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List of Contents Chemistry and Chemical Engineering BK Experimental Methods in Kinetic Studies, Revised Edition ....................................... 3 BK Fundamentals of Molecular Catalysis ....................................................... 4 MV Handbook of Thermal Analysis and Calorimetry: Volume 3 ....................................... 5 BK Integrated Analytical Systems ............................................................ 6 Earth and Planetary Sciences BK Godunov-type Schemes ................................................................ 8 BK Seismic Amplitude Inversion in Reflection Tomography ......................................... 8 Economics, Business and Management BK Advances in Management Accounting, Volume 11............................................ 10 BK Inequality, Welfare and Poverty: Theory and Measurement...................................... 11 MV Research in the History of Economic Thought and Methodology, Volume 21 ......................... 11 Environmental Sciences BK Ozone Air Pollution in the Sierra Nevada - Distribution and Effects on Forests ........................ 14 Mathematics MV Handbook of Numerical Analysis: Volume XI ................................................ 16 Medicine BK Progress in Forensic Genetics 9 .......................................................... 17 NFP 384/1

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Page 1: List of Contents - Universitas Muhammadiyah Malangdirectory.umm.ac.id/sistem-pakar/nfp-2003mar.pdf · Volume 3 Applications to Polymers and Plastics Edited By S.Z.D. Cheng, University

List of Contents

Chemistry and Chemical Engineering

BK

Experimental Methods in Kinetic Studies, Revised Edition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3

BK

Fundamentals of Molecular Catalysis. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4

MV

Handbook of Thermal Analysis and Calorimetry: Volume 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5

BK

Integrated Analytical Systems. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6

Earth and Planetary Sciences

BK

Godunov-type Schemes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8

BK

Seismic Amplitude Inversion in Reflection Tomography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8

Economics, Business and Management

BK

Advances in Management Accounting, Volume 11. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10

BK

Inequality, Welfare and Poverty: Theory and Measurement. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11

MV

Research in the History of Economic Thought and Methodology, Volume 21 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11

Environmental Sciences

BK

Ozone Air Pollution in the Sierra Nevada - Distribution and Effects on Forests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14

Mathematics

MV

Handbook of Numerical Analysis: Volume XI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16

Medicine

BK

Progress in Forensic Genetics 9. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17

NFP 384/1

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Neuroscience

MV

Handbook of Neuropsychology, 2nd Edition: Volume 8 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24

Social and Behavioural Sciences

BK

Advances in Library Administration and Organization, Volume 20 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27

BK

Flexible Urban Transportation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27

BK

Handbook of Transport and the Environment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29

BK

Studies in Law, Politics and Society, Volume 28 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30

BK

Studies in Symbolic Interaction, Volume 26 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31

2/NFP 384

Keyword Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33

Author Index. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35

Title Index. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37

Representatives’ Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38

Legend

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

DY = Dictionary HB = Handbook

JN = Journal MV = Multi-volume

RJ = Review Journal RW = Reference Work

TB = Textbook

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Chemistry and ChemicalEngineering

BK�

Experimental Methods inKinetic Studies, RevisedEdition

Edited by B.W. Wojciechowski,19500 Emerald Bay View, 101

Estero, FL 33928, USA

E-mail: [email protected],

N.M. Rice, Queen’s University,

Kingston, Ontario, Canada,

K7L 3N6

©2003 322 pages

ISBN 0-444-51314-0 Hardbound

Publication: February 2003

Price: EUR 225 / USD 225

This book is a guide to kineticstudies of reaction mechanisms. Itreviews conventional reactortypes and data collectionmethods, and introduces a newmethodology for data collectionusing Temperature ScanningReactors.It provides a theoretical andpractical approach to temperaturescanning (TS) methodology andsupports a revival of kineticstudies as a useful approach tothe fundamental understanding ofchemical reaction mechanismsand the consequential reactionkinetics. This in turn will serve toput catalyst development on aquantitative and rationalfoundation.

AUDIENCE

Professors, research directors,and individual researchers andteachers in kinetics, catalystdevelopment and evaluation,reactor and process design.Industrial workers in catalystdevelopment and process design.University departments andlibraries for chemical engineering.Industry laboratories for chemical,petrochemical and catalysisresearch and development.

Contents: Reactor Types and

their Characteristics. A broadclassification of reactor types. Thebatch reactor. The plug flowreactor. The continuously stirredtank reactor. Other reactor types.General thoughts on reactorconfigurations.Collecting Data under

Isothermal Operation. Collectingraw data. Data processing andevaluation methods. Convertingfrom concentrations to molefractions. Calculating reactionrates.Using Kinetic Data in Reaction

Studies. The rate expression.Formulating kinetic rateexpressions. Formulatingelementary rate expressions.Identifying the region of kineticrate control. Formulatingmechanistic rate expressions.Uses of the mechanistic rateexpression.Difficulties with Mechanistic

Rate Expressions. Problems ofparameter scaling. The catalytic

rate expression. The integralmethod of data interpretation.Caveat. The Theory of

Temperature Scanning

Operation. The fundamentals.Operating a temperature scanningreactor. Application to variousreactor types. Temperaturescanning batch reactor.Temperature scanning plug flowreactor. Temperature scanningcontinuously stirred tank reactor.The temperature scanning streamswept reactor. Advancedscanning modes. Flow scanningmodes. A simplified method oftemperature scanning. InterpretingTSR data using integrated rateexpressions. The future oftemperature scanning.Verification of Kinetic

Dominance. Reaction rates:identifying extraneous effects.Testing for non-chemicalinfluences. Catalyst instabilities.A suggestion.Processing of Data.Transforming analytical results fordata fitting. Calculating fractionalconversion. Dealing with noise inexperimental data. Data fitting.Suggested procedures for dataclean-up. A quick review of matrixoperations in mass balancing.Fitting Rate Expressions to TSR

Data. Fitting rate expressions toexperimental data. Optimizationalgorithms. Summary ofoptimization methods. Choosing adata fitting procedure.Interpretation of Rate

Parameters. The parameters

Chemistry and Chemical Engineering

NFP 384/3

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involved in rate expressions. Thefundamental constraints onactivation energies. Fundamentalconstraints on frequency factors.Frequency factors and activationenergies in mechanisms.Fundamental constraints on heatof adsorption. Fundamentalconstraints on the entropy ofadsorption. Experimental rateparameters in catalytic reactions.Understanding rate parameters.Statistical Evaluation of

Multiparameter Fits. The parityplot. A list of suggestedprocedures for data fitting.Experimental Studies Using TSR

Methods. Applications oftemperature scanning reactors.The oxidation of carbon monoxide.Steam reforming of methanol. Thehydrolysis of acetic anhydride.Variants on the methods of datainterpretation. Experimental issuesin TSR operation.Using a Mechanistic Rate

Expression. A plan of action.Maximizing the conversion ofcarbon monoxide. Designingcatalysts to improve performance.A view of the future of kineticstudies in catalyst development.TSR Hardware Configurations.The flow reactors. Differencesbetween the TS-PFR and theTS-CSTR. The transient reactors.

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444513140

BK�

Fundamentals ofMolecular Catalysis

Edited by H. Kurosawa,Department of Applied Chemistry,Osaka University, Yamada-oka,Suita, Osaka 5656-0871, Japan,A. Yamamoto, AdvancedResearch Institute for Science andEngineering, Waseda University,3-4-1 Ohkubo, Shinjuki, Tokyo169-8555, Japan

©2002 536 pages

ISBN 0-444-50921-6 Hardbound

Publication: January 2003

Price: EUR 220 / USD 220

Current Methods in InorganicChemistry, Volume 3

A distinct advantage ofhomogeneous catalysis overconventional heterogeneouscatalysis is that it allows detailedclarification at the molecluar levelof the reaction mechanisms in theelementary processes whichcomprise catalytic cycles. Thusthe term molecular catalysis aptlydescribes the characteristics ofhomogeneous catalysis.Understanding the basic conceptsin catalysis will allow furtherapplications of the concepts todevelop transition metal catalystssupported on the solid surface.One can thus create catalystsystems where the catalyticprocesses can be understood atthe molecular level while thebenefit of heterogeneous systemsin separation is maintained.Another effect of the progress inmolecular catalysis can be foundin green chemistry wheredevelopment of atom-efficientsynthesis through new syntheticroutes can minimize waste.

Greener routes with lessunfavourable impact on theenvironment may be provided bydesigning proper syntheticmethodologies from the outset,based on the information ofelementary processes inmolecular catalysis.The aim is to provide the readerwith detailed accounts ofelementary processes to allowdevelopment of molecularcatalysis and to aid in designingnovel catalytic systems. The bookcomprises authoritative reviewson elementary processes fromexperts working at the forefront oforganometallic chemistry.

AUDIENCE

Students and researchers workingin the fields of organometallicchemistry, catalysis, organicsynthesis, polymer synthesis, andmaterials science. Universitieswith chemistry departments andlibraries; companies withchemistry related researchers;Government institutes conductingchemical research.

Contents: General Introduction(A. Yamamoto). Activation ofSubstrates with Nonpolar SingleBonds (R.H. Crabtree, D-H. Lee).Activation of Substrates withPolar Single Bonds (S. Komiya,M. Hirano). TransitionMetal-Carbene Complexes inOlefin Metathesis and RelatedReactions (R.H. Grubbs).Transmetalation (K. Osakada).1,2-Insertion and β-Elimination(P. Espinet, A.C. Albéniz).1,1-Insertion into Metal-CarbonBond (Y. Kayaki). Addition toUnsaturated Ligands (H. Kurosawa).Reductive Elimination (F. Ozawa).

