.Cousens, J.R. Chiarenzelli, L.B.Aspler). 3.6 A commentary onPrecambrian plate tectonics (P.G.Eriksson, O. Catuneanu). 3.7Precambrian ophiolites (J.R.Chiarenzelli, E.M. Moores). 3.8The Limpopo belt of southernAfrica: a Neoarchaean toPalaeoproterozoic orogen (A.J.Bumby, R. van der Merwe). 3.9Geodynamic crustal evolution andlong-lived supercontinents duringthe Palaeoproterozoic: evidencefrom granulite-gneiss belts,collisional and accretionaryorogens (M.V. Mints, A.N.Konilov). 3.10 Formation of a lateMesoproterozoic supercontinent:the South Africa-East Antarcticaconnection (H.E. Frimmel). 3.11 Amechanism for explaining rapidcontinental motion in the lateNeoproterozoic (J.G. Meert, E.Tamrat). 3.12 Commentary (P.G.Eriksson, O. Catuneanu).4. Precambrian Volcanism: an

independent Variable through

Time (W.U. Mueller). 4.1Introduction (W.U. Mueller, P.C.Thurston). 4.2 Terminology ofvolcaniclastic and volcanic rocks(W.U. Mueller and J.D.L. White).4.3 Komatiites: volcanology,geochemistry and textures. 4.3.1Physical volcanology of komatiites(W.U. Mueller). 4.3.2 Komatiitegeochemistry (J. Dostal, W.U.Mueller). 4.3.3 Textures in

komatiites and variolitic basalts(N.T. Arndt, A.D. Fowler). 4.4Archaean and Proterozoicgreenstone belts: setting andevolution (P.C. Thurston, L.D.Ayres). 4.5 Explosive subaqueousvolcanism (J.D.L. White). 4.6Archaean calderas (W.U. Mueller,J. Stix et al.). 4.7 Commentary(W.U. Mueller).5. Evolution of the Hydrosphere

and Atmosphere (P.G. Eriksson,

W. Altermann). 5.1 Introduction(P.G. Eriksson, W. Altermann). 5.2The Archaean atmosphere,hydrosphere and biosphere (H.Ohmoto). 5.3 The evolution of thePrecambrian atmosphere: carbonisotopic evidence from theAustralian continent (J.F. Lindsay,M.D. Brasier). 5.4 Precambrianiron-formation (A.F. Trendall, J.G.Blockley). 5.5 The Precambriansulphur isotope record of evolvingatmospheric oxygen (T.W. Lyons,L.C. Kah, A.M. Gellatly). 5.6Earth’s two great Precambrianglaciations: aftermath of the“snowball Earth” hypothesis (G.M.Young). 5.7 The paradox ofProterozoic glaciomarinedeposition, open seas and strongseasonality near thepalaeo-equator: globalimplications (G.E. Williams). 5.8Neoproterozoic sedimentationrates and timing of glaciations - asouthern African perspective (H.E.Frimmel). 5.9 Earth’s Precambrianrotation and the evolving lunarorbit: implications of tidalrhythmite data forpalaeogeophysics (G.E. Williams).5.10 Ancient climatic and tectonicsettings inferred from palaeosolsdeveloped on igneous rocks (H.W.Nesbitt, G.M. Young). 5.11Aggressive Archaean weathering(P.L. Corcoran, W.U. Mueller).5.12 Commentary (P.G. Eriksson,

W. Altermann).6. Evolution of Life and

Precambrian Bio-Geology (W.

Altermann). 6.1 Introduction (W.Altermann). 6.2 Earth’s earliestbiosphere: status of the hunt(J.W. Schopf). 6.3 Evolving lifeand its effect on Precambriansedimentation (W. Altermann).6.4 Microbial origin ofPrecambrian carbonates: lessonsfrom modern analogues (J.Kazmierczak, S. Kempe, W.Altermann). 6.5 Precambrianstromatolites: problems indefinition, classification,morphology and stratigraphy (W.Altermann). 6.6 Precambriangeology and exobiology (F.Westall). 6.7 Commentary (W.Altermann).7. Sedimentation through Time

(P.G. Eriksson). 7.1 Introduction(P.G. Eriksson, A.J. Bumby, M.Popa). 7.2 Sedimentarystructures: an essential key forinterpreting the Precambrian rockrecord (J.A. Donaldson, L.B.Aspler, J.R. Chiarenzelli). 7.3Archaean sedimentary sequences(P.L. Corcoran, W.U. Mueller). 7.4Discussion of selected techniquesand problems in the field mappingand interpretation of Archaeanclastic metasedimentary rocks ofthe Superior Province, Canada(J.R. Devaney). 7.5 Precambriantidalites: recognition andsignificance (K.A. Eriksson, E.L.Simpson). 7.6 Sedimentarydynamics of Precambrianaeolianites (E.L. Simpson, F.F.Alkmim et al.). 7.7 EarlyPrecambrian epeiric seas (P.G.Eriksson, A.J. Bumby, P. Mostert).7.8 Precambrian rivers (D.G.F.Long). 7.9 Microbial mats in thesiliciclastic rock record: asummary of diagnostic features(J. Schieber). 7.10 Microbial mat

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features in sandstones illustrated(S. Sarkar, S. Banerjee, P.G.Eriksson). 7.11 Sedimentationrates (P.G. Eriksson, P.K. Bose et

al.). 7.12 Commentary (P.G.Eriksson, M.A. Martins-Neto).8. Sequence Stratigraphy and

the Precambrian (O. Catuneanu).

8.1 Introduction (A.F. Embry, O.Catuneanu, P.G. Eriksson). 8.2Concepts of sequencestratigraphy (O. Catuneanu, A.F.Embry, P.G. Eriksson). 8.3Development and sequences ofthe Athabasca basin, EarlyProterozoic, Saskatchewan andAlberta, Canada (P. Ramaekers, O.Catuneanu). 8.4 Third-ordersequence stratigraphy in thePalaeoproterozoic DaspoortFormation (Pretoria Group,Transvaal Supergroup), Kaapvaalcraton (P.G. Eriksson, O.Catuneanu). 8.5 Commentary (O.Catuneanu, P.G. Eriksson).9. Synthesis (P.G. Eriksson,

O. Catuneanu et al.). 9.1Evolution of the solar system andthe early Earth. 9.2 Generation ofcontinental crust. 9.3 Tectonismand mantle plumes through time.9.4 Precambrian volcanism, anindependent variable. 9.5Evolution of the hydrosphere andatmosphere. 9.6 Evolution ofPrecambrian life and bio-geology.9.7 Sedimentation regimesthrough time. 9.8 Sequencestratigraphy through time. 9.9Tempos and events inPrecambrian time.

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444515062

Earth and Planetary Sciences

NFP 395/15

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Life Sciences

BK�

Advances in AntiviralDrug Design, Volume 4

Edited by E. De Clercq, Rega

Institute for Medical Research,

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven,

Leuven, Belgium

©2004 240 pages

ISBN 0-444-50602-0 Hardbound

Publication: December 2003

Price: EUR 119.95 / USD 119.95

Advances in Antiviral DrugDesign, Volume 4

The fourth volume of Advances in

Antiviral Drug Design is keepingup with the recent progress madein the broad field of antiviral drugresearch and encompasses sixspecific directions that haveopened new avenues for thetreatment of HIV and other virusinfections.First, as the introductory chapter,the different new anti-HIV agentsthat are now in preclinical orclinical development are reviewedby E. De Clercq. This includes newNRTIs, NNRTIs and PIs, but alsoHIV entry/fusion inhibitors as wellas integrase inhibitors, and someof these agents, such as the NRTIemtricitabine [(-)FTC] and the PIatazanavir, may soon be licensedfor clinical use.Second, high expectations arevested in the potential therapeuticusefulness of inhibitors of HIV

integration, a point of no return inthe life cycle of HIV, and thisapproach is highlighted by D.J.Hazuda and S.D. Young.Third, as all currently available PIscan be described as“peptidomimetic”, and, therefore,expected to demonstrateoverlapping virus-drug resistanceand side effect profiles, it wouldbe interesting to see how anon-peptidic protease inhibitorsuch as tipranavir behaves, andthis is covered by D. Mayers, K.Curry, V. Kohlbrenner and S.McCallister.Fourth, neuraminidase inhibitorssuch as zanamivir (that has to beinhaled) and oseltamivir (that canbe administered via the oral route)have gained a definitive status asantiviral drugs useful for boththerapy and prophylaxis ofinfluenza A and B virus infections;as they target a specific influenzaviral enzyme, neuraminidase (orsialidase), they may be expectedto block newly emerging influenzaviruses as well, and the design ofneuraminidase inhibitors hasreceived due attention of H. Jinand C.U. Kim.Fifth, while the major currentefforts in antiviral drugdevelopment have shifted fromherpesviruses towards HIV andhepatitis viruses [hepatitis B virus(HBV), hepatitis C virus (HCV)], itis interesting to note that byswitching from the classicalfive-membered sugar or acyclicnucleoside strategy, J. Wang, M.Froeyen and P. Herdewijn have

gone “upstream” in designingsix-membered carbocyclicnucleosides as potentialanti-herpesvirus agents.Sixth, following up on thenucleotide prodrug strategyintroduced above under ix, todeliver the biologically activenucleotides inside the cells, C.Meier has elaborated on aparticular class of suchpronucleotides, namely that of thecyclosaligenyl pronucleotides, anapproach that should have farreaching implications forcompounds effective against HIV,HBV and other viruses.The six topics covered in thisfourth volume of Advances in

Antiviral Drug Design are in thefront line of the present endeavorstowards the design anddevelopment of new therapeuticagents for virus infections. Theypertain to the combat againstthree of the most important viralpathogens of current times: HIV,HBV, influenza virus andherpesviruses.

Contents: List of contributors.Preface. New anti-HIV agents inpreclinical or clinical development(E. De Clercq). Inhibitors of humanimmunodeficiency virusintegration (D.J. Hazuda, S.D.Young). Non-peptidic proteaseinhibitors (NPPIs): Tipranavir (D.Mayers et al.). Design ofneuraminidase inhibitors asanti-influenza virus agents (H. Jin,C.U. Kim). Six-memberedcarbocyclic nucleosides (J. Wang,

Life Sciences

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M. Froeyen, P. Herdewijn).cycloSal-pronucleotides - Designof the concept, chemistry andantiviral activity (C. Meier). Index.

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444506020

BK�

Viral Hepatitis

Molecular Biology,

Diagnosis, Epidemiology

and Control

Edited by I.K. Mushahwar,Abbott Laboratories, North

Chicago, IL, USA

©2004 292 pages

ISBN 0-444-51487-2 Hardbound

Publication: December 2003

Price: EUR 129.95 / USD 129.95

Perspectives in Medical Virology,Volume 10

The last forty years havewitnessed the discovery of fivehuman hepatitis viruses: hepatitisvirus A, B, C, D, and E, and tworelated blood-borne viruses: GBvirus C and TT virus.Viral Hepatitis provides acomprehensive overview of thelatest developments and researchstudies in human viral hepatitis.Written by leading internationalscientists in the field, this bookcovers topics ranging from thehistory of these viruses to theirmolecular biology, diagnosis,epidemiology and control. It willbe an invaluable reference sourcefor hepatitis researchers,reference and diagnosticlaboratories, clinicians, public

health officers and graduate andmedical students.