ELSEVIERwww.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444509216

Chemistry and Chemical Engineering

4/NFP 384

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MV�

Handbook of ThermalAnalysis and Calorimetry

Edited by P.K. Gallagher,Department of Chemistry, The

Ohio State University, Columbus,

OH, USA

The applications and interest inthermal analysis and calorimetryhave grown enormously duringthe last half of 20th century. Therenaissance in these methods hasbeen fueled by several influences,not least of which has been therevolution in instrumentationresulting from computerautomation. Our ingenuity andvision have also expanded torecognize the tremendousversatility of these techniques.They have long been used tocharacterize materials,decompositions, and transitions.We now appreciate the fact thatthese techniques have greatlyincreased their utility in studyingmany processes such ascatalysis, hazards evaluation, etc.,or to measuring importantphysical properties quickly,conveniently, and with markedlyimproved accuracy.Consequently, thermal analysisand calorimetry have grown instature and more scientists andengineers have become, at leastpart time, practitioners. It is verydesirable that those who are newto the field can have a source ofinformation describing the basicprinciples and current state of theart. Examples of the prevailingapplications of these methods arealso essential to spur recognitionof the potential for future uses.The use of these methods is

highly interdisciplinary and anyadequate description mustencompass a range of topics wellbeyond the interests andcapabilities of any singleinvestigator. To this end, aconvenient four-volumecompendium of such informationhas been prepared by recognizedexperts in various aspects of thetopic.The editorial team has chosenauthors with great care in an effortto produce a readable, informativehandbook on this broad topic. Thechapters are not intended to be acomprehensive review of thespecific subject. The purpose isthat they will enable the reader toglean the essence of the subjectand form the basis for furthercritical reading or actualinvolvement in the topic. The goalof the editorial team is to spur theimagination to recognize thepotential application of thesemethods to specific goals andefforts. In addition it is hoped toanticipate and answer questions,to guide the reader in the selectionof appropriate techniques, and tohelp him perform them in a properand meaningful manner.

Volume 3

Applications to Polymers

and Plastics

Edited By S.Z.D. Cheng,University of Akron, Akron, Ohio,

USA

©2002 850 pages

ISBN 0-444-51286-1 Hardbound

Publication: December 2002

Price: EUR 250 / USD 250

Handbook of Thermal Analysisand Calorimetry, Volume 3

As a new and exciting field ofinterdisciplinary macromolecularscience and engineering,polymeric materials will have aprofound presence in the 21stcentury chemical, pharmaceutical,biomedical, manufacturing,infrastructure, electronic, opticaland information technologies. Theorigin of this field derived from anarea of polymer science andengineering encompassing plastictechnologies. The field is rapidlyexpanding to incorporate newinterdisciplinary research areassuch as biomaterials,macromolecular biology, novelmacromolecular structures,environmental science andengineering, innovative andnano-fabrications of products, andis translating discoveries intotechnologies.

Contents: Selected Papers. Heat

capacity of polymers

(B. Wunderlich). Measurement ofheat capacity. Thermodynamicstheory. Quantum mechanicaldescription. The heat capacity ofsolids. Complex heat capacity.The advanced thermal analysissystem, ATHAS. Examples of theapplication of ATHAS.Temperature-modulatedcalorimetry. Concluding remarks.The glass transition: its

measurement and underlying

physics (G.B. McKenna,

S.L. Simon). Inroduction. Theapparent thermodynamicbehaviour. Kinetics of glassformation. Microscopic theoriesrelated to the glass transition.Measurement of Tg. Physicalageing affects.Mechanical relaxation

processes in polymers

(S. Matsuoka). What do wemean by the relaxation process.

Chemistry and Chemical Engineering

NFP 384/5

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Intermolecular cooperativity.Chemical structure and Tg.Viscoelasticity data analysis.Viscoelasticity data analysis nearbut above Tg.Dielectric analysis of polymers

(P. Avakian et al.). Introduction.Polar atmosphere polymers.Miscibility of polymer blends. Coldcrystallization of amorphouspolymers above Tg.Frequency-temperaturerelationships.Crystallization and melting of

metastable crystalline polymers

(S.Z.D. Cheng). Introduction.Thermodynamic definitions of thephase and phase transitions.Polymer crystallization andmorphology. Polymer crystalmelting. Concluding remarks.Crystallaization, melting and

morphology of homogeneous

ethylene copolymers

(V.B.F. Mathot, H. Reynaers).Introduction. Ethylene-propylenecopolymers. Ethylene-1-butenecopolymers. Ethylene-1-octenecopolymers. Overview.Recent advances in thermal

analysis of thermotropic

mainchain liquid crystalline

polymers (C.Y. Li). Introduction.Liquid crystals and liquidcrystalline polymers.Thermodynamics transitionbehaviors. Enantiotropic andmonotropic behaviors. Effects ofmesogenic groups and spacers onthe liquid crystalline orders andstability. Concluding remarks.Polymers blends and

copolymers (J.Runt, J. Huang).Introduction. Background. Polymerblends.Thermosets (A. Hale). Thermal

analysis of polymer films

(L. Zhu). Introduction. Generalconcepts. Chemistry andapplications of thermosetting

polymers. Determination of extentof cure. Glass transitiontemperature. Dependence of Tg onnetwork and chemiscal structure.Reaction kinetics. Photo-initiatedpolymerization. Modulatedtemperature DSC. Concludingremarks.Thermal analysis of polmer

films (L. Zhu). Introduction.General experimentalconsiderations in thermal analysisof polymer films. Thermalanalyses of specific polymer films.Concluding remarks.Thermal analysis polymer fibers

(A.J. Jing et al.). Intoduction.Fiber structure and itsdetermination. Thermal analysis offiber. Conventional fibers and theirmodifications. High performancefibers. Concluding remarks.Thermal properties of high

temperature polymer matrix

fibrous composites

(R.J. Morgan et al.). Introduction.Results and discussion.Concluding remarks.Thermal analysis and

calorimetry of elastomers

(D.J. Burlett, M.B. Altman).Introduction. Classes of elastomer.Single elastomer. Blends.Additives. Curing. Quality control.Future opportunities.Polymer degradation

(J.H. Flynn). Introduction. Generalthermo-oxidative mechanisms.General hydrolysis mechanisms.Lifetime prediction of polymers bythermal analysis. Some specificexamples of degradation.Copolymers, blends and mixtures.Concluding remarks. Bibliography.Thermally stimulated currents:

recent developments in

characterization and analysis of

polymers (B.B. Sauer).Introduction. Experimentalsection. Analysis of TSC-TS data.

Interpretation of global TSCresults. Interpretation ofTSC-thermal sampling(TSC-TS)results. TSC applications.Concluding remarks.Temperature modulated

differential scanning calorimetry

(TMDSC)- basics and

applications to polymers

(C. Schick). Introduction.Differential scanning calorimetry(DSC)- basic considerations.Applications. Concluding remarks.

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/hatac

BK�

Integrated AnalyticalSystems

Edited by S. Alegret, Department

of Chemistry, Autonomous

University of Barcelona, 08193

Bellaterra, Catalonia, Spain

©2003 568 pages

ISBN 0-444-51037-0 Hardbound

Publication: April 2003

Price: EUR 245 / USD 245

Comprehensive AnalyticalChemistry, Volume XXXIX

This book summarizes the mainintegration strategies currentlyfound in analytical instrumentationor laboratories, giving a wide andupdated panorama of analyticalchemistry. The objective of thisbook is to highlight the differentintegration solutions, currentlyused in analytical chemistry, bytreating them in groups of one orseveral chapters. The book isaimed at graduate students andresearchers in industry andacademy to help them acquire a

Chemistry and Chemical Engineering

6/NFP 384

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critical vision of some of thecurrent tendencies in analyticalchemistry. It is written by aninternational team of researchersactive within the fields covered inthe book.The authors come from a widediversity of technological andscientific fields including:chemistry; electrochemistry;physics; materials science;microelectronics; electronicengineering; and theinstrumentation industry, thushighlighting the multidisciplinarynature of analytical chemistry intoday’s world.

AUDIENCE

All those involved in analyticalchemistry.

Contents: Integration, a NewParadigm in Analytical Chemistry(S. Alegret).Systems. Integrated SeparationSystems (D.N. Muraviev).Solid-phase Spectrometric Assays(L. F. Capitán-Vallvey,M.D. Fernández Ramos).Continuous Flow AnalyticalSystems (M.D. Luque de Castro,J. L. Luque-García). DistributedAnalytical InstrumentationSystems (D. Ramirez et al.).Laboratory InformationManagement Systems(R.D. McDowall).Sensor Systems. ChemicallyModified Electrodes withIntegrated Biomolecules andMolecular Wires (E.J. Calvo et

al.). Composite and BiocompositeMaterials for ElectrochemicalSensing (S. Alegret, A. Merkoçi).Optical Sensors and Biosensors(F. Sevilla, R. Narayanaswamy).Array Systems. ElectronicTongues: New AnalyticalProspective of Chemical Sensors

(A. Legin et al.). A Taste Sensor(K. Toko). Application of ElectronicNose Technology for MonitoringWater and Wastewater(R. Stuetz).Microsystems. Integrated OpticalTransducer for Chemical andBiological Sensing(C. Domínguez et al.). “High Order”Hybrid FET Module for(Bio-)Chemical and PhysicalSensing (A. Poghossian,M.J. Schöning). MicrodialysisBased Lab-on-a-Chip, Applying aGeneric MEMS Technology(P. Bergveld et al.). DesignMethodology for a Lab-on-a-Chipfor Chemical Analysis Resulting inthe MAFIAS Chip (T.T. Veenstra,A. van den Berg).Nanosystems. Nanosensor andNanoprobe Systems for In VivoBioanalysis (T. Vo-Dinh).

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444510370

Chemistry and Chemical Engineering

NFP 384/7

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Earth and Planetary Sciences

BK�

Godunov-type Schemes

An Introduction for

Engineers

By V. Guinot, Université

Montpellier 2, Maison des

Sciences de l’Eau, Montpellier

Cedex, France

©2003 508 pages

ISBN 0-444-51155-5 Hardbound

Publication: January 2003

Price: EUR 130 / USD 130

Godunov-type schemes appear asgood candidates for the nextgeneration of commercialmodelling software packages, thecapability of which to handlediscontinuous solution will be abasic requirement. It is in theinterest of practising engineersand developers to be familiar withthe specific features ofdiscontinuous wave propagationproblems and to be aware of thepossibilities offered byGodunov-type schemes for theirsolution.This book aims to preset theprinciples of such schemes in away that is easily understandableto practising engineers. Thefeatures of hyperbolicconservation laws and theirsolutions are presented in the firsttwo chapters. The principles ofGodunov-type schemes areoutlined in a third chapter.Chapters 4 and 5 cover the

application of the original Godunovscheme to scalar laws and tohyperbolic systems ofconservation laws respectively.Chapter 6 is devoted tohigher-order schemes in onedimension of space. The design ofsuch a scheme is described forthe general case and applied tosome well-known schemes suchas the MUSCL and PPM schemes.Chapter 7 focuses onmultidimensional problems. Theclassical alternate directions andfinite volume approaches arepresented together with the wavesplitting technique that isdescribed in depth with anapplication to two-dimensionalsystems. Chapter 8 deals withlarge-time step algorithms. Theseinclude front tracking-basedmethods, explicit-implicittechniques and the time-lineinterpolation technique. Threeappendices provide notions onaccuracy and stability issues,Riemann solvers and the userinstructions for the computationalcodes provided in the enclosedCD-ROM.

Contents: Preface.Acknowledgements. Notation.1. Scalar conservation laws.2. Hyperbolic systems ofconservation laws. 3. An outline ofGodunov-type schemes. 4. TheGodunov method for scalar lawsin one dimension. 5. The Godunovmethod for systems ofconservation laws. 6. Higher-orderschemes. 7. Multidimensionalschemes. 8. Large-time-step

algorithms. 9. Concludingremarks. Appendix A. Notions inmathematics. Appendix B.Riemann solvers. Appendix C.Sample codes. References. Index.

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444511555

BK�

Seismic AmplitudeInversion in ReflectionTomography

By Y. Wang, Robertson Research

International, Swanley, Kent, UK

©2003 270 pages

ISBN 0-08-044243-9 Hardbound

Publication: January 2003

Price: EUR 105 / USD 105

Handbook of GeophysicalExploration: Seismic Exploration,Volume 33

This is the first book of its kind onseismic amplitude inversion in thecontext of reflection tomography.The aim of the monograph is toadvocate the use of ray-amplitudedata, separately or jointly withtraveltime data, in reflectionseismic tomography.The emphasis of seismicexploration is on imagingtechniques, so that seismicsection can be interpreted directlyas a geological section. Incontrast it is perhaps ironic that,in decades of industrial

Earth and Planetary Sciences

8/NFP 384

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seismology, one major aspect ofwaveform data that potentially iseasier to measure and analysehas generally been ignored. Thatis, the information content ofseismic amplitudes. Perhaps thepotential complexity has deterredmost researchers from a morethorough investigation of thepractical use of seismic amplitudedata. The author of this volumepresents an authoritative anddetailed study of amplitude data,as used in conjunction withtraveltime data, to provide betterconstraints on the variation ofseismic wave speed in thesubsurface.One of the fundamental problemsin conventional reflection seismictomography using only traveltimedata is the possible ambiguitybetween the velocity variation andthe reflector depth. The inclusionof amplitude data in the inversionmay help to resolve this problembecause the amplitudes andtraveltimes are sensitive todifferent features of thesubsurface model, and therebyprovide more accurate informationabout the subsurface structureand the velocity distribution. Anessential goal of this monographis to make the amplitude inversionmethod work with real reflectionseismic data.

Contents: Preface. Introduction(Professor G.A. Houseman).1. Introduction to amplitudeinversion. Introduction.Velocity-depth ambiguity intraveltime inversion. Resolvingambiguity by using amplitudeinformation. Overview ofamplitude inversion. Analyticalexpression for the geometricalspreading function for layeredstructures. 2. Traveltime andray-amplitude in heterogeneousmedia. Introduction. Bending raytracing method. Traveltime and its

perturbations. Propagator ofparaxial rays and geometricalspreading. Ray perturbations dueto model perturbations. Rayamplitude. 3. Amplitudecoefficients and approximations.Introduction. The Zoeppritzequations. The pseudo-p2

expressions. Quadraticexpressions in terms of elasticcontrasts. Accuracy of thequadratic approximations.Amplitude coefficientsrepresented as a function of threeelastic parameters. Three elasticparameters from amplitudeinversion. Implication for fluidsubstitution modelling.4. Amplitude inversion forinterface geometry. Introduction.Parameterization and forwardmodelling. Subspace gradientinversion method. A simpleexample of reflection amplitudeinversion. Inversion for aninterface represented as a sum ofharmonic functions. Stability ofthe amplitude inversion. Strategyfor the choice of ∆k and M.Discussion. 5. Amplitudeinversion for velocity variation.Introduction. Amplitudedependence on slownessperturbation. Inversion algorithm.Inversion example of 1-Dslowness distribution.Constraining higher wavenumbercomponents. Robustness of theinversion in the presence of modelerror or data noise. Inversion ofarbitrary smooth velocityanomalies. Discussion.6. Sensitivities of traveltimesand amplitudes in jointinversion. Introduction. TheHessian and the norm in modelspace. Sensitivities to interfacegeometry. Sensitivities to 2-Dslowness variation. Inversionformula. Joint inversion for aninterface. Joint inversion forslowness. Discussion.

7. Amplitude inversion of amulti-layered structure.Introduction. Forward calculationand inverse method. Preliminaryinversion test. Damped subspacemethod. Multi-scale scheme.Multi-stage damped subspacemethod. 8. Practical approach toapplication. Introduction.Amplitudes estimated frommigrated gathers. Demigration ofreflection amplitudes. Winnowingamplitudes by LOESS. Inversionprocedure. Inversion results.9. Simultaneous inversion formodel geometry and elasticparameters. Introduction.Ray-amplitude and itsapproximation. Inversion method.Inversion example. Measurementsfor lithological interpretation.Structural effects on amplitudevariation. 10. Decomposition ofstructural effect and AVOattributes. Introduction.Decomposition of ray-amplitude.The inverse problem. Sampledataset of gas-water contact.Inversion results. The Chebyshevspectra of the AVO attributes.11. Amplitude tomography inpractice. Introduction. Estimate ofamplitudes, traveltimes and datauncertainties. Tomographicinversion incorporating moreinformation and using an improvedforward calculation. Considerationof factors influencing amplitudes.Turning-ray tomography fornear-surface velocity structureand attenuation. Prestack seismictrace inversion for ray elasticimpedance. Appendices.Derivation of the geometricalspreading function. Derivation ofreflection amplitude demigration.References. Author Index. TopicIndex.

PERGAMONwww.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0080442439

Earth and Planetary Sciences

NFP 384/9

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Economics, Business andManagement

BK�

Advances inManagement Accounting,Volume 11

Edited by J.Y. Lee, Lubin School

of Business, Pace University,

Pleasantville, New York,

NY 10570, USA

E-mail: [email protected],

M.J. Epstein, Jesse H Jones

Graduate School of Management,

Rice University MS531, Houston,

TX 77005-1892, USA

E-mail: [email protected]

©2003 280 pages

ISBN 0-7623-1012-X Hardbound

Publication: May 2003

Price: USD 90 / EUR 90

Advances in ManagementAccounting, Volume 11

Advances in Management

Accounting (AIMA) publisheswell-developed articles on avariety of current topics inmanagement accounting that arerelevant to both practitioners andacademicians. As a respectedprofessional journal, AIMA is wellpoised to meet their informationneeds. Featured in Volume 11 arearticles on manager’s perceptionsof the physical reality of the firm’sutilization of its physical assets,the perspectives used in analyticaland empirical cost systemresearch, operational planning and

control involving activity-basedcosting, effects of benchmarkingand incentives on organizationalperformance, organizationalcontrol and work teamempowerment, budget slackcreation in organizations,taxonomy for the masscustomization approach, topmanagement involvement in R&Dbudget setting, role of self-interestin project continuation decisions,agency theory determinants ofmanagers’ adverse selection inresource allocation, processinnovation and adaptiveinstitutional change strategies inmanagement control systems,and change in managementaccounting controls afterimplementation of electronic datainterchange. Accountants at alllevels who work in corporationsand not-for-profit organizationswould be interested in the AIMA

articles.

Contents: List of contributors.Editorial board. AIMA Statementof Purpose. Editorial policy andmanuscript form guidelines.Introduction (M.J. Epstein,J.Y. Lee). Shifting perspectives:accounting, visibility, andmanagement action (C.J. McNairet al.). Cost system researchperspectives (J.Y. Lee).Operational planning and controlwith an activity-based costingsystem (R.C. Kee). The effects ofbenchmarking and incentives onorganizational performance: a test

of two-way interaction(A.S. Maiga, F.A. Jacobs).Organizational control and workteam empowerment: an empiricalanalysis (Khim Ling Sim,J.A. Carey). Effects of uncertainty,participation, and control systemmonitoring on the propensity tocreate budget slack and actualbudget slack created (L. Kren).A management accountingtaxonomy for the masscustomization approach(M.E. Bayou, A. Reinstein). Topmanagement involvement in R&Dbudget setting: the importance offinancial factors, budget targets,and R&D performance evaluation(A.S. Dunk, A. Kilgore).A cross-national test of the role ofself-interest on projectcontinuation decisions(P.D. Harrison, K. Haddad).Manager’s adverse selection inresource allocation: a laboratoryexperiment (M. Goedono,H. Sami). Process innovation andadaptive institutional changestrategies in management controlsystems: activity based costingas administrative innovation(S. Sisaye). EDI adoption: controlsin a changing environment(T. Glandon).