Contents: Preface. Hepatitis A (N.Previsani, D. Lavanchy, G. Siegl).Hepatitis B (N. Previsani, D.Lavanchy, A.J. Zuckerman).Hepatitis B virus mutants:Emergence and impact ondiagnostic detection (P.F.Coleman). Hepatitis B virus: Lifecycle and morphogenesis (L.G.Birkenmeyer). Hepatitis C virus (A.Scott Muerhoff, G.J. Dawson).Hepatitis Delta (N. Previsani, D.Lavanchy, M. Rizzetto). Hepatitis Evirus: Current status (G.G.Schlauder). GB virus C (T.P. Leary,I.K. Mushahwar). Torque Tenovirus (TTV): Molecular virologyand clinical implications (H.Okamoto, T. Nishizawa, M.Takahashi). List of contributors.Index.

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444514872

Life Sciences

NFP 395/17

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Materials Science

BK�

Application of FractureMechanics to Polymers,Adhesives andComposites, 33

Edited By D Moore

©2003

ISBN 0-08-044205-6 Hardbound

Publication: December 2003

Price: USD 150 / EUR 150

Elsevier International Series onStructural Integrity

• Providing practical

examples of how to apply

fracture mechanical

principles

• Contributions from over

forty authors from a

multinational background

• Peer reviewed papers

ensuring high standards

and consistent presentation

This multi-author book containscontributions from approximatelyforty scientists involved with theEuropean Structural IntegritySociety (ESIS) and the TechnicalCommittee (TC4).Comprising a structured set ofcase histories illustrating how toapply fracture mechanic principlesand parameters to polymersadhesives and composites. Eachcontribution fits into aPerformance or Design sectionand the benefits, values, needsand limitations of such application

are discussed.Each contribution has beenrefereed by an experiencededitorial guaranteeing a highscientific standard and consistentpresentation. The authors, aboutforty in number, have a wide andvaried experience in this area andthe book benefits from such wideexperience and their multi-nationalbackground

AUDIENCE

For engineers, industry experts,research scientists, from both afundamental scientific andtechnological standpoint.

Contents:

Application of fracture mechanicsto polymersApplication of fracture mechanicsto adhesivesApplication of fracture mechanicsto composites

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0080442056

BK�

Guidance and Control ofUnderwater Vehicles2003

Edited by G Roberts, Newport

Mechatronics Research Centre,

Newport, South Wales, UK,R Sutton, Department of

Mechanical and Marine

Engineering, Plymouth, Devon, UK,

R Allen, Southampton University,

ISVR, Southampton, UK

©2003 256 pages

ISBN 0-08-044202-1 Paperback

Publication: December 2003

Price: EUR 87 / USD 87

IFAC Proceedings Volumes

• Presents the findings of

experts and practitioners in

the field

• Provides an overview of

the theory and applications

• Presents an exchange of

experiences on recent

advances in this field

This volume contains forty papersfrom the 1st IFAC Workshop onGuidance and Control ofUnderwater Vehicles. The aim ofthe Workshop was to bringtogether academic practitionersand industrialists involved in thisimportant and expanding area ofinterest in order to exchangeexperiences on recent advancesin this field. Topics covered by thepapers in this proceeding includeUUV Control Applications, SystemIdentification, UUV Architectures,Navigation, Modelling, FaultDetection and Reconfiguration.Contributors from Italy, Ireland,Japan, Portugal, Spain, Turkey,USA and the United Kingdomwere represented at theworkshop.The Workshop wasvoted a resounding success by alldelegates and in the light of thisvote of confidence the TechnicalCommittee on Marine Systems is

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planning to run this event again in2005, with the slightly amendedtitle of Navigation, Guidance andControl of Underwater Vehicles

AUDIENCE

Academic researchers andpractitioners in the field ofelectrical and electronicengineering specializing in controlsystems

Contents: Keynote paper; ControlI, Identification, Navigation I,Control II, Navigation II, Modelling,Multimedia demonstration papers

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0080442021

Materials Science

NFP 395/19

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Mathematics

MV�

Handbook of the Historyof Logic

Editors: D.M. Gabbay, King’s

College London, Department of

Computer Science, WC2R 2LS,

UK, J. Woods, University of

British Columbia, V6T 1ZI, Canada

and King’s College London

A multi-volume research

instrument that brings to the

development of logic the best in

modern techniques of historical

and interpretative scholarship

The Handbook of the History ofLogic is a multi-volume researchinstrument that brings to thedevelopment of logic the best inmodern techniques of historicaland interpretative scholarship. Thefollowing is the planned order ofthe Handbook’s nine volumes.Greek, Indian and Arabic LogicThe Rise of Modern Logic: FromLeibniz to FregeLogic and the Modalities in theTwentieth CenturyThe Many Valued andNon-monotonic Turn in LogicLogic from Russell to GödelLogic: A History of its CentralConceptsThe Emergence of Classical LogicBritish Logic in the NineteenthCenturyMediaeval and Renaissance LogicThe Handbook is the first work inEnglish in which the history oflogic is presented so extensively.

The volumes are numerous andlarge. Authors have been givenconsiderable latitude to producechapters of a length, and a level ofdetail, that would lay fair claim onthe ambitions of the project to bea definitive research work.Authors have been carefullyselected with this aim in mind.They and the Editors join in theconviction that a knowledge of thehistory of logic is nothing butbeneficial to the subject’spresent-day researchprogrammes. One of theattractions of the Handbook’sseveral volumes is the emphasisthey give to the enduringrelevance of developments in logicthroughout the ages, includingsome of the earliestmanifestations of the subject.The Handbook of the History ofLogic will be necessary readingfor researchers, and graduate andsenior undergraduate students inlogic in all its forms,argumentation theory, AI andcomputer science, cognitivepsychology and neuroscience,linguistics, forensics, philosophyand the philosophy and the historyof philosophy, and the history ofideas.

Volume 1: Greek, Indian and

Arabic Logic

©2004 628 pages

ISBN 0-444-50466-4 Hardbound

Publication: February 2004

Price: EUR 145 / USD 145

Greek, Indian and Arabic Logicmarks the initial appearance of themulti-volume Handbook of theHistory of Logic. Additionalvolumes will be published whenready, rather than in strictchronological order. Soon toappear are The Rise of ModernLogic: From Leibniz to Frege. Alsoin preparation are Logic FromRussell to Gödel, The Emergenceof Classical Logic, Logic and theModalities in the TwentiethCentury, and The Many-Valuedand Non-Monotonic Turn in Logic.Further volumes will follow,including Mediaeval andRenaissance Logic and Logic: AHistory of its Central.In designing the Handbook of theHistory of Logic, the Editors havetaken the view that the history oflogic holds more than anantiquarian interest, and that aknowledge of logic’s rich andsophisticated development is, invarious respects, relevant to theresearch programmes of thepresent day. Ancient logic is noexception. The present volumeattests to the distant origins ofsome of modern logic’s mostimportant features, such as canbe found in the claim by theauthors of the chapter onAristotle’s early logic that, from itsinfancy, the theory of thesyllogism is an example of anintuitionistic, non-monotonic,relevantly paraconsistent logic.Similarly, in addition to itscomparative earliness, what isstriking about the best of theMegarian and Stoic traditions is

Mathematics

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their sophistication and originality.Logic is an indispensablyimportant pivot of the Westernintellectual tradition. But, as thechapters on Indian and Arabiclogic make clear, logic’s parentageextends more widely than anydirect line from the Greek citystates. It is hardly surprising,therefore, that for centuries logichas been an unfetteredlyinternational enterprise, whoseresearch programmes reach toevery corner of the learned world.Like its companion volumes,Greek, Indian and Arabic Logic isthe result of a design that gives toits distinguished authors as muchspace as would be needed toproduce highly authoritativechapters, rich in detail andinterpretative reach. The aim ofthe Editors is to have placedbefore the relevant intellectualcommunities a research tool ofindispensable value.Together with the other volumes,Greek, Indian and Arabic Logic,will be essential reading foreveryone with a curiosity aboutlogic’s long development,especially researchers, graduateand senior undergraduatestudents in logic in all its forms,argumentation theory, AI andcomputer science, cognitivepsychology and neuroscience,linguistics, forensics, philosophyand the history of philosophy, andthe history of ideas.

Contents: Contents.Preface (D.M. Gabbay, J. Woods).List of Contributors.Logic before Aristotle:Development or Birth? (J.Moravcsik).Aristotle’s Early Logic (J. Woods,A. Irvine).Aristotle’s Underlying Logic (G.

Boger).Aristotle’s Modal Syllogisms (F.Johnson).Indian Logic (J. Ganeri).The Megarians and the Stoics (R.R. O’Toole, R. E. Jennings).Arabic Logic (T. Street).The Translation of Arabic Workson Logic into Latin in the MiddleAges and Renaissance (C.Burnett).Index.

NORTH-HOLLAND

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Medicine

JN�

Journal of RadiologyNursing

Editor: Marie Korenstein, MHS,

RN, CRN, Director, Invasive

Services, UNC Breast Center-CB

7218, 8900 North Kendall Drive,

Miami, FL 33176, USA;

Tel: 305-596-1960 ext. 4714.

Fax: 305-270-3600.

E-mail: [email protected]

2004 SUBSCRIPTION DATA

Volume 23 (4 issues)

ISSN 1546-0843 (Code 13356)

Institutional price outside

USA: USD 113

Institutional price USA: USD 89

The Journal of Radiology Nursing

promotes the highest qualitypatient care in the diagnostic andtherapeutic imagingenvironments. The content isintended to show radiology nurseshow to practice with compassion,competence, and commitment,not only to patients but also to theprofession of nursing as a whole.The journal’s goals mirror those ofthe American Radiological NursesAssociation: to provide, promote,maintain , and continuouslyimprove patient care througheducation, standards, professionalgrowth, and collaboration withother health care provides.

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/xjrn

JN�

Journal of the AmericanCollege of Radiology

Official Publication of the

American College of

Radiology

Editor-in-Chief: Bruce J. Hillman,MD, Department of Radiology,

University of Virginia, Lee Street,

New Hospital, Room 1076,

Charlottesville, VA 22908;

Tel: (434)982-0211

Associate Editors:Jonathan Levy, MD, Clinical

Practice,John J. Cronan, MD, Practice

Management,Howard P. Forman, MD, MBA,Health Services and Policy,Jannette Collins, MD, MEd,Education,Beth Erickson, MD, Radiation

Oncology

2004 SUBSCRIPTION DATA

Volume 1 (12 Issues)

ISSN 1546-1440 (Code 13357)

Institutional price: USD 180

AUDIENCE

Practioners of radiology, radiationoncology, radiologic or medicalphysics, and nuclear medicine;radiology business managers andadministrators; radiology residentsand fellows.

The mission of JACR is to fill thegap for information on clinicalparameters, practicemanagement, education, healthpolicy, and research on radiologyhealth services. The Journal aimsto give radiological practitioners“how to” articles with practicaltips on managing every aspect oftheir practices-from organizationand management to technologyneeds and patient service.

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Medicine

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CD�

Oto-Rhino-Laryngology

Proceedings of the 17th World

Congress of the International

Federation of Oto-Rhino-

Laryngological Societies (IFOS),

Cairo, Egypt, 28 September to 3

October 2002

A.G. Zohny, Ain Shams University,

Cairo, Egypt, R.J. Ruben,

Department of Otolaryngology,

Albert Einstein College of

Medicine, New York, USA

©2003

ISBN 0-444-50711-6 CD-ROM

Publication: December 2003

Price: EUR 115 / USD 115

International Congress Series,Volume 1240

This volume, made in theelectronic form, is meant tohighlight aspects of the scientificcontent of the XVII IFOS WorldCongress, held in Cairo in the fallof 2002. It reflects the size andversatility of the scientific programof the Congress and containspapers covering the entire area ofOtolaryngology Head and NeckSurgery and Facial Plastic Surgerygiven at the Seventeenth Worldand National Congress. Thispublication deals with the mostresent advances and the mostup-to date work within the area.

AUDIENCE

Scientists, practitioners andsurgeons interested inOtolaryngology Head & NeckSurgery and Facial Plastic Surgery.