JAI

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/076231012X

BK

Economics, Business and Management

10/NFP 384

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Inequality, Welfare andPoverty: Theory andMeasurement

By J.A. Bishop, Department of

Economics, East Carolina

University, Greenville, NC 27858,

USA, Y. Amiel, Ruppin Institute,

Emek Hefer 40250, Israel

©2003 437 pages

ISBN 0-7623-1014-6 Hardbound

Publication: January 2003

Price: EUR 95 / USD 95

Research on Economic Inequality,Volume 9

Research on Economic Inequality,

Volume 9, Inequality, Welfare and

Poverty: Theory and Measurement

continues the series of original,timely and useful papers in appliedwelfare analysis. This volumecontains fifteen papers oninequality theory, economicmobility, issues in empiricalestimation, and empirical studies.The theory papers address the linkbetween inequality and socialwelfare. The mobility papersaddress issues of unequal growthand intergenerational mobility. Theestimation papers address dataweighting and equivalent scaleissues. The final section presentsempirical papers on poverty andinequality for a variety ofcountries.

Contents: 1. The measurement ofthe inequality of opportunities(J. Ruiz-Castillo).2. Inequity, welfare andmonotonicity (Y. Amiel,F.A. Cowell).3. Inequality measurement for

homogeneous group (U. Ebert).4. Extended Bi-polarization andinequality measures(J.G. Rodriguez, R. Salas).5. International comparison ofincome distributions (S. Bazen,P. Moyes).6. Mobility comparisons: Doesusing different measures matter?(D. Checchi, V. Dardanoni).7. Economic growth, welfare andthe measurement of socialmobility (J.P. Formby, et al.).8. Estimating welfare indices:household weights and sampledesign (F.A. Cowell, S.P. Jenkins).9. Weighting with individuals,equivalent individuals or notweighting at all. Does it matterempirically? (A. Decoster,E. Ooghe).10. Personal assessments ofminimum income and expenses:What do they tell us about‘Minimum Living’ Thresholds andEquivalence scales? (T.I. Garner,K.S. Short).11. A generalized social welfarefunction and its disaggregation bycomponents of income: Themethod and application(P. Mukhopadhaya).12. Equity, efficiency and socialwelfare: An application ofgeneralized Lorenz dominance toNew Zealand incomes data1984-98 (S. Chatterjee, et al.).13. U.S income inequality trendsand recent immigration(R.I. Lerman).14.Urban poverty in developedcountries (A. Brandolini,P. Cipollone).15. Regional poverty within therich countries (D. Jesuit, et al.).

JAI

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0762310146

MV�

Research in the History ofEconomic Thought andMethodology, Volume 21

Edited by: W.J. Samuels,Michigan, State University, East

Lansing, MI 48824, USA,J.E. Biddle, Michigan, State

University, East Lansing,

MI 48824, USA

Research Annual

©2003 390 pages

ISBN 0-7623-0996-2 Hardbound

Publication: January 2003

Price: EUR 105 / USD 105

Research in the History ofEconomic Thought andMethodology, Volume 21A

The collection includes refereedarticles on a variety of subjects inthe history of economic thought:Adam Smith, J.M. Clark and F.H.Knight, F.H. Knight and M.A.Copeland, S. Bulgakov, andinterwar monetary and businesscycle theory.Review essays on newpublications cover such areas asmethodology, Veblen, economicsand religion, Hayek, economicphilosophy and ideology, J.S. Mill,and evolution theory.

Contents: An inquiry into thenature and causes of the wealth ofnations, Book I: Its relationship toAdam Smith’s full moralphilosophical vision(J. Evensky). John Maurice Clarkand Frank H. Knight on marginalproductivity theory: A note withsome unpublishedcorrespondence (L. Fiorito).

Economics, Business and Management

NFP 384/11

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Waging war against mechanicalman: The knight-copelandcontroversy over behaviorism ineconomics (P.F. Asso, L. Fiorito).In whose image? SergiusBulgakov’s accounting of thehistory of economics (Y.Tulupenko). Interwar monetaryand business cycle theory:Macroeconomics before Keynes(R.W. Dimand). Review Essays.

Multiple reviews of Hand’sreflection without rules (D.K.Barker et al.). Multiple reviews ofNelson’s economics as religion:From Samuelson to Chicago andbeyond (M.W. Reder, R. Emmett).Multiple reviews of Edgell’sVeblen in perspective: His life andthought (E.S. Miller,W. Waller). Cartwright’s thedappled world: A study of theboundaries of science(K.D. Hoover). Sciabarra’s totalfreedom: Toward a dialecticallibertarianism (P.R. Diesing).Whatmore’s republicanism andthe french revolution: Anintellectual history ofJean-Baptiste say’s politicaleconomy (W. Henderson). Long’sdivine economy: Theology and themarket (D.R. Finn). Skousen’s themaking of modern economics(S. Bober). Mayumi’s the originsof ecological economics(M. Perelman). Reich, nationalaccounts and economic value:A study in concepts(S.P.Hargeaves Heap). Ebenstien’sFriedrich Hayek: A biography(D.E. Moggridge). Dugger andSherman’s reclaiming evolution(G.M. Hodgson). Aune’s sellingthe free market: The rhetoric ofeconomic correctness (S.T. Ziliak).Hamburger’s John Stuart Mill onliberty and control and O’Rourke’sJohn Stuart Mill and freedom ofexpression: The genesis of a

theory (S. Pressman). Ofek’ssecond nature: Economic originsof human evolution(G.M. Hodgson). Micocci’sAnti-Hegelian reading of economictheory (P. Diesing). Houck’srhetoric as currency: Hoover,Roosevelt, and the greatdepression (W.J. Barber). Newbooks recieved.

Histories of Economic

Thought

©2003 280 pages

ISBN 0-7623-0997-0 Hardbound

Publication: January 2003

Price: EUR 95 / USD 95

Research in the History ofEconomic Thought andMethodology, Volume 21B

Four documents pertinent to thehistory of economic thought arepublished for the first time: A listof references in economics datingfrom 1880. A syllabus of lectureson the history of economics givenby C.H. Hull in Cornell University in1895. The outlines for Walton H.Hamilton’s Principles-ofEconomics course in theUniversity of Michigan, 1911.Notes taken in James S. Earley’scourse on the Development ofEconomics, 1954-1955, byWarren J. Samuels.

Contents: An 1880 list ofreferences in economics(W.J. Samuels).Charles Henry Hull’s syllabus oflectures on the history ofeconomic theories, Cornelluniversity, 1895 (W.J. Samuels).Walton H. Hamilton’s outlines forthe principles of economics,University of Michigan, 1911(W.J. Samuels).

Lectures by James S. Earley onthe development of economics,University of Wisconsin,1954-1955 (W.J. Samuels).

Documents on Modern

History of Economic

Thought

©2003 310 pages

ISBN 0-7623-0998-9 Hardbound

Publication: January 2003

Price: EUR 95 / USD 95

Research in the History ofEconomic Thought andMethodology, Volume 21C

Seven documents from the historyof economics: Four sets of lecturenotes taken by Victor E. Smith,two from courses given byWilliam Jaffe at NorthwesternUniversity, on general equilibriumtheory and on Keynes, from1938-39, and one from lecturesgiven at the University ofCambridge during 1954-55. Twodocuments from the history ofInstitutional Economics, one the1974 Editor’s Report on theJournal of Economic Issues - onthe conflicts then rampant - andthe other, an exposition of the pastand future of InstitutionalEconomics, both by Warren J.Samuels. And a set ofautobiographical notes by theWisconsin institutionalist, MartinG. Glaeser, and a bibliography ofthe writings of F.Y. Edgeworth byAlberto Baccini.

Contents: Lecture notes by

Victor E. Smith.Victor E. Smith’s notes on WilliamJaffes’s lectures on generalequilibrium, 1938-1939(W.J. Samuels).

Economics, Business and Management

12/NFP 384

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Victor E. Smith’s notes on WilliamJaffe’s seminars on Keynes,spring 1939 (W.J. Samuels).Victore E. Smith’s notes fromuniversity of Cambridge lectures,1954-1955 (W.J. Samuels).Documents on Institutional

Economics

The 1974 editor’s report of theJournal of Economic Issues(W.J. Samuels).Institutional economics:Retrospect and prospect, 1968(W.J. Samuels).Miscellaneous Materials

Martin G. Glaeseer’sautobiographical notes(W.J. Samuels).Toward a bibliography ofEdgeworth’s writings (A. Baccini).

3-Volume set

©2003 980 pages (in 3 Vols)

ISBN 0-76230999-7 Hardbound

Publication: January 2003

Price: EUR 265 / USD 265

JAI

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0762309997

Economics, Business and Management

NFP 384/13

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Environmental Sciences

BK�

Ozone Air Pollution in theSierra Nevada -Distribution and Effects onForests

Edited by A. Bytnerowicz,M.J. Arbaugh, R. Alonso, USDA

Forest Service, Pacific Southwest

Research Station, Riverside,

CA, USA

©2003 388 pages

ISBN 0-08-044193-9 Hardbound

Publication: May 2003

Price: EUR 130 / USD 130

Developments in EnvironmentalScience, Volume 2

The book contains information ongeology, climate and vegetation ofthe Sierra Nevada with a specialemphasis on air pollution effectson the mixed conifer forests.A history of the extent of airpollution effects on mixed coniferforests, especially ponderosa andJeffrey pines is provided. Thephysiological basis for ozone-typeinjury development in ponderosapine, a discussion of ozone uptakeby plants at different levels ofbiological organization and theeffects of air pollution and otherstresses on mountain forests arediscussed. A considerable portionof the book is dedicated todevelopment of statistical modelsand maps of ambient ozonedistribution in the Sierra Nevada

based on the 1999 monitoringdata with passive samplers. Theimplications of the methodologicalresults, formulation andapplication of regional air qualitymodels for integrated assessmentof urban and wildland pollutionand the need for functionallyintegrated models of ozonedeposition to the Sierra Nevadaforests are also discussed.Management and monitoringneeds for improved long-termunderstanding air pollution effectson forest ecosystems, discussionof options for proper managementof the air pollution affectedforests, and comparison ofmonitoring and modelling of ozoneand forest health status in theSierra Nevada with similar effortsin mountains of North Americanand European mountain rangesare the focus of the later chaptersof the book.