Contents: Preface. Invited

papers. Protocol of assessment ofvelopharyngeal incompetence(E.K. Abdel-Haleem). Efficacy ofbehaviour re-adjustment therapy(Brat) for Oro-Pharyngealdysphagia (T. Abou Elsaad, M.N.Kotby). Logopedic and phoniatricaspects of V.P.I. (M. Accordi, S.Agnelli). Minimal invasiveparanasal sinus surgery (W.C.Almeida et al.). Early diagnosis ofhearing loss (M.N. Amin).Variables pertinent to successfulhabilitation of delayed cochlearimplantation in prelingual children(S. Bassiouny). Compensation foroccupational noise inducedhearing loss in Australia and NewZealand (R.L. Carroll). Trans-canallabyrinthectomy (A. El Seifi).Stapedectomy technique (A. ElSeifi). Management of anteriorcommissure lesions by combininganterior partial resection and CO2laser excision (M. El-Shennawy).Care of the singing voice (M.-A.Faure). Evidence of incipientdisease in asymptomatic ears inunilateral Meniere’s disease andclinical signs (I. Friedrichs, A.R.D.Thornton, C. Eng). Labyrinthinefistula: diagnosis andmanagement (R.R. Gacek). Headand neck cancer - the Indianscene (P.P. Hakim). Managementof head-and-neck lymphomas:from the standpoint ofradiotherapy (N. Hayabuchi et al.).Models of management ofvelopharyngeal valveincompetence in developingcountries - Tasks of theotolaryngologist and phoniatricianin multidisciplinary care. (J.Hirschberg). Clinical course oflaryngeal papillomatosis (I.Hocevar-Boltezar, M. Zargi, N.Gale). Speech performance andcochlear coverage with cochlear

implants (E. Hochmair et al.).Parathyroid carcinoma: clinicalpresentation and treatment (S.Jakoubková et al.). Early diagnosisof hearing loss in newborns andchildren (J. Jakubíková, M.Závodná). Paediatric fess inAustralia (K.J. Kane). Persistentsinusitis from recirculatingmucous after inferior turbinectomy(K.J. Kane). Diagnostic imaging:the key for a precise diagnosis ofORL. Nasal and paranasal lesions;differentiating malignant tumorsfrom benign lesions. (Y. Kase et

al.). Effects of the “Smith AccentTechnique” of voice therapy onthe laryngeal functions and voicequality of patients with unilateralvocal fold paralysis (A. Khidr).Laser surgery for T1 laryngealcancer (S. Kitahara et al.). Acomparative study betweencertain behavioral methods intreatment of stuttering (M.N.Kotbyet al.). Psychogenic stress as apossible etiological factor innon-organic dysphonia(M.N.Kotby et al.). Care of theprofessional voice in Egypt (M.NKotby, S.R. El Sady). Resourceallocation system for the care ofcommunicative disorders in Egypt(M.N. Kotby, N.A. Labib, A.A.Aziz). KOSIFOS, the ORL museum(L. Manolidis). Partialcricotracheal resection forpediatric subglottic stenosis:single-stage or double-stagesurgery? (P. Monnier). Theoutcomes and economic issues inhead and neck cancer (M. Munir).Quantitative analysis of synkinesisfollowing facial nerve palsy (K.Murata et al.). A 5-yearexperience with hypopharyngealcarcinoma in Ain Shamsuniversity hospitals (M. Nassar,S.A. Ibrahim). Quality of life, moodand social support in

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laryngectomized patients (E.J.Birkhaug et al.). Pharaonic ORL(A.L. Pahor). The influence ofcurrent basic science research onthe future of cochlear implants(B.C. Pyman, G.M. Clark). Effectsof cochlear implantation on thecontralateral cochlear andvestibular system (O. Ribári). TheORL from the 3rd milennium b.c.to the 3rd milennium a.d. in theAmericas (M. Rizzi, S. Burgues).An audiologic rehabilitationprogram for elderly adults in brazil(I.C.P. Russo). Basic aspects oftrauma mechanisms in thecervico-encephalic syndrome (E.Sakata, K. Ohtsu). Voicerehabilitation after totallaryngectomy using a simplecheap prosthesis (M. Samir).Management of non-organic voicedisorders: physiological bases ofAccent Method for non-organicvoice disorders (O. Shiromoto).Outcome of surgical managementof chronic otitis media in thecommunity through mobile earsurgery camps in Nepal(R.P.Shrivastav et al.). Preventingdeafness - an achievablechallenge: the WHO perspective.(A. Smith). Pediatriclaryngotracheal stenosis: “Presentand future status” diagnosis (C.D.Tiscornia). When and howinterfere in thyroid and parathyroidsurgery (J. Vokurka). Hyaluronicacid is not upregulated in nasalpolyps (J.B. Watelet et al.).Matrix metalloproteinases inchronic sinus diseases (J.B.Watelet et al.). Tympanometricear examination for the diagnosisof hearing impairment in Saudichildren (S.M. Zakzouk). Theprevalence of sensorineuralhearing loss among Saudi children(K.A. Al-Abduljawad, S.M.Zakzouk). Surgical findings in

revision tympanoplasty (S.M.Zakzouk, F.H. Al Anazi). Pediatricstridor and airway management(G.H. Zalzal). Free papers.

Monothermal caloric test its valuein assessment of vestibularfunction (A.S. Farid, S.M. El-Abd,M.H. Abou-Elew). Effect of dietvariables on the biomechanicalmeasures of swallowing in strokepatients (T. Abou Elsaad). Theinteraction of whole body vibrationand noise on the cochlea (S.Soliman et al.). Acousticalanalysis of the phonemes /a/, /e /and /i/ (S.A. Araújo et al.). A studyof phonation pharyngogram infunctional voice disorders (C.M.Ahn, K.J. Moon, D.H. Chung).Drawing up of grounded prognosisconcerning the tendencies oftumor development in patientswith larynx malignancies (S.Andreychenko). Etiopathogeneticaspects of reccurentcholesteatoma development (N.Arsovic et al.). Revision surgeryin cochlear implants (M. Hamad et

al.). Perimodiolar electrodes -radiological and histologicalfindings (A. Aschendorff et al.).Ultrasonography (B scan) in thehead and neck region (J. Astl et

al.). Ultrasonography - imagingmethod for oropharyngeal SCClymphnode metastases mapping(J. Astl et al.). HLA class I defectsin maxillary sinus squamous cellcarcinoma - potential prognosticsignificance (N. Bandoh et al.).Value of biological factors forprognosis in maxillary sinussquamous cell carcinoma: p53gene mutation and apoptosis (N.Bandoh et al.). Detection ofhearing loss in elementaryschools: a national campaign (R.F.Bento et al.). Video test forhearing screening in children (R.F.Bento et al.). Chronic intractable

cough and silent sinusitis: role offunctional endoscopic sinussurgery (FESS) (D. Bhargava, R.Jain, K. Bhargava). The initialresults of the effectiveness ofoutpatient tinnitus retrainingtherapy - a multicentric study (C.Brehmer, H.M. Overhoff).Prevalence of allergic rhinitis inyoung adults in Italy (M. Bugianiet al.). Psychological adaptationin surgically treated patients forlaryngeal cancer (M. CarrascoLlatas et al.). A case report oflymphoma non-Hodgkin in tonsil-arare disease in topography andage onset (M.R.M. de SouzaCarvalho et al.). Labyrinthitis andsensorineural hearing loss - anunusual complication of acuteotitis media in adult (M.R.M. deSouza Carvalho et al.). Adenoidalimaging sitting or supine? (K.S.Mangat, S.V. Chavda, A.L. Pahor).MRI in the assessment ofadenoids in children (K. Mangat et

al.). Tonsillar remnants and painfulcervical lymphadenopathy (K.S.Mangat et al.). History andpresent situation of paediatric ENTsurgery in Poland and in otherCentral East European countries(M. Chmielik et al.). Statistics onhead and neck cancers in Korea(K.-J. Cho et al.). Endoscopicseptoplasty (S. Conticello et al.).Usefulness of intraoperativedosage of I-PTH in the surgicaltreatment of primaryhyperparathyroidism (S. Aversa et

al.). Endoscopic diverticulotomyfor the treatment of zenker’sdiverticulum (S. Conticello et al.).Mode of invasion and outcome insquamous cell carcinoma of theoral tongue (R.A. Dedivitis).Recent advances in cochlearimplant devices and techniques inIndia S. DeSaSouza, D.J.FD’Souza, N. D’Souza). Otitis media

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and its correlation to craniofacialmorphology (R.C. DiFrancesco,P.L. Sampaio, R.F. Bento).Surgical diseases of the mouthand throat by Albucasis (E. Dibsi).Otogenic brain abscess:diagnostic et treatmentexperience (D. Djeric, N. Arsovic,V. Djukic). Central auditoryprocessing disorder in childrenwith developmental dysphasia (O.Dlouha). Labyrinthine fistulas dueto the chronic cholesteatomatousotitis media - controversial issueson diagnosis and surgicaltreatment (M. Durko, T. Durko).The role of MRI and spiral CT with3D reconstruction techniques inthe temporal bone tumors surgicaltreatment (M. Durko, T. Durko, W.Gajewicz). Nocturnal enuresis inchildren with adenotonsillarhypertrophy (A. Elasfour et al.).Pre-operative embolization ofnasopharyngeal angiofibroma: areport of 34 cases (A. Elasfour et

al.). Prosthetic mandibularadvancement in treatment ofobstructive sleep apnea syndrome(A. Elasfour). Cartilagetympanoplasty audiological andotological outcome (A. Elasfour,H.S. Zaghloul). Transmeatalendoscopic exposure of middleear structures: potentials andlimitations (M.A. El Begermy,B.M. Badr Eldin, M.G. Raslan).Endoscopic assistedstapedectomy (M. A. ElBegermy). Evaluation of upperairway lesions by virtualendoscopy (L.M. El Fiky et al.).Sinonasal schwannoma: two casereports and review of literature (A.El Saggan, J. Olofsson, B.Krossnes). ENT practice inpharonic medicine: (part 1)pharonic otologist (A. El-Rashidi,M. El-Sayed). Basic concepts ineosinophil recruitment to sites of

allergic inflammation: an in vitromodel of the pathophysiology oflate phase response in allergicrhinitis (A. El-Shazly). Completedisappearance of thenasopharyngeal cancer withintracranial extension byintra-arterial cisplatin infusion:report of two cases (S. Endo et

al.). Hearing loss in uncomplicatedchronic suppurative otitis mediaamong Nigerians (B.C. Ezeanolue,B.C. Okafor, M.N. Obiakor0. Freejejunal flap in pharyngealreconstruction: the method ofchoice or the choice of methodsM. Zargi et al.). Usefulness of MRangiography in cases of centralvertigo (N. Fujita, T. Yamanaka, H.Hosoi). Treatment problems ofcancer in the head and neckregion preceded by cancer inother organs (M.K. Furukawa, M.Furukawa). Ultrasonography ofthe oral cavity and pharynx duringarticulation and swallowing (M.Furukawa, M.K. Furukawa, H.Matsuda). Surgery plus radiationversus neoadjuvant chemotherapyplus radiation in resectable locallyadvanced laryngeal carcinoma(M.E. El Samaa et al.). Thecytological research in nasalpolyposis (M. Gelardi et al).Obstruction of the nasolacrimalduct: three-year experience onintranasal endoscopicdacryocystorhinostomy withultrasounds (G. Georgoulopouloset al.). Which microbial flora arefound in chronic tonsillitis? (C.Simon, M.German-Fattal).Supracrycoid laryngectomytechnique and results of 15 yearsexperience (R. Ghirardo et al.).Nasal bleeding treatment bysupraselective arteriography andembolisation (N. Gomez et al.).Preservation of the stapedialtendon in surgery for otosclerosis

(A. Gros, J. Vatovec, M. Zargi).Fiber-optic examination ofnasopharynx as objectiveindication to adenoidectomy (M.Krawczynski, D. Gryczynska).Nasal airflow in children withmaxillo-facial anomalies and nasalallergy (M. Malicka, D.Gryczynska). The value of fineneedle aspiration biopsy insalivary gland tumors (I. Haberalet al.). Endonasal endoscopicapproach to the anterior skull basefor reconstruction of CSF fistulas(R.V. Mourkabel et al.). Tonsilsand adenoids - the myth and thereality (P.P. Hakim). Inhalationmitomycin- C in the managementof laryngeal fibrosis: rationale,benefits, and pitfalls (H.A. Fattahet al.). Microendoscopictransseptal transsphenoidexcision of pituitarymacroadenomas (M.Z. Helal).EOAE I/O curves in inner earimpairments (T.Inoue et al.).Neuro-otological examinations inpatients with neurofibromatosistype 1 (NF1) (A. Ito et al.). Visualevoked potentials as additionaldiagnostic procedure in migraineheadaches in childhood andadolescence (B.J.Jancic-Stefanovic et al.). Deepneck space infections B.Jankowska et al.). Vocal qualityevaluation in children withoutvoice disorders: a prospective anddouble-blind study (G.P. Jotz et

al.). Postmortem laryngealhistopathologic analysis (G.P. Jotzet al.). Treatment of the parotidglands cancer(M.Jozefowicz-Korczynska,E.Debniak, M.Lukomski). Longtime observation of patients aftertonsillectomy(M.Jozefowicz-Korczynska,G.Mazur, M.Lukomski). Results ofvisual ocular-motor tests and

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neuropsychological evaluation intinnitus patients(M.Jozefowicz-Korczynska et al.).The nasal scrolls significance inrhinoplasty (P. Kabakchiev). Nasaltrauma in children - surgicaltreatment (P. Kabakchiev). Timepattern of cochlear implantperformance (A. Sarwat et al.).Giant angiolipoma of the nasalseptum; a case report (Y. Kanetaet al.). Interstitial radiotherapy ofthe tumour of the base of thetongue (M. Kásler et al.).Distortion product otoacousticemissions in Bell’s palsy (C.A.Kasse et al.). Clinical data andprognosis in 1521 cases of Bell’spalsy (C.A. Kasse et al.).Restoration of function in theparalyzed laryngeal muscles byfunctional electrical stimulation incats (A. Katada et al.). Changes inthe laryngeal signs of patientswith reflux laryngitis: aprospective, placebo-controlled,randomized, double-blindedevaluation of omeprazole (A. Khidret al.). Frequency-specificity ofauditory brainstem responseselicited by 500 Hz tone-pip withGaussian envelope in normalhearing and sensorineural hearingloss (K.Kochanek et al.).Prevention of otitis media by nasalvaccine -an animal study- (S.Kodama et al.). Surgical problemsin some otosclerosis cases (A.Konarska). Immunology of humantympanic membrane in otitismedia - Immunohistochemicalstudy of epidermal cytokines (J.Kuczkowski, W. Narozny, B.Mikaszewski). Cochleovestibularcomplications of diabetes mellitusin Ibadan, Nigeria (O.A. Lasisi,O.G.B. Nwaorgu, A.F. Bella).Glomus tumours: a South Africanexperience (B. Le Roux.Bupivacaine in nasal packs as

topical analgesia after nasalsurgery: a prospective controlledtrial (P. Leong et al.). Prognosticfactors of results of conservativetreatment of secretory otitis mediafor adults (E. Lesinskas, R.Kasinskas). Physiotherapy ofbreathing as an element ofmultidisciplinary rehabilitation ofchildren using cochlear implants(M. Lisiecka-Bielanowicz et al.).Impact of treatment on benignpositional vertigo-related quality oflife (J.A. Lopez-Escamez et al.).Objective methods of postoperative tests in cochlear implantpatients (A. Lorens et al.).Improvement of quality of life anddaytime sleepiness in perennialallergic rhinitis patients treatedwith immunotherapy (T.Madiadipoera, A.A. Dahlan).Pre-therapeutic evaluation oforopharyngeal and oral cavitysquamous cell carcinomas: aclinical, radiological andhistological evaluation (O. Malardet al.). Considerations aboutteachers’ dysphonias (P. Melnyket al.). Primitive small cell larynxtumor: presentation of a case andliterature review (M. Braier et al.).Blood supply of the trigeminalganglion and nerve root (M.Milisavljevic et al.). The canal wallup (CWU) technique versus thecanal wall down (CWD) intympanoplasty withmastoidectomy (H. Mostafa, H.Saleh). Nerve welding using CO2

laser (experimental work) (Y.M.Mostafa). Role of laser incutaneous vascular lesions ofhead and neck (Y.M. Mostafa, H.Shokeir). Excision of rhinophymawith CO2 laser (Y.M. Mostafa).Cochlear implants in children (G.Motta et al.). Use of Flashscantechnology in CO2 laserstapedotomy (G. Motta et al.).

Middle ear transmissioncharacteristics in tympanicmembrane perforations: cochlearemission and endoscopic study(M Mourad, M. Badr-El-Dine, H.Megahed). Program of earlyidentification of hearing loss innewborns in Poland (H.Skarzynskiet al.). Noise induced hearing loss(NIHL) (Y. Nakai). New insights ofairborne pollinosis -EM, NO andCytokines- (T. Nakano et al.).Aberration in the nasal physiology-MD Cycle Rest (M.C.R.)- (T.Nakano, W.M. Yu, Y. Kobayashi).New theory on pollinosis ofairborne tree grains -EM, NO andCytokines - (T. Nakano, Q-B. Shan,S. Hori). Exercise on experimentalrats with arthemisia pollens (L.M.Zhe, T. Nakano, S. Hori). Newtheory on pollinosis from airbornepollen of grass -EM, NO andCytokines- (T. Nakano, S. Hori).Usefulness of hyperbaric oxygentherapy in patients withsensorineural acute and chronictinnitus (W. Narozny et al.). Therole of Interleukin-12 and tissueantioxidants in chronic sinusitis(M. Nassar et al.). A retrospectivestudy of head and neckmalignancies (T.H. Nassir, S.M.Al-Agilly). Functional role ofauditory inputs in control oflaryngeal muscles duringvocalization (S. Nonaka et al.). 10years experience with voiceprosthesis (M.D. Ozkul et al.). Anobjective scoring system for themanagement of otitis media witheffusion (A.L. Pahor et al.).Predictive value of factorsinfluencing recovery from suddensensorineural hearing loss (A.Pajor, T. Durko, M. Gryczynski).Late post-tonsillectomy quinsyreport of three cases and reviewof the literature (T. Papadas et al.).Cancer patients with large

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defects: reconstructional options -case study (T. Papadas et al.).Fine needle aspiration cytology -are we getting it right? (N. Patel et

al.). Selective neck dissection forNo Neck supraglottic carcinoma(Z. Petrovic, N. Arsovic, A. Trivic).Intratumoral microvessels densityand morphometric study ofangiogenesis as prognostic factorin laryngeal cancer (M.Gryczynski, J. Kobos, W.Pietruszewska). Prognosticsignificance of chosen tumourindicators (angiogenesis, cellproliferation and apoptosis) inlaryngeal cancer (W.Pietruszewska, J. Kobos, M.Gryczynski). Application ofelectric-acoustic stimulation inpatients with profound hearingloss - case study (H. Skarzynski et

al.). Silverstein wick application tothe round window: our experiencefor acute hearing loss (F. Pottier,J. Cook). Amplitude and frequencycorrespondence between DPOAEand pure tone audiometry: clinicalcheck up (G. Precerutti, M.P.Lunati). Parenchymal and nodalsalivary glands lymphomas:differential diagnosis byultrasonography color and powerDoppler (M. Precerutti et al.).Management of the peritonsillarabscess: incision or abscesstonsillectomy (M. Profant et al.).Use of the TEMPO+ behind theear speech processor andCOMBI40+ cochlear implant withvery young children (L. Jamiesonet al.). Tinnitus as a symptom ofacoustic neuroma (D. Raj-Koziaket al.). Bell’s palsy and EbsteinBarr virus infection (A. Ramos et

al.). Congenital malformation incochlear implantation (A. Ramoset al.). Perimodiolar electrode incochlear implantation (A. Ramoset al.). Application of a digital

speech aid in stuttering patients(A. Szkielkowska et al.). Listeningability and auditory lateralisationin patients with vocal fold nodulesand other laryngeal pathologiessecondary to improper voiceemission (J. Ratynska et al.).Application of intraoral ultrasoundin examination of parapharyngealspace tumors (J. Rebol and I.Takac). Direct evidence of nitricoxide production in the cochlea(R.-S. Ruan). Stapedectomy intympanosclerosis (M.A. Safak etal.). Pure-tone audiometry incochlear implanted patients (M.Sainz et al.). Transitory alterationsof the electrode impedances incochlear implants associated tomiddle and inner ear diseases (M.Sainz et al.). Interventionalmagnetic resonance image-guidedendoscopic endonasal surgery (G.Sakurai et al.). Temporal analysisof the vestibular and optokineticnystagmus (A. Salami et al.).Otoplasty for the prominent ear (H.Saleh, H. Mostafa). Role ofclinician’s speech characteristicsin auditory training of post lingualcochlear implant adult patients (A.Sarwat et al.). Kinesthethic versusauditory cues in speechmonitoring of post lingual cochlearimplant patients (A. Sarwat et al.).Tongue base assessment inobstructive sleep apnea (M.Samir, A. Adly, M. El-Shinawy).Atypical presentations ofantrochoanal polyps (R.H. Sayed,U.M. Rashad). One-stagereconstruction in management ofextensive cholesteatoma (R.H.Sayed). Skull base tumours:assessment of intracranialextension (A.S. Seleem). Influenceof Nd-YAG laser on cochlearfunction: experimental study (F.V.Semenov, V.F. Voronkin). Nasalaperture surgery (M.H.A. Shafy).