Contents: Preface(A. Bytnerowicz, M.J. Arbaugh,R. Alonso).Section I: Ozone and its effects

on Sierra Nevada ecosystems.

1. Geology, climate and vegetationof the Sierra Nevada and themixed-conifer zone: Anintroduction to the ecosystem(R.A. Minnich, P.E. Padgett).2. Historical perspectives onambient ozone and its effects onthe Sierra Nevada (J.J. Carroll,P.R. Miller, J. Pronos). 3. Thephysiological basis of ozone injuryassessment attributes in Sierranconifers (N.E. Grulke). 4. Ozoneuptake by ponderosa pine in the

Sierra Nevada - A measurementperspective (A.H. Goldstein, M.R.Kurpius, J.A. Panek). 5. Effects ofozone, nitrogen deposition, andother stressors on montaneecosystems in the Sierra Nevada(M.E. Fenn, M.A. Poth et al.).Section II: Analysis of spatial

patterns of urban transported

ozone in the Sierra Nevada.

6. Introduction to a regionalpassive ozone sampler network inthe Sierra Nevada (M.J. Arbaugh,A. Bytnerowicz). 7. Use ofauxiliary data for spatialinterpolation of surface ozonepatterns (E.H. Lee). 8. Use ofnonparametric local regression toestimate surface ozone patternsover space and time (H.K. Preisler,S. Schilling). 9. Use ofgeostatistics to estimate surfaceozone patterns (W. Fraczek,A. Bytnerowicz, M.J. Arbaugh).10. Ambient ozone patterns andeffects over the Sierra Nevada:Synthesis and implications forfuture research (M.J. Arbaugh,A. Bytnerowicz).Section III: Research and

development needs for the

Sierra Nevada.

11. Methodological needs andperspectives for monitoringambient air pollution and regionalhaze: Tools for understandingforest responses (A. Bytnerowicz,P.E. Padgett, M.J. Arbaugh).12. Towards an air pollutioneffects monitoring system for theSierra Nevada (E. Plymale,M.J. Arbaugh et al.).13. Formulation and application ofregional air quality modeling for

Environmental Sciences

14/NFP 384

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integrated assessments of urbanand wildland pollution(G. Tonnesen, Z. Wang et al.).14. The need for spatially andfunctionally integrated models ofozone deposition to Sierra Nevadaforests (J.A. Panek,D.D. Baldocchi, A.H. Goldstein).15. Managing air pollutionaffected forests in the SierraNevada (T. Procter, S. Ahuja,F.M. McCorrison).Section IV: International

perspective of the Sierra

Nevada research. 16. Monitoringand modeling of ozone status andeffects in the Sierra Nevada:A comparison with studies inNorth America and Europe(R. Alonso, A. Bytnerowicz).

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0080441939

Environmental Sciences

NFP 384/15

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Mathematics

MV�

Handbook of NumericalAnalysis

Edited by P.G. Ciarlet, Université

Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris,

France, J.L. Lions†, Collège de

France, Paris, France

This series of volumes covers allthe major aspects of numericalanalysis, serving as the basicreference work on the subject.Each volume concentrates on oneto three, particular topics. Eacharticle, written by an expert, is anin-depth survey, reflecting themost recent trends in the field,and is essentially self-contained.The handbook will cover the basicmethods of numerical analysis,under the following generalheadings:

• Solution of Equations in Rn

• Finite Difference Methods

• Finite Element Methods

• Techniques of ScientificComputing

• Optimization Theory andSystems Science.

It will also cover the numericalsolution of actual problems ofcontemporary interest in AppliedMathematics, under the followingheadings:

• Numerical Methods forFluids

• Numerical Methods forSolids

• Specific Applications -including meteorology,seismology, petroleummechanics and celestialmechanics.

“...A valuable reference work for

mathematician related to numeral

analysis and scientific computing,

but also physicists, engineers and

information scientist working in

the field of numerical analysis the

Handbook can emphatically

recommended. ”

Technische Mechanik

Volume XI

Special Volume: Foundations

of Computational

Mathematics

Guest Editor: F. Cucker

©2003 536 pages

ISBN 0-444-51247-0 Hardbound

Publication: May 2003

Price: EUR 140 / USD 140

Handbook of Numerical Analysis,Volume XI

Contents: Preface.On the Foundations ofComputational Mathematics(B.J.C. Baxter, A. Iserles).Geometric Integration and it’sApplications (C.J. Budd, M.D.Piggott).Linear programming and ConditionNumbers Under the Real NumberComputation Model (D. Cheung, F.Cucker, Y. Ye).Numerical Solution of PolynomialSystems by Homotopy

Continuation Methods (T.Y. Li).Chaos in Finite Difference Scheme(M. Yamaguti, Y. Maeda).Introduction to Partial DifferentialEquations and VariationalFormulations in Image Processing(G. Sapiro).

NORTH-HOLLAND

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444512470

Mathematics

16/NFP 384

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Medicine

BK�

Progress in ForensicGenetics 9

Proceedings of the 19th

International ISFG Congress,

Münster, 28 August - 1 September

2001

Edited by B. Brinkman, Institut für

Rechtsmedizin, Münster, Germany,A. Carracedo, Facultad de

Medicina, Universidad de Santiago

de Compostela, Santiago de

Compostela, Spain

©2003 976 pages

ISBN 0-444-50717-5 Hardbound

Publication: January 2003

Price: EUR 230 / USD 230

International Congress Series,Volume 1239

This is the third volume in theseries of books entitled “Progress

in Forensic Genetics” andcontains the oral and posterpresentations given at the 19thcongress of the newly renamedISFG International Society forForensic Genetics (formerly ISFHInternational Society for ForensicHaemogenetics). The congresstook place in Munster, Germanyfrom 28th August to 1stSeptember 2001 at the HalleMunsterland.All manuscripts presented in thisvolume have also been through areviewing procedure in order tomaintain the high quality of theseries.It is hoped that all attendees andalso those who were not able toattend will be able to profit fromthe high level of scientificinformation contained in thisbook and that this will stimulatethe readership to innovativeresearch in this rapidly changingfield of forensic genetics.

AUDIENCE

For worldwide readers interestedin genetics and internal medicine

Contents: Preface. Session 1.

DNA micro-arrays and

methodologies. Applications of5-Dye technology in forensicDNA typing and analysis (S.Rao-Coticone et al.). Rapidpreparation of SNP multiplexesutilising universal reporterprimers and their detection bygel electrophoresis andmicrofabricated arrays (J.Hussain et al.). A novel DNAmicroarray system for analysis of

limited forensic evidence material(A.-M. Divne et al.). Strategies forSNP genotyping by massspectrometric (S. Hahner et al.).Genotyping for single nucleotidepolymorphism using a multiplexdetection assay (M. Osada, M.D’Ambrose, I. Balazs). Typing Ychromosome SNPs with DNAmicroarray technology (M. Lareuet al.). Rapid detection of GYPA,LDLR,HBGG,D7S8 and GC allelesby real-time fluorescene PCR (M.Nata, M. Hashiyada). Validation ofSNPs as markers for individualidentification (E. Petkovski et al.).Mass spectrometric analysis ofhuman microsatellite markers (S.Hahner et al.). Single nucleotidepolymorphisms detected bytemperature-modulatedhigh-performance liquidchromatography (Y.P. Hou et al.).Seven SNPs and YAPdemonstrate that thechromosome Y lineages ofBasques are different fromGeorgians and Berbers (M.Alvarez-Alvarez et al.).Session 2. Differentiation of

ethnic groups and population

studies. Differential slave trade toEurope and Brazil from thewestern and eastern Africancoasts as registered in the mtDNApool (L. Pereira et al.). Estimatingthe ethnic origin (EEO) ofindividuals using short tandemrepeat loci of forensic relevance(M. Klintchar et al.). An evaluationof the proportion of identicalY-STR haplotypes due to recurrentmutation (L. Pereira, M.J. Prata,A. Amorim). Microgeographic

Medicine

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patterns of highly informative Ychromosome haplotypes (usingbiallelic markers and STRs) inGalicia (NW Spain): Forensic andanthropological implications(M. Brión et al.). Comparison of Ychromosome haplotypes in threeracial groups and the possibility ofpredicting ethnic origin (D.Syndercombe Court et al.).Population studies on 17 STR lociroutinely used in forensic analyses(B. Budowle). Analysis ofMitochondrial 12S rRNA genesequence variation in fourethnically defined populations(C. Albarrán et al.). Significantdifferences between the Leewardand Windward groups of the CaboVerde archipelago (West AfricanCoast) (A.T. Fernandes et al.).Dynamics of molecular geneticdiversity in the East Midlands, UK:forensic and paternity implications(S.S. Mastana, D.R. Lee). Amulticentric study of SE33 allelefrequencies in the Italianpopulation (L. Buscemi et al.).Ecuadorian Quichua populationdata on 3 tetrameric STRloci-HUMCSF1PO, TPOXFD andTH01 - derived using a multiplexsystem (D. Sánchez et al.). Thetetranucleotide repeatpolymorphism C 2_4_4: sequenceand population data (S.Stadlbacher et al.). Allelefrequencies of the Profiler PlusTMSTR loci in Canary Islands (Spain)(A. Hernandez et al.). Allelefrequency distribution of cofilerSTRs in a Canary Islandspopulation (Spain) (I. Frias et al.).Allele frequency distribution offour STR loci vWA, TH01, TPOXand F13A01 in three Asianpopulations (Japanese,Bangladeshis and Indonesians) (A.Kido et al.). STR data for 13 locifrom Jewish populations (A.

Picornell et al.). Tunisianpopulation alleles frequency on 15PCR-based loci (C.Brandt-Casadevall et al.). Alleledistributions and geneticrelationship with 13 CODIS coreSTR loci in various Asianpopulations in or near Japan (T.Yamamoto et al.). Populationgenetic analysis in Hungarianpopulations using the Powerplex16 system (B. Egyed et al.). Allelefrequencies of eight STR Loci in aJapanese population detected bythe fluorescent image analyzer (A.Nagai et al.). Powerplex(TM) 16analysis in the Japanesepopulation (M. Hashiyada, Y.Itakura, M. Nata). Multiplex STRgenotyping: comparison study,population data and newsequence information (C. Alves et

al.). Allele frequency distributionof 13 STRs in an Italian andimmigrant population sample (N.Cerri et al.). Population genetics of9 STR Loci in the Turkishpopulation (M. Kurtulu et al.).Genetic structure of thecontemporary Cuban populationfor 9 STR loci (R. Lleonart et al.).Population genetics of three STRmarkers (CYP19, D8S1132 andFGA) in north-east Italy (R.Perossa et al.). Allele frequenciesof the STR-loci F13A01, F13B,TPOX in population sample fromthe Ukraine (Yu. M.Sivolap, S.V.Chebotar, G.F. Krivda). A VNTRpolymorphism in human 5’H19flanking regions in Japanese andGerman populations (M. Fukuda et

al.). A study of four short tandemrepeat systems: Africanimmigrant, Portuguese andSpanish population data (J.J.Gamero et al.). Analysis of 15STRs in the Italian population ofAlia (M. Pizzamiglio et al.). Alleledistribution of fifteen STRs in a

population from Extremadura(Central-West Spain) (J.García-Hirschfeld et al.). Geneticanalysis of the short tandemrepeat loci D1S1656, D12S391,D18S535 and D22S683 in theCroatian population (Z. Grubic, K.Stingl, A. Kastelan). Typing ofpentanucleotide STRpolymorphisms (Y.P. Hou et al.). Anew useful STR locus for forensicanalysis (J. Zhang et al.).Polymorphisms of 6 STR loci onchromosome 22 in Chinesepopulation (J.P. Tang et al.). Thecodis system in the Basquecountry resident populationstudied with multiplex systems(O. Garcia et al.). Populationgenetic data for 13 STR loci in aNortheast Colombian (departmentof Santander) population (C.I.Vargas et al.). Population data onD7S820, FGA, D1S533 andD9S304 in a sample ofCaucasian-Mestizos fromColombia (J.J. Yunis et al.).Population data on powerplex 2.1(FGA, vWA, TPOX, THO1, Penta E,D18S51, D21S11, D3S1358,D8S1179) and gammaStar(D16S539, D7S820, D13S317,D5S818) in a sample ofcaucasian-mestizos fromColombia (J.J. Yunis et al.).Paternity testing analysis - allelicdistribution, heterozigosity andpower of exclusion of commonlyused SLPs and STRs in BrazilianCaucasoid Population (L.F. Jobimet al.). Analysis of penta D andpenta E STR loci in a northernPortuguese population (D.Abrantes et al.). OtomiAmerindian population (Mexico)characterized by HUMVWA,HUMTH01, HUMTPOX,HUMCSF1PO, D3S1358, andD19S253 STR-PCRpolymorphisms (E. Piqué et al.).

Medicine

18/NFP 384

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Population data for nine STR lociFGA, vWA, D3S1358, CSF1PO,TPOX, TH01, D7S820, D13S317and D5S818 in Japanese (M. Haraet al.). Portuguese population dataon two pentanucleotide STR loci:penta E and penta D (T. Ribeiro et

al.). Data analysis of 10 STR loci ina population in the province ofNeuquen, Argentina (U. Toscaniniet al.). Population data from Chileusing Powerplex-16 (R. Celis et

al.). Spanish population data forthe 15 STRs Loci included inPowerplex-16 (C. Entrala et al.).Kurdish population data for theSTR loci ACTBP2, CSF1PO, FGA,TH01, TPOX, VWA, D3S1358,D5S818, D7S820, D13S317 andD21S11 (I. Shimada et al.). Allelefrequency distributions and otherpopulation genetic parameters for13 STR loci in a UAE localpopulation from Dubai (F.H.Alshamali et al.). Populationgenetic study of 15 STRs lociusing AmpFlSTR identifier kit (A.Barbaro et al.). Frequency data for15 STR loci and forensic use in aBeijing-Han population (Y. Liu et

al.). Population genetic data for 8STR loci in the South of Africa(O. Stefano et al.).Session 3. Y and X

chromosomes, mtDNA. ISFGPrize Winner The use of the Ychromosome in forensic genetics -current practices and futureperspectives (L. Roewer).Y-chromosomal DNA variation andhuman population history (C.Tyler-Smith et al.). Genotyping of9 STR systems in combinationwith 11 diallelic polymorphismson the Y-chromosome byfragment analysis andminisequencing (K. Bender et al.)Y-chromosome short tandemrepeat polymorphisms: acomparison between humans and

chimpanzees (L. Gusmão et al.).Allelic diversity and mutation atthe hypervariable minisatellitelocus DYF155S1 (MSY-1) (R.Andreassen, J. Lundsted, B.Olaisen). Male/female DNAmixtures: a challenge for Y-STRanalysis (B. Berger et al.). Highlymultiplexed assays for measuringpolymorphisms on theY-chromosome (M. Butler,R.Schoske, M. Vallone). Highresolution analysis of malegenomes by the addition of ninetbiallelic polymorphisms to theclassic 8-STR forensic haplotypeA. Caglià et al.). Development ofquadruplex PCR system for thegenetic analysis ofX-chromosomal STR loci (D.Athanasiadou et al.). 13Y-chromosomal STRs in aVietnamese population (K. Dewaet al.). Analysis of 13Y-chromosomal STRs in an Arabpopulation sample from Syria (L.Abdin et al.). A genetic populationstudy of seven Y-ChromosomeSTR-loci in a population of Bresciaarea (North Italy) (N. Cerri, E.Ponzano, F. De Ferrari). Populationgenetics of Y-chromosomalhaplotypes in Asturias (NorthernSpain) (B. Martínez-Jarreta).Genetic analysis of 18 STR loci onthe X chromosome in a Japanesepopulation (H. Matsushita et al.).Distribution of DYS385 genotypesin several Japanesesub-populations and a Koreanpopulation (K. Ago et al.).Y-chromosome STR haplotypes ina population from North-EastSpain (M. Crespillo et al.).Y-chromosome STR-haplotypes ina Swedish population (G.Holmlund et al.). Y-ChromosomeSTR defined haplotypes in NorthPortugal (L. Gusmão et al.).Y-chromosomal polymorphic loci

DYS 19, DYS 389 I/II, DYS 390,DYS 391, DYS 392, DYS 393 in apopulation sample fromSouth-Western Poland (A.Jonkisz, B. Bartnik, T. Dobosz).Penta, Nona and Decaplex Y-STRtyping systems: a comparativestudy (A. Sala et al.). DXS10011:a hypervariable TTTC/GAAArepeat marker on humanchromosome Xq27-q28 (T.Matsuki et al.). Y chromosomehaplotypes in the Madeiraarchipelago population (A.T.Fernandes et al.). A geneticpopulation study of six Ychromosomal STRs incentral-west African immigrantsin Spain and south west Spainpopulations (J.J. Gamero et al.).Population genetics of 7 Y-STRloci in the Pomerania - Kujawyregion of Poland (M. Wozniak et

al.). Population study andvalidation of the Y-STR pentaplexfor use in forensic case work (C.Hallenberg, Morling).Polymorphism of two new Y-STRloci in a Chinese population (P.P.Hou et al.). Forensic validationstudies on the Y-plexTM 6 kit (P.Martíin et al.). Validation of the Xchromosomal STR DXS7424which is closely linked to DXS101(J. Edelmann et al.). Haplotypefrequencies of DYS19, DYS389 I/II,DYS390, DYS391, DYS393 andDYS385 STR Loci in Barcelona(North-East Spain) (N. Borrego et

al.). Population genetics of Ychromosomal STR haplotypes inSouth Spain (Andalusia) (V. Prietoet al.). Differences inY-chromosome haplotypefrequencies at themicrogeographical level (M.T.Zarrabeitia et al.). Y-chromosomalmicrosatellites in the Finns (M.Hedman, K. Höök, A. Sajantila).Optimisation of Y-STR multiplexing

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combining established and newlydescribed loci (S. Beleza et al.)Y-chromosome STRs inpopulations of Bantu origin fromMozambique: male contribution tothe Africa genetic pool andforensic implications. (P.Sánchez-Diz et al.). Sequencestructure of 12 novel Ychromosome microsatellites andPCR amplification strategies (A.González-Neira et al.). Study of 8Novel Y-chromosome STRs in asample from Valencia (East ofSpain): Analysis of gene andhaplotypes frequencies (M. Aler et

al.). Haplotype discriminationamongst three UK populationgroups using three multiplexes totype eleven Y chromosome STRs(D. Ballard et al.). Y-chromosomeSTRs DYS385, DYS19, DYS389-Iand II, DYS390, DYS391, DYS392and DYS393 in five Africanpopulations (V. Lopes et al.).Y-chromosome DNA haplotypes inhuman samples from Bahia, Brazil(M.V. Santos et al.).Y-chromosomal haplogroups inmale identification: study of apopulation sample from Portugal(central area) (L. Andrade et al.). Anew duplex PCR system for YCAIIand DXYS156Y microsatellitesanalysis (I. Sani et al.). YChromosome haplotypes in anAlbanian population sample (C.Robino, S. Gino, C. Torre).Forensic validation ofY-chromosome STRpolymorphisms in Italy: the GE.F.I.collaborative database A. Caglià et

al.). Y-Chromosome variation andinter-haplotype mutationaldistances in 111 unrelatedindividuals from Tuscany, Italy (C.Toni et al.). Y Chromosomehaplotypes for 9 STRs in Tobas,Amerindians from NorthernArgentina (G. Berardi et al.).