Cortico-cortical projections of themotorcortical larynx area in therhesus monkey (K. Simonyan, U.Jürgens). Application of boneanchored hearing aids (BAHA) indifferent acquired and congenitalear malformations (H.Skarzynskiet al.). “I can hear” A system foruniversal hearing screening inschool age children - Organizationand first results (H. Skarzynski et

al.). Combined treatment ofadvanced head and neck cancer(L. Šmid et al.). Auditoryneuropathy and cochlearimplantation (S. Soliman, N.Kamal, S. Ashour). Cervical lymphnode metastases of cervix utericarcinoma in a patient withmultinodular goiter (E.M. Sota et

al.). Results of cholesteatomasurgery: the influence of age (M.Stankovic). The use of autogenouscartilage grafts in revision nasalsurgery (F.J. Stucker, F. Nathan,T. Lian). Cutaneous laser surgeryin otolaryngology-head and necksurgery (F.J. Stucker, F. Nathan,T. Lian). Management experiencein 142 cases of rhinophyma (F.J.Stucker, F. Nathan, T. Lian).Management of animal andhuman bites in the head and neck(F.J. Stucker, P.Driscoll, T. Lian).Treatment of stenosing lesions oflarynx and trachea usingcanula-free tracheostoma (G.Feigin, J. Sulaimanov, V.Shevchuk). Auditory corticalresponse to monaural stimulationdetected by functional magneticresonance imaging (M. Suzuki et

al.). Three year experience inrehabilitation of brainstem implantpatients (H. Skarzynski et al.).Clinicopathologic and geneticstudies of nasal NK/T-celllymphoma. 1 Clinical features andprognosis (M. Takahara et al.).Clinicopathologic and genetic

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studies of nasal NK/T-celllymphoma. 2 Mutations of thep53, beta-catenin, and ras genes(M. Takahara et al.). Endonasallaser dacryocystorhinostomy inoutpatient clinic (T.Tanabe et al.).Long term results of provox voiceprosthesis for voice rehabilitationafter total laryngectomy “A sevenyears experience” (A.Tantawy).Microsurgical management oflaryngeal papillomas andprevalence of human papillomavirus infection (V. Uloza, D.Velyvyte, A. Gozdzicka-Jozefiak).Swedish-Lithuanian telemedicinelitmed project in otolaryngology(V. Uloza et al.). The Europeanproject AHEAD II on newbornhearing screening (I. Uloziene, F.Grandori). Evaluation ofreconstructed 3-D images of themiddle ear using multi-slice scanCT (K. Urano et al.). The etiologyof vestibular disorder in infants atrisk (J. Vatovec et al.). Fantoni’stranslaryngeal tracheostomy:results and follow up of 200 cases(P. Vecchiarelli et al.).Manoeuvres for finding laryngealnerves and parathyroid glandsduring surgery (J.M. Vidal, A.M.Morán) Zetapalatopharyngoplasty(ZPPP): new surgical tecnique forsnoring and sleep apnea treatment(M.B.M. Vieira). Spontaneousherniation of thetemporomandibular joint into theexternal auditory canal - A casereport and literary review. (R.F.Vitale, F. Goncalez, M.G. Rausis).Assessment of the effects ofnoise suppression in digitalhearing aids (S. Tawfik et al.).Finite element model ofsupraglottal space in cleft palate(M. Vohradnik et al.). Shaver(micro debridor) inOtorhinolaryngology (J. Vokurka).Using selected computer software

in therapy of delayed languagechildren W.A.A.W. Wafi Therelationship between eosinophilsand ECP value in nasal secretion(T. Eguchi, T. Misu, K. Watanabe).Preservation of labyrinth and facialfunction in extensivecholesteatoma (C. Wennmo).Facial nerve monitoring in parotidsurgery C. Wennmo Adaptiveregulation of GABA receptor investibular nucleus neuronesduring vestibular compensation(T.Yamanaka, H.Hosoi,M.D.Dutia). The role andexpression of CD27 and CD70 inthe tonsil H. Yokoi, M. Seki, S.Okazoe, K. Okumura and G-I.Ichikawa Antibodies against innerear proteins in the sera of patientswith inner ear diseases M. Suzuki,M.S. Krug, K.C. Cheng, Y. Yazawa,J. Bernstein, S.S. Kwon, R. Moraand T.J. Yoo Prevention ofretrocochlear hearing loss inmurine experimental allergicencephalitis with T cell receptorVbeta8 specific antibody M.Suzuki, K.C. Cheng, M.S. Krug, H.Kohzaki, Y. Yazawa, S.S. Kwon, R.Mora and T.J. Yoo Murine modelof autoimmune hearing loss withmyelin protein P0 H. Matsuoka,K.C. Cheng, M.S. Krug, Y. Yazawa,M. Suzuki, S.S. Kwon, R. Moraand T.J. Yoo Production ofendolymphatic hydrops inducedby directly infused monoclonalantibody against type II collagenCB11 peptide H. Matsuoka, S.S.Kwon, Y. Yazawa, M. Barbieri, M.Suzuki and T.J. Yoo The effect ofvaccination with DNA encodingmurine T -cell epitopes on the Derp 1 and 2 induced immunoglobulinE synthesis S.S. Kwon, N. Kim andT.J.Yoo Presence ofautoantibodies in the sera ofMeniere’s disease T.J. Yoo, S.S.Kwon, J. Shea, Y. Yazawa, M.

Suzuki, F. Mora, M. Mora, M.Barbieri, R. Mora and K.W. ParkProto-oncogene Raf-1 as anautoantigen in Meniere’s diseaseK.C. Cheng, S.S. Kwon, Y. Yazawa,H. Matsuoka, M. Suzuki, M. Mora,F. Mora, R. Mora, M. Barbieri andT.J. Yoo Beta-Tubulin as anautoantigen for autoimmune innerear disease T.J. Yoo, H. Tanaka,S.S. Kwon, F. Mora, M. Mora, Y.Yazawa, M. Suzuki and K. KitajimaOral administration of collagenconjugated with cholera toxininduces tolerance to type IIcollagen and suppresseschondritis in an animal model ofautoimmune ear disease N.S. Kim,K.C. Cheng, S.S. Kwon, M. Suzuki,Y. Yazawa, R. Mora, F. Mora, M.Barbieri and T.J. Yoo Evaluation ofnasal valve area by CT images H.Yoshinami, Y. Kase, Y. Toriyama,H. Nakata and Y. Okasaaka Theprevalence of severe to profoundsensorineural hearing loss (SNHL)in Saudi children and the need forcochlear implants (A.H. Al-Shaikh,S.M. Zakzouk). Analysis ofepidemiological and otologicalaspects of surgical treatmentperformed in the Institute ofPhysiology and Pathology ofHearing in the year 2001. (H.Sharzynski et al.). Our ownexperience in supracricoidlaryngectomy with CHP and CHEPtype of reconstruction due tolarynx cancer (E. Zietek et al.).

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444507116

Medicine

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Neuroscience

BK�

Developments inNeuroscience

Proceedings of the 3rd

International Mt. Bandai

Symposium for Neuroscience and

the 4th Pan-Pacific Neurosurgery

Congress, Hawaii, 22 and 28

February 2003.

Edited by K. Watanabe, Southern

Tohoku Research Institute for

Neuroscience, Southern Tohoku

General Hospital, Fukushima-ken,

Japan, Y. Ito, Southern Tohoku

Research Institute for

Neuroscience, Southern Tohoku

General Hospital, Fukushima-ken,

Japan, S. Katayama, Southern

Tohoku Research Institute for

Neuroscience, Southern Tohoku

General Hospital, Fukushima-ken,

Japan, H. Goto, Southern Tohoku

Research Institute for

Neuroscience, Southern Tohoku

General Hospital, Fukushima-ken,

Japan

©2004 504 pages

ISBN 0-444-51488-0 Hardbound

Publication: February 2004

Price: EUR 160 / USD 160

International Congress Series,Volume 1259

With “Developments inNeuroscience”, Volume II, theproceeding of the JointNeurosurgical Convention of the3rd International Mt. Bandai

Symposium for Neuroscience andthe 4th Pan Pacific NeurosurgeryCongress held in Hawaii from22-28 February 2003, thedistinguished authors providedetailed descriptions of clinicaland basic neuroscience issues.The book demonstrates the mostinnovative new techniques,procedures and approaches asperformed in hundreds of clinicalcases. It provides easy-to-followadvice from the clinical and basicneuroscience consultant inneurosurgery, neurology,neuroradiology, andneuropathology, an ideal referencefor practicing neurosurgeons,neurologists, andresidents-in-training. You will findcoverage of aneurysms,arteriovenous malformations,brain tumors, and so on, derivedfrom a wide range of etiologies asfor neuroscience issues.Refinements in the neurosurgicalarmamentarium continue to pushthe borders of neurosurgeryforward. Lesions, consideredinoperable a decade ago, can nowbe resected, especially in theregion close to the eloquent areaand of skull base. These newdevelopments, plus rapidtechnological innovations havedramatically altered the scope ofmodern neuroscience.

AUDIENCE

Scientists working in the field ofneuroscience

Contents: Preface. Introduction.

Anatomy. The surgical anatomy

of the anomalous posteriorcommunicating artery (E. Avci,M.K. Baskaya).Brain tumors. Pathology. Studyof methylation status of p14/ARFgene in benign, atypical andanaplastic meningiomas bymethylation specific PCR (V.J.Amatya, Y. Takeshima, K. Inaim).Automatic quantification of theMIB-1 immunoreactivity in braintumors (G. Tanaka, Y. Nakazato).Cytologic features of reactivebrain tissue in brain biopsies (T.Namiki, P. Bryant-Greenwood).Neuroepithelial tumors. Reporton the first patient group of thephase 1 BNCT trial at the LVR-15reactor (J. Burian et al.).Fiber-optic spectroscopicdetection of neoplasm byintraoperative fluorescencelabeling (Y. Kajimoto, S. Miyatake,T. Kuroiwa). Experience ofmodified boron neutron capturetherapy to a glioblastoma patient(T. Kuroiwa et al.). Malignant braintumors - effect of repeatedresection and adjuvant treatment(T. Ianssen et al.).Parasellar lesion and skull

base. Resection of recurrentparasagittal meningiomas withcomplete obstructed superiorsagittal sinus (W. Y. Huo et al.).Sphenoid wing meningiomas -neurosurgical recommendations(I.N.I. Kanaan). Microsurgery with26 cases of tuberculum sellaemeningiomas (V. van Nho, N.Phong). Microsurgery oftuberculum sellae meningiomas(P. Spangenberg et al.). Minimallyinvasive surgery - Large vestibular

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schwannomas and auditorybrainstem implant (E. Zverina et

al.). Skull base surgery for glomustumors (B.M. McGrew, C.G.Jackson). Trauma-induced hearingloss due to apoptic auditoryneuronal death in cerebellopontineangle manipulations: anexperimental study (T. Sekiya et al.).Pituitary and hypothalamic

lesion. Surgical management ofgiant pituitary adenomas (Goel, D.Muzumdar). Surgical experiencesof consecutive 45craniopharyngiomas (T. Hori, T.Kawamata, O. Kubo). Intra-thirdventricular craniopharyngiomas:imaging characteristics,histopathology and succesfultrans-lamina terminals approach(T. Sohma et al.). Role of bifrontalbasal interhemispheric approachin recurrent suprasellar tumors;craniopharyngioma and pituitarytumors (J.-K. Kang et al.).Lymphocytic hypophysitis: longtime follow-up of clinical and MRfindings (M. Sumida et al.).Others. Intravascular malignantlymphomatosis: report of twobiopsy cases (W. Yin et al.).Dynamic MRI using a field echofor brain tumors (M. Oinuma et

al.). Management of brain tumorin Nepal (B. Pant, P. Shrestha).Cerebrovascular disease.

Aneurysm. Cisternal washingtherapy in the patients withsubarachnoid hemorrhage of highgrades (T. Nakagomi et al.).Surgical experiences ofintracranial aneurysms (2,500cases) (J.-H. Sim). Surgicaloutcomes in elderly patients withaneurysmal subarachnoidhemorrhage (M. Sugita et al.).Causes and evaluation ofpostoperative deterioration due tosurgical procedure in patients withruptured cerebral aneurysms (K.

Hashizume, H. Nukui).Interhemispheric approach foranterior communicating arteryaneurysm and perforating arteryinjury (N. Yasui et al.). Our surgicaltactics for cerebral aneurysms,especially modified pterionalapproach and transcondylar andfossa approach (T. Eguchi).Vascular reconstruction forcerebral aneurysms in the anteriorcirculation (R. Tanikawa et al.).Neuroendovascular therapycombined with neurosurgery forlarge and giant intracranial carotidartery aneurysm presenting masseffect (M. Ezura et al.). Thesurgery of ruptured and unrupuredcerebral aneurysms usingthree-dimensional CT angiographywithout conventional catheterangiography (M. Matsumoto et

al.). The usefulness of 3Dangiography in treatment ofcerebral aneurysms (M. Murakamiet al.). The usefulness of three-dimensional (3D) MRA in afterGDC emobilization for cerebralaneurysms (S. Susumu et al.).Vascular malformation.Ultrastructural study of themicrovasculature in the cerebralbed adjacent to arteriovenousmalformation (AVM) nidus: aproof against endovascularembolization (W. Attia et al.).Clinical characteristics andsurgical results of 2086 patientswith cerebral arteriovenousmalformation (Z. Jizong, W. Shuo,L. Jingsheng). Microsurgicaltreatment of brainstem cavernousangiomas (H. Bertalanffy et al.).Middle cerebellar pedunclotomyapproach as a safer entry formid-pontine cavernomas (K.Hashi).Intracerebral hematoma. Role ofsurgery in the management ofprimary spontaneous intracerebral

haemorrhage in adult patients(A.M. Barkatullah, E. Mahmood,R. Ahmad). Endoscopic treatmentof intracerebral henorrhage withmassive ventricular hemorrhage(T. Nisikawa et al.). Endoscopicevacuation of intraventricularhematoma and thirdventriculostomy (K. Anzai et al.).Neuroendoscopic surgery forintracerebral hematomas using atransparant sheath - Techniqueand results of putaminal, thalamicand lobar hemorrhages (D.Suyama et al.).Ischemia and others. Syntheticpatch angioplasty proves useful incarotid endarterectomy (K.Nishitani et al.). Indications forand perioperative management ofemergency carotidendarterectomy - report on sixcases - (S. Ueda et al.). Immediaterecurrence of a carotid plaquefollowing carotid endarterectomy(T. Yoshimoto et al.). EC-IC bypassin the management of cerebralhemodynamic ischemia (M.Sames, P. Vacheta, R. Bartos).Pitfalls in cerebralrevascularization surgery (K.Houkin). Effect of age on localintra-arterial thrombolysis foracute middle cerebral arteryocclusion (K. Isaki et al.).Pregnancy and stroke: 2 casereports (M. Nakashima et al.).Intracranial aneursysms andischemic cerebrovasculardiseases (L. Li et al.).Functional neurosugery and

Parkinson disease. TopicalAnesthesia on the cranial nerve Vprevents intra-operative arousalevents during microvasculardecompression surger (T. Fujita,T. Shimizu). Intraoperativemapping of the trigeminal nerveroot during MVD (T. Hatayama).What should be done, what

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should not be done inmicrovascular decompressionsurgery (A. Kondo, H. Tanabe).The efficacy of the levodopa oncognitive function in patients withde novo Parkinson’s disease (Y.Kobayashi et al.). Head injury.

Cerebral blood flow andmetabolism in patients withcognitive impairments after minortraumatic brain injury: PET studyin a chronic state (M. Mase et al.).Hydrocephalus and others. Riskof infection in patients who havecoplacement of a percutaneousendoscopic gastrostomy and aventriculoperitoneal shunt: aretrospective study of 23 patients(S. Nabika et al.). Magneticresonance imaging inspontaneous intracranialhypotension (M. Murakami et al.).Intraoperative imaging,

monitoring and navigation.

Intraoperative MRI inneurosurgery (V. Seifert). The roleof functional neuronavigation inthe treatment of lesions ineloquent areas of the brain (J.Klener et al.). Application ofmobile CT for neurosurgicaloperation and stereotacticradiotherapy (T. Kubota et al.).Awake craniotomy for malignantglioma resection (K.M. Little, A. H.Friedma). Awake craniotomy forepilepsy patients in eloquent brain(. Miyasaki, T. Hoshida, T. Sakaki).Awake craniotomy in brain tumorsurgery (H. Colle et al.).Impairment of motor function afterfrontal lobe resection withpreservation of the primary motorcortex (C. Fukaya et al.).Neuroradiology. Evaluation ofcervical arteries with 3D-CTAusing multi-detector row CT -One-session scanning of the headand neck using single or doubleinjection of contrast medium (J.

Sakuma et al.). Brain check-upsusing a mobile MRI in Hokkaido,Northern Japan (R. Takeda et al.).Spine and peripheral nerve.

Surgical treatment of cervicalspinal cord tumors (S. Bao et al.).Ultrasonic bone curettes in spinalsurgery (H. Nakagawa et al.).Surgical treatment of spinallipomatous malformations (K.L.Karagiozov). Intramedullary lipomaand epidermoid - rare coincidencein elderly (M. Vaverka, L.Hrabalek, J. Machac). Operatedfamily cases of cervical canalstenosis (T. Matsushima et al.).End-to-side anastomosis ofperipheral nerve in experimentaland clinical model (P. Haninec et

al.). Discriminant analysis ofdifferent levels of diabeticneuropathies recorded bysomatosensory evoked potentials(S.H. Laika et al.). Author index.

Keyword index.

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444514880

BK�

TheSenescence-AcceleratedMouse (SAM): An AnimalModel of Senescence

Proceedings of the 2nd

International Conference on

Senescene: The SAM Model,

Sapporo, Japan 21-23 July 2003

Edited by Y. Nomura, Department

of Pharmacology, Hokkaido

University, Sapporo, Japan,T. Takeda, The Council for SAM

Research, Research Institute for

Production Development, Kyoto,

Japan, Y. Okuma, Department of

Pharmacology, Hokkaido

University, Hokkaido, Japan

©2004 460 pages

ISBN 0-444-51413-9 Hardbound

Publication: January 2004

Price: EUR 156 / USD 156

International Congress Series,Volume 1260

This volume represents asummary of reports on studiesusing the Senescence AcceleratedMouse, as presented at the 2ndInternational Conference onSenescence: The SAM Model,held from 21-23 July in Sapporo,Japan.Work on the SAM began in 1968in the Department of Pathology,Chart Disease Research Institute(currently Field of RegenerationControl Institute for FrontierMedical Sciences) of KyotoUniversity. Since 1982,experiments on the SAM havebeen carried out in over 300laboratories in Japan and othercountries.Many emerging aspects of theSAM model were successfullydealt with at the first conference,which was held in 1994 in Kyoto.Dramatic progress in research onthe SAM model has been madesince. The focus of thisconference was on findingsobtained by using the SAM modeland pertinent information wasprovided by investigators workingon the SAM model together withcomments for those who areabout to embark on SAM-relatedinvestigations.Many excellent papers included inthis issue offer new insights intothe significance of the SAM as ananimal model of aging.

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AUDIENCE

Both new comers, experts withmany years experience and thoseinterested in the field ofSenescence-Accelerated Mouse(SAM).

Contents: Preface. Plenary

lectures. Effects of environmenton life span and pathobiologicalphenotypes insenescence-accelerated mice(T. Takeda). Caloric restriction,gene expression and aging(R. Weindruch).New frontiers in SAM research.

The SAMP8 mouse as a model forAlzheimer disease: studies fromSaint Louis University (J.E. Morleyet al.). Quantitative trait loci (QTL)for age-related memorydysfunction in SAMP8 andJF1mice (M. Isobe et al.). Mousesenile amyloidosis in the SAMmodel (K. Higuchi et al.). Immunesystem deficiencies in SAM (T.Hosokawa). Mitochondrialdysfunction and an impairedresponse to higher oxidativestatus accelerate cellular aging inSAMP strains of mice (M.Hosokawa).Etiopathogenesis of SAMP6

senile osteoporosis. Age-relatedbone loss: lessons from theosteoporotic SAMP6 mousemodel (R.L. Jilka, R.J.S. Reis, S.C.Manolagas). Reduced AP-1mediated transcription ofinterleukin-11 gene in marrowstromal cells as a mechanism ofsenile Osteoprosis: lessons fromSAMP6 (D. Inoue, T. Matsumoto).Neuroscience in aging and SAM

research. Pathobiological featuresin neurodegenerative diseases: anoverview (M. Higuchi, J.Q.Trojanowski, V.M. Lee).Pathological studies ofneurodegeneration in SAMP10

mice (A. Shimada et al.). AlteredGene expression in the brain ofsenescence accelerated mouseSAMP8 (R. Takahashi, S. Goto).Biochemical changes in the brainof the senescence-acceleratedmouse (SAM) P8 and P10 (Y.Nomura et al.). Emotional disordersand memory deficits insenescence-accelerated mice,SAMP8 and SAMP10(M. Miyamoto).Modulation of accelerated

senescence and age-associated

pathologies in SAM. Chemicalintervention in senescenceaccelerated mice metabolism formodeling neurodegenerativediseases: an overview (A.Boldyrev et al.). Prevention andtreatment of age-associateddisease in SAM by bone marrowtransplantation with or withoutthymus grafts (M. Inaba, H. Iwai,S. Ikehara). Ameliorative effects ofacetyl-L-carnitine and acidicfibroblast growth factor fragmentanalog on brain lipidhydroperoxide level, passiveavoidance learning, and/orimmunoreactivity for cholineacetyltransferase in the medialseptum in senescence-accelerated mice (K. Sasaki et al.).Ameliorative effects of dietarycarotenoids on memory deficits insenescence-accelerated mice(SAMP8) (H. Suganuma et al.).The roles of enteric bacteria onthe development of Chron’sdisease like intestinalinflammation in SAMP1/Yit mice(S. Matsumoto). Ameliorativeeffects of nucleosides onsenescence accelaration andmemory deterioration insenescence-accelerated mice (D.Kunii et al.).Practical application in the

breeding and experiments of

SAM. Breeding system andbackground data for SAM mice atJapan SLC (T. Suzuki et al.).Application of the passiveavoidance task for manitenanceand breeding of SAMP8/Ta tomaintain stable phenotype (T.Abe, Y. Omori). Effects of housingand nutrition condition on thereproduction of SAMR1, SAMP6and SAMP8 at NILS aging farm(S. Tanaka, K. Shiokawa, O.Miyaishi). Homepage of thecouncil for SAM research(http://samrcmd.shinshu-u.ac.jp)(J. Sawashita et al.). Abnormalaccumulation of corpora lutea inovaries of the senescenceaccelerated mouse prone (SAMP)(N. Manabe et al.). Geneticmonitoring system for SAMstrains utilizing DNA markers (M.Mori, K. Higuchi). Physiologicalcharacteristics in SAMP1 andSAMP2 mice (Y. Yanagidaira,K. Higuchi).Immunology and senescence.

Morphological changes of thethymus under stress caused bywater immersion and restraint inSAMP1 mice (M.S. Miyamoto, Y.Miyamoto, T. Hosokawa).Regulatory effects ofnoradrenaline and corticosteroneon the antibody-forming responseof cultured spleen cells fromSAMP1 mice (M. Kitamura, Y.Yagi, T. Hosokawa).Antibody-forming response ofcultured spleen cells to a proteinantigen: function of antigenpresenting cells in SAMP1 mice(T. Kimura, A. Kohdan, T.Hosokawa). Regulatory effects ofnoradrenaline on the production ofTh1 and Th2 cytokines by culturedspleen cells in SAMP1 mice (S.Hashimoto, R. Naruse, T.Hosokawa). The stability ofinterleukin-2 mRNA transcribed in

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splenic CD4+ T cells from SAMP1mice (Y. Nishimura et al.).Endocrinology and senescence.