Comparison of two isolated“Hungarian”, population topopulation of Budapest (mixedHungarian) by Y-chromosomes (Z.Beer et al.). A nomenclature forYCA II which is compatible withthe ISFG guidelines for Y-STRanalysis (U. Schmidt, S. Lutz, L.Roewer). Y-STR typing in forensicanalysis (N. von Wurmb-Schwark,S. Petermann, R. Wegener).Phylogeny of the mtDNAhaplogroup U6. Analysis of thesequences observed in NorthAfrica and Iberia (L. Pereira et al.).A novel mt-DNA coding andD-loop analysis for forensicidentification based onpyro-sequencing (M. Allen, H.André)asson, U. Gyllensten).Genetic structure ofautochthonous Basques throughanalysis of the HVI and HVIIregions of mitochondrial DNA (C.Martínez-Bouzas et al.).Mitochondrial DNA polymorphismin 50 unrelated individuals fromNorth-Italy (L. Caenazzo et al.).D-Loop-BASE online now - acentral European database ofmitochondrial DNA (H. Wittig et

al.). Sequencing of MitochondrialHV1 and HV2 DNA with lengthheteroplasmy (E.M. Rasmussen et

al.). Analysis of mitochondrialDNA with an infrared automatedDNA sequencer in a Tuscanpopulation (Central Italy) (L. Giuntiet al.). MtDNA control regionpolymorphism: sequencedatabase and forensic applications(A. Rodríguez-Monge et al.).Population data of mitochondrialDNA region HVIII in 150individuals from Bolongna (Italy)(C. Bini et al.). Polymorphism ofD-loop mitochondrial DNA: studyof HV1 and HV2 regions inunrelated individuals living in theEast of France (V. Troesch et al.).

MtDNA analysis in Portuguesepopulations (Central Portugal andAzores Islands): polymorphic sitesin control region sequences (M.Carvalho et al.). No heteroplasmyat base position 16169 of TsarNicholai II’s mitochondrial DNA (T.Nagai et al.). Mitochondrial DNAvariability patterns in southeastAfrica and forensic implications(A. Salas et al.). Variability of themitochondrial loci nt00073 andnt16519 in populations ofGermany, Syria, Cameroon,Japan, Vietnam and Peru - a studyusing the RFLP and LightCycler(TM) technique (U. Szibor et

al.). Mitochondrial DNAsequencing in “unsolvable cases”(N. von Wurmb-Schwark et al.).Occurrence of heteroplasmy inrelated individuals (C. Turchi et al.).Session 4. Physical traits,

mutations/chimerism.

Investigation of chimerism in ahealthy, adult female by means ofminisatellite and microsatellitetyping (B. Glock et al.). Mutationsand Aneuploidies: their prevalenceand impact on forensic casework(T.M. Clayton et al.). Mutationrates at twenty-three differentshort tandem repeat loci (E. M.Dauber et al.). STR-typing in apair of chimeric twins (E.M.Dauber et al.). Identification of aphenotypically normaltetragametic chimeric fertilewoman by HLA and STR typing(J.J. Yunis et al.).Session 5. Degraded DNA,

databanks. The top 10 list:criteria of Authenticity for ancientand forensic samples (H.N.Poinar). Megaplex analysis of amongolian population from theEgyin Gol site (300 B.C.—200A.D.) (C. Keyser-Tracqui et al.).Multiplex-PCR of short ampliconsfor MTDNA sequencing from

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ancient DNA (A. Alonso et al.).Individual difference in drugmetabolism and dispositiontoxicological significance ofgenotypes and phenotypes ofS-Mephenytoin 4-Hydroxylase(CYP2C19) (J. Ikebuchi et al.).Gender determination in highlydegraded DNA samples (M.Zoledziewska, T. Dobosz).Ultimate shortening of the PCRproduct in the STR system TH01— a new perspective in testing ofdegraded forensic samples (A.Lebioda et al.). Mitochondrial DNAanalysis of ancient human teethfrom a XVIth centuryarchaeological excavation (A.Hernandez et al.). The hand ofLunow - verification of an ancienttale using DNA analysis (M.Klintschar, M. Kleiber). Preliminarymolecular study oftime-dependent changes in DNAstability in skeletal material buriedin soil (B. Bachmeier et al.). STRanalysis of artificially degradedDNA - results of a collaborativeEuropean exercise (P.M.Schneider, K. Bender and theEuropean DNA Profiling (EDNAP)Group). Evaluation of Powerplex16 (TM) for typing of degradedDNA samples (B. Glock et al.).Parentage testing following aninfanticid case using fetal DNAfrom archival fixed tissues (D.Dermengiu, L. Barbarii). Thecombined DNA index system(CODIS) (K.W.P. Miller, B.L.Brown, B. Budowle). The nationalDNA data bank of Canada - Alaboratory bench retrospective onthe first year of operation (J.C.Frégeau et al.).Session 6. Statistics. Statisticalissues in Y-chromosomalmicrosatellite haplotyping (M.Krawczak). Four unusual cases ofdisputed paternity evaluated by a

likelihood ratio test based on thenumber of alleles shared identicalby state (IBS) (C. Toni et al.). Onthe statistical analysis of DNAmixture evidence (I. Dalen, T.Egeland). Old family secretsexposed (C. H. Brenner).Mutations, and the probabilisticapproach to incompatiblepaternity tests (A. P. Dawid et al.).Assessing relationships in anancient skeletal collection by thenumber of alleles shared (S.Presciuttini et al.). De novomutations at D3S1358, D8S1179and D18S51 loci, emerged duringpaternity testing: confirmation ofbiological paternal lineage byusing a panel of Y-chromosomeSTRs (U. Ricci et al.). Presence oftwo mutations betweenfather/child in two cases ofpaternity testing (C.Brandt-Casadevall et al.). Meioticmutation rates of mini andmicrosatellites in a Spanishpopulation sample (M.J. Farfán et

al.). Quantification of fluorescentSTR genotyping results forchimerism control after bonemarrow transplantation (P.M.Schnieder et al.). STR Mutationsin paternity investigation: a studyof one-year consecutive cases (H.Geada et al.). Analysis of paternityindex of 164 paternity triosDNA-typed by either 10 STR or 4RFLP loci (E. Raimondi, U.Toscanini, E. Haas). Statisticalpattern analysis of D1S80 allelesin Northwestern Russians andworldwide database usingCOLLAPSE software (A.G.Smolyanitsky et al.). Evaluation of“in house” criteria for PCR basedanalusis in immigration casework(P.H. van Eede, S. Keller, G.G. deLange). A method to help thedetection of false homozygoussamples at D17S5 locus (S. Pelotti

et al.). The use of DNA analysesfor subtyping Aend or Bm in ABOblood group system (Y. Itoh, K.Satoh, R. Kobayashi).Microsatellite instability inmononuclear cells fromnon-tumorigenic human tonsilsand its use in forensic evaluation(R. Kobayashi, Y. Itoh). DNAArchiving on FTA(R) paper:photosensitizer initiated attacks asmodels of aging (L.H. Seah, L.A.Burgoyne). SE33 (HumACTBP2):native gel electrophoresis versusdenaturing capillaryelectrophoresis, and populationdata (S. Stadlbacher et al.).Distribution of MN genotypesdetected by PCR-SSCP analysis(N. Nakayashiki et al.). Allele 14 ofvWA is characterized by3’-flanking nucleotidesubstitutions and a TTAT insertion(A. Tamura et al.). Obviouslyimpossible - the application of theinheritance of blood groups as aforensic method: the beginning ofpaternity tests in Germany, Europeand the USA (M. Okroi, P.Voswinckel). PCR based diagnosisof enterovirus and parvovirus B19in paraffin embedded heart tissue(A. Baasner et al.). Forensicevaluation of tetranucleotide STRinstability in lung cancer (G.Peloso et al.). DNA STR typing forforensic use - two methods andtwo instruments in comparison:IR-based sequencer and UV-basedsequencer (U. Ricci et al.).Genotyping with a 16 Locus STRmultiplex using 12cm plates on anABI PRISM 377 DNA sequencer(A. Berti et al.). Evolutionaryaspects of the gene for theclassical enzyme polymorphism,ACP1 (L. Rudbeck, A. Johnsen, J.Dissing). The regional pattern ofµ-opioid receptor (MOR1) mRNAin human brain - a real-time PCR