Expression of matrixmetalloproteinases and theirtissue inhibitors in ovaries ofsenescence accelerated mice (M.Shimabe et al.). Expression ofprolactin receptor mRNAs inovaries of senescence acceleratedmice (M. Kiso et al.). Age-relatedchanges of the hippocampalestrogen receptor geneexpression in senescence-accelerated mouse (W. Zhou et al.).Oxidative stress and

senescence. Production ofreactive oxygen species bycerebellum granule cells isolatedfrom senescence acceleratedmice (V. Kazey, E. Tuneva, A.Boldyrev). Analysis of theoxidative stress state in the brainand peripheral organs ofsenescence-accelerated mouse(SAM) model (S. Matsugo, F.Yasui, K. Sasaki). Mitochondrialalterations and a higher oxidativestatus in cultured fibroblast-likecells fromsenescence-accelerated mice (Y.Chiba et al.). Age-related changesin the oxidation-reductioncharacteristics and the 8-OHdGaccumulation in liver, lung, brainof SAMP1 and SAMR1 (F.Maehira et al.).Neurodegeneration. Microglialactivation around amyloid-�deposits in mouse and rat models(K. Takata et al.). Clearance ofamyloid-� in microglial culturemodel (D. Tsuchiya et al.).Neuroprotection against focalischemia in the hyperbilirubinemicrat model (T. Sugisaki et al.).Hemiparkinsonian rat models:different sensitivity ofdopaminergic neurotoxins (J.Kondo et al.). In vitro

neurodegeneration model:dopaminergic toxin-inducedapoptosis in human SH-SY5Y cells(K. Nakamura et al.). Parkinsonianmodel of planarian, an invertebrateflatworm (M. Inden et al.).Neuronal and behavioral

disorder in senescence.

Accelerated senescence andadaptation to cold exposure (Y.Yamashita et al.). Involvement ofthe glutamatergic system inbehavioral disorders insenescence-accelerated mice(SAMP8) (Y. Fujiwara et al.).Age-related decrease inspontaneity observed insenescence-accelerated mice(SAMP10) and the involvement ofthe dopaminergic system inbehavioral disorders (H. Takahashiet al.). Effects of rearingconditions on agingcharacteristics andpathobiological phenotypes inSAMP10 mice (M. Kikumori etal.). Age-related changes inhippocampal theta rhythm inSAMP8 mouse (A. Sano et al.).Deterioration in synaptic plasticityof cultured hippocampal neuronsof senescence-accelerated mouseprone 8 (S. Yang et al.).Age-related changes in telomereof brain cell in aging SAMP10mice (S. Wang et al.). Centripetalretraction of dendrites with apicalvulnerability in the prefrontalneurons of aged SAMP10 mice(H. Keino et al.). Age-relatedchanges in blood-brain barrier ofthe SAM brain (M. Ueno et al.).Developmentally retardedexpression of the glial glutamatetransporter, GLT-1, in the cerebralcortex of senescence-acceleratedprone mouse SAMP8 (T.Kurokawa et al.). Genetical and

molecular aspect of

senescence. Genetic study of

learning and memory deficits inSAMP8 mice (K. Tomobe et al.).Relationship between immuneactivity, senile amyloidosis andlife span of hybrids of SAMP1 andB10.BR mice (E. Toichi et al.).Microarray analysis of mRNAexpressed in colon ofsenescence-accelerated mouse(SAM)P6 (T. Kawashima, Y.Shidoji, T. Oku). Expression of anovel gene containingankyrin-repeat in SAMP8 mousehippocampus (N. Yamamura et

al.). Seeking forageing-associated geneexpression in cerebral tissue ofsenescence-accelerated mouse(SAM) (C. Zhang, J. Cheng, Q.Chen). Aging and acupunctureeffects on hippocampal geneexpression profile of SAMP10 (J.Han et al.). Induction of AApoAIIand AA amyloidosis by theinjections of various amyloid fibrils(X. Fu et al.).Senescence-accelerated mouseaccumulates dietarytriacylglycerols in the intestinalmucosa with aging (S. Nishizono,A. Ogawa, K. Imaizumi).Amelioration of senile

acceleration. Prevention of senileosteoporosis in SAMP6 mice byintra-bone marrow injection ofallogeneic bone marrow cells (K.Takada et al.). Effects ofGanoderma on aging and learningand memory ability in senescenceaccelerated mice (M.-F. Wang et

al.). Neuroprotective effect ofmagnolol in the hippocampus ofsenescence-accelerated mice(SAMP1) (M. Akagi et al.).Improvement in brain function andoxidative damage of agedsenescence-accelerated mice(SAMP10) by green tea catechins(K. Unno, F. Takabayashi, N. Oku).Effects of red algae cultivated with

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deep-sea water on theoxidation-reduction status of liver,lung, brain, and bone metabolismin SAMP1 and SAMR1 (F.Maehira et al.). Influence of achange in the synovia constituenton temporomandibular joint insenescence accelerated mouseP8 (T. Yokoyama et al.). Effect ofLiuwei Dihuang decoction on thefunction of hypothalamus-pituitary-ovary axis insenescence-accelerated mouse(Y. Zhang et al.). Effects of dietaryfats on senile amyloidosis inSAMP1 mice (M. Umezawa et

al.). Characteristics of hemebiosynthesis in the liver of thesenescence-accelerated mouse(R. Akagi et al.). Ameliorativeeffect of deep-sea water onbiochemical and mechanicalproperties of bone in SAMP6 andSAMR1 (Y. Iinuma et al.). Author

index. Keyword index.

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444514139

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Physics and Astronomy

BK�

Generalized BoltzmannPhysical Kinetics

By B.V. Alexeev, Moscow Fine

Chemical Technology Institute,

Moscow, Russia

©2004 376 pages

ISBN 0444515828 Hardbound

Publication: April 2004

Price: EUR 135 / USD 135

Theory and Applications

The Boltzmann equation belongsto the fundamental equations ofphysics. In the early 1980s it wasshown by the author of this book,that taking into account thevariation of the distributionfunction over times of the order ofthe collision time leads toadditional terms in the Boltzmannequation, which are proportionalto the mean time betweencollisions of particles andtherefore to the Knudsen numberand the viscosity in thehydrodynamic limit of the theory.Moreover it turns out that theseterms - of which the influencegrows with increasing Knudsennumber - cannot be omitted in thecase of small Knudsen numbers.Therefore a fundamental physicalequation is revised. This bookreflects the scales of thesealterations. One can say - as themain result of the generalizedBoltzmann kinetic theory - thatthis theory has shown to be a

highly effective tool for solvingmany physical problems in areaswhere the classical theory runsinto difficulties.

Contents: PrefaceHistorical introduction and theproblem formulation

Chapter 1. Generalized BoltzmannEquation1.1. Mathematical introduction.Method of many scales1.2. Hierarchy of Bogolubovkinetic equations1.3. Derivation of the generalizedBoltzmann equation1.4. Generalized BoltzmannH-theorem and the problem ofirreversibility of time1.5. Generalized Boltzmannequation and iterativeconstruction of higher-orderequations in the Boltzmann kinetictheory1.6. Generalized Boltzmannequation and the theory ofnon-local kinetic equations withtime delay

Chapter 2. Theory of generalizedhydrodynamic equations2.1. Transport of molecularcharacteristics2.2. Hydrodynamic Enskogequations2.3. Transformations of thegeneralized Boltzmann equation2.4. Generalized continuityequation2.5. Generalized momentumequation for component2.6. Generalized energy equationfor component

2.7. Generalized hydrodynamicEuler equations2.8. Boundary conditions in thetheory of the generalizedhydrodynamic equations

Chapter 3. Strict theory ofturbulence and some applicationsof the generalized hydrodynamictheory3.1. About principles of classicaltheory of turbulent flows3.2. Theory of turbulence andgeneralized Euler equations3.3. Theory of turbulence and thegeneralized Enskog equations3.4. Generalized hydrodynamicequations and quantummechanics

Chapter 4. Physics of a weaklyionized gas4.1. Charged particles relaxation in‘’maxwellian’’ gas and thehydrodynamic aspects of thetheory4.2. Distribution function of thecharged particles in the ‘’Lorentz’’gas4.3. Charged particles inalternating electric field4.4. Conductivity of a weaklyionized gas in crossed electric andmagnetic fields

Chapter 5. Kinetic coefficients inthe theory of the generalizedkinetic equations5.1. Linearization of thegeneralized Boltzmann equation5.2. Approximate modifiedChapman-Enskog method5.3. Kinetic coefficient calculationwith taking into account of

Physics and Astronomy

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statistical fluctuations

Chapter 6. Some applications ofthe generalized Boltzmannphysical kinetics6.1 Investigation of thegeneralized Boltzmann equationfor electron energy distribution ina constant electric field with dueregard for inelastic collisions6.2. Sound propagation studiedwith the generalized equations offluid dynamics6.3. Shock wave structureexamined with the generalizedequations of fluid dynamics

Chapter 7. Numerical simulation ofvortex gas flow using thegeneralized Euler equations7.1. Unsteady flow of acompressible gas in a cavity7.2. Application of the generalizedhydrodynamic equations: to theinvestigation of gas flows inchannels with a step7.3 Vortex and turbulent flow ofviscous gas in channel with flatplate

Chapter 8. Generalized Boltzmannphysical kinetics in physics ofplasma and liquids8.1. Extension of generalizedBoltzmann physical kinetics forthe transport processesdescription in plasma8.2. Dispersion equations ofplasma in generalized Boltzmanntheory8.3 Generalized dispersionrelations for plasma: theory andexperiment8.4. To the kinetic andhydrodynamic theory of liquids

Appendix 1. Derivation of energyequation for invariant E� =m�V2

�/2 + � �

Appendix 2. Three-diagonal

method of Gauss eliminationtechnique for the differential thirdorder equationAppendix 3. Some integralcalculations in the generalizedNavier-Stokes approximationAppendix 4. Three-diagonalmethod of Gauss eliminationtechnique for the differentialsecond order equationAppendix 5. Characteristic scalesin plasma physicsAppendix 6. Dispersion relationsin the generalized Boltzmannkinetic theory neglecting theintegral collision term

ReferencesSubject index

ELSEVIER

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Physics and Astronomy

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Social and Behavioural Sciences

BK�

Contemporary Tourism

By E. Cohen, The Hebrew

University of Jerusalem, Israel

©2004 310 pages

ISBN 0-08-044244-7 Hardbound

Publication: April 2004

Price: USD 85 / EUR 85

Tourism Social Science Series

The volume brings togetherCohen’s principal articles on thesociology of tourism, publishedover the last three decades. Part 1collects his major theoreticalpapers starting with thepioneering articles of the 1970s,which contributed to the openingof the field of tourism for socialscience research, up to the recentwork on the ongoing processes ofchange in contemporary tourism.Part 2 features the author’s workon the many-sided interfacesbetween tourism and otherdomains - such as religion, crimeand language. Part 3 includesseveral case studies,representative of diverse aspectsof the author’s empirical research.The introduction places theauthor’s work in the context of thedevelopment of the field, while theconcluding chapter outlines thechallenges, which futuredevelopments in tourism will poseto its study. The book is of interestto researchers and students oftourism, as well as to the general

public interested in issues ofmodernity and post modernity.

Contents: Introduction. PART I:THEORY. Who is a Tourist? AConceptual Clarification. Towardsa Sociology of InternationalTourism. Nomads from Affluence:Notes on the Phenomenon ofDrifter-Tourism. A Phenomenologyof Tourist Experiences. Tourism asPlay. Authenticity andCommoditization in Tourism.Traditions in the QualitativeSociology of Tourism.Contemporary Tourism - Trendsand Challenges. PART II:INTERFACES. Tourism andReligion: A ComparativePerspective. The Tourist Guide:The Origins, Structure andDynamics of a Role. The Tourist asVictim and Protege of LawEnforcing Agencies.Tourism-related Crime: Towards aSociology of Crime and Tourism.Language and Tourism (with R.Cooper). PART III: CASE STUDIES.Arab Boys and Tourist Girls in aMixed Jewish-Arab Community.The Pacific Islands from Utopia toConsumer Product: TheDisenchantment of Paradise.Hunter-Gatherer Tourism inThailand. Thailand in TouristicTransition. Conclusion: The WayAhead.

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0080442447

BK

Railroad Bankruptcies andMergers from ChicagoWest: 1975-2001

Financial Analysis and

Regulatory Critique

By M. Conant, University of

California, Berkeley, USA

©2004 152 pages

ISBN 0-7623-1079-0 Hardbound

Publication: February 2004

Price: USD 90 / EUR 90

Research in TransportationEconomics, Volume 7

Two major U.S. Midwesternrailroads, the Rock Island Linesand the Milwauke Road, filed forbankruptcy after 1975 and theCourt ordered them dismembered.This study explains the economicfactors causing financial failuresuch as total rail line excesscapacity in the region leading tolow density of freight traffic; inaddition, labor union rules requiredunnecessary large train crews.The regulations of the InterstateCommerce Commissionaggravated the economicproblems by limiting rail lineabandonments and mergersdesigned to improve efficiency.Congress passed the StaggersAct in 1980 to correct a large partof the regulatory limitations toefficient reorganization of the U.S.

Social and Behavioural Sciences

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rail system, but it was too late tosave the Rock Island and theMilwaukee Road.The later chapters are economicanalyses of the more recentmergers of the large railroads fromthe Mississippi River to the PacificCoast. A key saving resulted fromthe court ruling that segments ofrail line could be sold to newshort-line railroads without theselling carrier having to payspecial compensation to railworkers who were discharged.The Illinois Central Railroad was aprime example of a carrier thatsold almost all of its branch lines.Great efficiencies in operationswere realized as the Union Pacificacquired the Missouri Pacific andthe Southern Pacific. Comparableefficiencies were realized by theBurlington Northern acquisitionsof the St. Louis-San Francisco andthe Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe.

Contents: Introduction. Railroadregulation and misallocation ofresources. Rock Islandbankruptcy. Milwaukee roadbankruptcy. Illinois central mergerand sales of lines. Union pacificmergers: 1982 and 1988.Burlington Northern-Santa Femerger. Union Pacific-SouthernPacific mergers. Appendix: maps.Index.

JAI

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BK�

Studies in Law, Politics,and Society

Edited by A. Sarat, Amherst

College, MA, USA

E-mail: [email protected]

P. Ewick, Clark University, MA,

USA

E-mail: [email protected]

©2004 256 pages

ISBN 0-7623-1097-9 Hardbound

Publication: April 2004

Price: USD 95 / EUR 95

Studies in Law, Politics andSociety, Volume 32

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: Part I.

Interdisciplinarity in Legal

Scholarship: Critical Theories of

Identity and Performance.Forces of Content. (S. R.Schmeiser). Rhetorics ofProvocation, Critical Race Theory,and Dreams-a Method for theSocial Sceinces. (J. M. Price).TheSocratic Screenplay: Law,Allegory and Science Fiction inJohn and Joyce Corrington’sscreenplays for the Omega Manand Battle for the Planet of the

Apes. (L. Ledwon).Part II. Policy and Practice:

Legal Institutions and the Law

in Action. Foundations ofConstitutional Legitamacy:Legal-Political Culture,Constitutional Aptness, andBaseline Community. (Z.Zevit).Mothers and Children: Caught inthe Warzone). (J.Goodman). APolitical Account for LegalConfrontation between State andSociety: the Case of Israeli LegalPluralism. (Y. Sezgin).

JAI

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0762310979

BK�

Terrorism andCounter-Terrorism

Edited by M. Deflem, University

of South Carolina, SC, USA

E-mail: [email protected]

©2004 188 pages

ISBN 0-7623-1040-5 Hardbound

Publication: April 2004

Price: USD 95 / EUR 95

Sociology of Crime, Law andDeviance, Volume 5

The contributions in this volumefocus on the ways in whichcriminologists study terrorism andcounter-terrorism. Generally,terrorism has not been central incriminology, but since the eventsof September 11, terrorism hassuddenly and resolutely movedcenter stage in criminologicaldebates. The papers in this bookbring out the distinct contributioncriminologists and criminologicalsociologists have to offer in the

Social and Behavioural Sciences

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study of (counter-) terrorism fromtheoretical, methodological, andsubstantive viewpoints. Thediscussions include a usefullybroad variety of themes, includingconceptual and theoreticalperspectives in the criminology ofterrorism; hate crimes andterrorism; civil liberties and thecontrol of terrorism; terrorism, warand crime; state crime andterrorism; terrorism andtransnational crime; the policedimensions of counter-terrorism;terrorism and the (international)court; and terrorism andpunishment. The criminologicalorientation of the book makes thevolume stand out among otherworks on terrorism. Bringingtogether distinguished scholars,the volume presents acomprehensive and insightfulstate-of-the-art overview ofterrorism and counter-terrorism asthemes of criminologicalreflection.

Contents: Introduction: Towards aCriminological Sociology ofTerrorism and Counter-Terrorism.(M. Deflem).Part I - Theoretical Perspectives

in the Criminology of Terrorism.Terrorism as Social Control. (D.Black). Terrorism and Criminology.(R. Rosenfeld). A ReciprocalApproach to Terrorism andTerrorist-Like Behavior. (G. Barak).Part II - Methodlogical Issues in

Terrorism Research. How doesStudying Terrorism Compare toStudying Crime? (G. LaFree, L.Dugan). Terrorism and EmpiricalTesting: Using Indictment Data toAssess Changes in TerroristConduct. (K. Damphousse, B.Smith). Counteracting Terror:Group Design and ResponseModalities. (M. Thomas).

Terrorism and the Federal SocialScience Research Agenda. (M. A.Zahn, K. J. Strom).Part III - Counter-Terrorism,

Ideology, and Security.Neoconservativism and AmericanCounter-Terrorism: EndarkenedPolicy? (W. de Lint). Right-WingIdeology, Terrorism, and the FalsePromise of Security (B. Berry).Part IV - The Construction and

Reality of Terrorism. Speaking ofEvil and Terrorism: The Politicaland Ideological Construction of aMoral Panic. (V. E. Kappeler, A. E.Kappeler). The Challenge ofTerrorism to Free Societies in theGlobal Village. (P. Leighton).

JAI

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0762310405

Social and Behavioural Sciences

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Out of Print Titles

Progress in MedicinalChemistry

Volume 38

Volume edited by F.D. King,A.W. Oxford

©2001 ISBN 0-444-50636-5

Gas Fluidization

By M. Pell

©1990 ISBN 0-444-88335-5

Animal Production andEnvironmental Health

Edited by D. Strauch

©1987 ISBN 0-444-42731-7

Investing in the Future

By J. Hallak

1990 ISBN 0-08-040793-5

Corporate and IndustryStrategies for Europe

Edited by L.-G. Mattsson

1995 ISBN 0-444-89182-X

Out of Print Titles

40/NFP 395

The following books have been declared Out of Print. Provided that copies of these titles have not been instock for more than one year, booksellers may return them (or at least advise of return) within three months.Return of titles will not be accepted after 31st May 2004.

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Keyword Index

A

Analytical Chemistry, 6, 11

B

Behavioral Neuroscience, 31

C

Cellular Biology, 31Chemical Engineering, 5Chemistry / General, 5 - 9, 11Control Applications, 18Control Systems, 18Criminology and Criminal Justice,

38Crisis Management / Conflict

Resolution, 38

D

Drug Design, 16

G

General Materials Science, 18Geochemistry and Petrology, 13Geology, 13Geriatrics and Gerontology, 31

I

Industrial Chemistry, 7Inorganic Chemistry, 6, 7

K

Kinetic and Transport Theory ofFluids, Physical Properties ofGases, 35

L

Logic, 20

M

Mathematical Logic andFoundations, 20

Mathematics (General), 20Molecular Biology, 11

Molecular Genetics, 31

N

Neural Aging, 31Neuroimaging, 29Neurology, 29Neuropathology, 29, 31Neuroscience, 29, 31

O

Organic Chemistry, 5, 8Otorhinolaryngology, 23

P

Pharmacology, 31Political Sociology, 38Polymer Science and Technology,

18

R

Radiology, Nuclear Medicine andMedical Imaging, 22

S

Sociology (General), 38Sociology of Leisure and Tourism,

37Surgery, 29

T

Transportation Systems, 37Travel and Tourism Management,

37

V

Virology, 16 - 17

Keyword Index

NFP 395/41

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42/NFP 395

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Author Index

A

Alexeev B.V., 35Allen R, 18Altermann W., 13

C

Catuneanu O., 13Cohen E., 37Collins Jannette, 22Conant M., 37

D

De Clercq E., 16Deflem M., 38

E

Erickson Beth, 22Eriksson P.G., 13Ewick P., 38

G

Gabbay D.M., 20Gajewski Joseph, 8Garrett Donald, 7Goto H., 29

H

Heftmann E., 6

I

Ito Y., 29

J

J. Cronan John, 22J. Hillman Bruce, 22

K

Katayama S., 29Katritzky Alan, 5Korenstein Marie, 22

L

Levy Jonathan, 22

M

Moore D, 18Mueller W.U., 13Mushahwar I.K., 17

N

Nelson D.R., 13Nomura Y., 31

O

Okuma Y., 31

P

P. Forman Howard, 22Pell M., 40Peppas Nicholas, 5

R

Roberts G, 18Ruben R.J., 23

S

Sarat A., 38Sefton Michael, 5Speicher David, 11Strathmann H, 9Strauch D., 40Sutton R, 18

T

Takeda T., 31

V

van Rijn CJM, 9

W

Watanabe K., 29West Robert, 6Woods J., 20

Z

Zohny A.G., 23

NFP 395/43

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Title Index

A

Advances in Antiviral DrugDesign, Volume 4, 16

Advances in ChemicalEngineering, 29, 5

Advances in HeterocyclicChemistry, 86, 5

Advances in OrganometallicChemistry, 50, 6

Application of Fracture Mechanicsto Polymers, Adhesives andComposites, 33, 18

C

Chromatography, 6th edition.Fundamentals and applicationsof chromatography and relateddifferential migration methods,6

Contemporary Tourism, 37

D

Developments in Neuroscience,29

G

Generalized Boltzmann PhysicalKinetics, 35

Guidance and Control ofUnderwater Vehicles 2003, 18

H

Handbook of Lithium and NaturalCalcium Chloride, 7

Handbook of the History of Logic,20

Hydrocarbon ThermalIsomerizations, 8

I

Ion-Exchange MembraneSeparation Processes, 9, 9

J

Journal of Radiology Nursing, 22Journal of the American College of

Radiology, 22

N

Nano and Micro EngineeredMembrane Technology, 10, 9

O

Oto-Rhino-Laryngology, 23

P

Proteome Analysis, 11

R

Railroad Bankruptcies andMergers from Chicago West:1975-2001, 37

S

Social and Behavioural SciencesStudies in Law, Politics, and

Society, 38

T

Terrorism and Counter-Terrorism,38

The Precambrian Earth, 13The Senescence-Accelerated

Mouse (SAM): An AnimalModel of Senescence, 31

V

Viral Hepatitis, 17

44/NFP 395

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REPRESENTATIVES’ INDEX

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EUROPEAN SALES TEAMRosanna Ramacciotti, European Sales Manager

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ASIA SALES REPRESENTATIVESChinaElsevier (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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Elsevier (Singapore) Pte LtdAttn: Mr Kenny Pang, 3 Killiney Road, #08-01 Winsland House I, Singapore 239519Tel: +65 63490290, Fax: +65 67331817 & 67331276, e-mail: [email protected] (Singapore) Pte LtdAttn: Miss Paulina Chen, 4F #155, Sec 1, Hsin Sheng South Road, 106 Taipei, TaiwanTel: +886 2 27551423, Fax: +886 2 27058963, e-mail: [email protected], Vietnam, Pacific IslandsElsevier (Singapore) Pte LtdAttn: Mr. Tim Lum, 3 Killiney Road, #08-01 Winsland House I, Singapore 239519Tel: +65 6349 0283, Fax: +65 67331817 & 67331276, e-mail: [email protected]

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NFP 395/47

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48/NFP 395