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assay (J. Becker et al.). D1S1171:a new highly variable shorttandem repeat polymorphismlocated on chromosome 1 (B.Reichenpfader, E.P. Leinzinger, M.Klintschar). Application ofrestriction landmark genomicscanning for analysis of thepostmortem phenomenon (T.Sawaguchi et al.). A criticalreview for DNA polymorphicmarkers and blood group markersin paternity testing (A.Sawaguchi, X. Wang, T.Sawaguchi). Multiplex PCR usingnewly designed primers for veryshort fragments of TH01, TPOX,CSF1PO, and vWA loci (K.Tsukada et al.). Investigation ofDNA extraction from hair shafts(K. Takayanagi et al.). Intragenichaplotypes and molecularevolution of the human alpha2-HSglycoprotein (AHSG/fetuin) gene(M. Osawa et al.). Forensicapplications of denaturing highperformance liquidchromatography: determination ofage at death, genderdetermination and humanidentification (P.Cathala et al.).Natural radioactivity and humanmtDNA mutations (L. Forster et

al.). The development ofintegrated case and laboratoryinformation management systemsfor forensics laboratories (J. Nolanet al.). Study of Spanish publicawareness regarding DNAdatabases in forensic genetics(J.J. Gamero et al.). Swiss federalDNA profile information system(M. Strehler, A. Kratzer, W. Bär).ForumDNA, a custom designedlaboratory informationmanagement system (C.Karlsson,S. Holgersson).Session 7. Forensic casework,

free themes and quality

arrangement. Evaluation of the

STR typing kit powerPlex(TM)16with respect to technicalperformance and populationgenetics: A multicenter study (L.Henke et al.). Efficacy and limits ofgenotyping low copy number(LCN) DNA samples by multiplexPCR of STR loci (A. D.Kloosterman, P. Kersbergen). Useof low copy number DNA inforensic inference (A. Lowe et al.).Are you collecting all the availableDNA from touched objects?(R.A.H. van Oorschot et al.). Thepersistence of DNA underfingernails following submersion inwater (S.A. Harbison, S.F.Petricevic, S.K. Vintiner).Real-time DNA quantification offorensic evidence materials (H.Andréasson et al.). ChromosomeX Haplotyping in deficiencypaternity testing principles andcase report (R. Szibor et al.).Applications of thiopropylsepharose 6B for removal of PCRinhibitors from DNA extracts fromdifferent sources (E. Sørensen et

al.). Grading of qualitative andquantitative responses in the PIproficiency survey of the collegeof American pathologists formailings in 1997-2000 (R.W. Allenet al.). Results of the 2001paternity testing workshop of theEnglish speaking working group(C. Hallenberg, N.Morling). TheGEDNAP blind trial concept (S.Rand, M. Schürenkamp, B.Brinkmann). The proficiencytesting program on DNA typing ofthe Spanish and Portugueseworking group of the InternationalSociety for Forensic Genetics(GEP-ISFG) (J. Gómez et al.).Cytochrome b and HVI sequencesof mitochondrial DNA to identifydomestic animal hair in forensiccasework (M. M. de Pancorbo et

al.). The first criminal case in

Estonia with dog’s DNA dataadmitted as evidence (A.Aaspõllu, M. Kelve). Appearanceof allelic drop-out in STR-multiplexamplified samples after capillaryelectrophoresis can (Th. Lederer et

al.). Discrimination ofmonocygotic twins (and clones)on the DNA level (D. Schlieper, A.Ehlich, M. Benecke). Incestuousoffspring detection inference byVNTR homozygosity increment (D.Corach et al.). Development oftwo new multiplex systems (M1:D3S1358, D8S1179, D7S820,D16S539, Penta E and M2:D5S818, D13S317, D10S516,Penta D) for routine and forensiccasework (C. Proff, C. Schmitt, M.Staak). Identification of acarbonized body found inside a car(A. Barbaro, P. Barbaro, A.Barbaro). Are DNA tests infallible?(G. Penacino, A. Sala, D. Corach).Determination of the blood volumeof blood stains on clothes: a casereport (A. Pifarré et al.). DNAtyping from biological stains: acasework experience (N. Cerri et

al.). DNA typing from epiglotticcartilage of exhumed bodies (S.Gino et al.). Paternitydetermination in criminal cases byDNA typing in South Ukraine(Yu.M.Sivolap, A.F.Brik,G.F.Krivda). Further study onsuitability of profiler plus inpersonal identification (L. Buscemiet al.). The rapid identification ofrailway disaster victims by DNAanalysis (P. Hoff-Olsen, B. Mevåg,K. Ormstad). Importance of canineidentification in the Hungarianforensic practice (Z. Pádár et al.).Validation and practicalexperiences with the multiplexkits genRESR MPX-2 (SERAC) andGeneprintR PowerPlexTM 16(Promega) (A. Junge,M.Steevens, B. Madea). CYT-B

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analysis and hair comparison inserial robbery cases (A.Berti et

al.). DNA typing after ?-amylasetest (C.Rapone et al.). STR Typingfrom human faeces: a modifiedDNA extraction method (G.Iacovacci et al.). DNA paternitytesting of 5-year-old exhumedremains (.Simjanovska et al.).Genetic analysis of fingernailsdebris: application to forensiccasework (A.Fernández-Rodríguez et al.). DNAanalysis of ABO blood groupsystem detected by single-basenucleotide substitutions in apaternity case (S. Nakamura et

al.). A 5-year study on DNArecovered from fingernail clippingsin homicide cases in Milan(A. Piccinini et al.). Validation ofmultiplex STR systems andpopulation databases for theinvestigation of immigration cases(H.Sippel, M.Hedman,A.Sajantila). Two fathers for twotwin sisters (S. Lebeau-Le Guineret al.). A fall in doubt (D. Stiller et

al.). Use of STRs in paternitytesting in the Flemish population(G. Mertens et al.). Qualitative andquantitative analysis of DNArecovered from fingerprints(M. Pesaresi et al.) Fingerprintsfrom fingerprints (M.K. Balogh et

al.). Seven SNPs and YAPdemonstrate that thechromosome Y lineages ofBasques are different fromGeorgians and Berbers(M. Alvarez-Alvarez et al.).Author index. Keyword index.

EXCERPTA MEDICA

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444507175

Medicine

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Neuroscience

MV�

Handbook ofNeuropsychology, 2ndEdition

Edited by F. Boller, INSERM,

Unite 324, Centre Paul Broca,

75014, Paris, France, J. Grafman,National Institute of Neurological

Disorders and Stroke, National

Institutes of Health, Bethesda,

MD 20892, USA

The second edition of theHandbook of Neuropsychology isdesigned to address theextraordinary growth and changestaking place in this field in recentyears. There are importantchanges between the first editionand the present one in terms oforganization, content, timing,presentation, and availability.Several volumes have beenconcurrently planned and theentire series will appear over aspan of approximately two years.

AUDIENCE

The Handbook is an essentialreference source for clinicianssuch as neuropsychologists,neurologists, psychiatrists,geriatricians and psychologists, aswell as for all neuroscientists.

“...These books would be an

excellent addition to any

neuropsychology program’s

reference library. They certainly

capture the current ideas about

brain function and their relations

to behavior.”

Psychological Reports

Volume 8

Clinical Neuropsychology

Edited by S.J. Segalowitz,Department of Psychology, Brock

University, St. Catharines, ON L2S

3A1 Canada, I. Rapin, Department

of Neurology, Albert Einstein

College of Medicine, K-807,

Bronx, NY 10461, USA

Handbook of Neuropsychology,2nd Edition, Volume 8

Volume 8 consists of Parts I and II,edited by Sid Segalowitz andIsabelle Rapin. They rest on thefact that the impact of acquiredand degenerative disorders inchildhood is strongly colored bythe immaturity of the brain, sothat what is said in other volumesof the Handbook rarely appliesdirectly to children.Part I considers theoreticalperspectives in bridgingdevelopmental neuroscience withchild psychology, with the role ofneuroscience furthering ourunderstanding of the child’smental development, and aseparate chapter outlines theimportance of plasticity in thisgrowth. Chapters also covermethodological issues arisingfrom epidemiological perspectivesand from psychometric conceptsand issues. Methods formeasuring biological brainfunction and structure and theirparticular application to childneuropsychological disorders arecovered next, including ERP, PET,

SPECT, MRI and fMRItechnologies. Included is achapter devoted to childhoodseizure disorders. Separatechapters follow onneuropsychological assessment ininfancy, in the preschool child,and in school-aged children.Following this are presentationson the development of motorcontrol, including handedness,and somatosensory perception.Part II begins with chapters onvisual development and ondevelopment in visually impairedchildren, followed by chapters oncognitive development in deafchildren and on central auditoryfunctions and their evaluation.This is followed by chapters onearly language development andits neural correlates,developmental languagedisorders, and on acquiredaphasia in childhood. Twochapters on dyslexia and anotheron dyscalculia follow. Next is achapter on disorders of memorywith a special focus on temporallobe disease and autism, one onattention disorders, and one onexecutive functions in normal andabnormal development. Followingthis are chapters on thedevelopment of emotionalregulation and on mechanismsand influences on addiction inchildren and adolescents. Finalchapters include one on eatingdisorders, and another focussingon autism spectrum disorders.

Neuroscience

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Part I

©2002 426 pages

ISBN 0-444-50364-1 Hardbound

Publication: December 2002

Price: EUR 175 / USD 175

ISBN 0-444-50373-0 Paperback

Publication: December 2002

Price: EUR 75 / USD 75

Part I considers theoreticalperspectives in bridgingdevelopmental neuroscience withchild psychology, with the role ofneuroscience furthering ourunderstanding of the child?smental development, and aseparate chapter outlines theimportance of plasticity in thisgrowth. Chapters also covermethodological issues arisingfrom epidemiological perspectivesand from psychometric conceptsand issues. Methods formeasuring biological brainfunction and structure and theirparticular application to childneuropsychological disorders arecovered next, including ERP, PET,SPECT, MRI and fMRItechnologies. Included is achapter devoted to childhoodseizure disorders. Separatechapters follow onneuropsychological assessment ininfancy, in the preschool child, andin school-aged children. Followingthis are presentations on thedevelopment of motor control,including handedness, andsomatosensory perception.

Contents: Preface. List ofContributors. 1. On the nature andscope of child neuropsychology(I. Rapin, S.J. Segalowitz).2. The neuropsychology of normaldevelopment: developmentalneuroscience and a newconstructivism (S.J. Segalowitz,M. Hiscock).

3. Plasticity: mechanisms, extentand limits (R. Nass).4. Epidemiologic perspectives onneuropsychological disorders inchildren (D.C. Bellinger,L.A. Rappaport et al.).5. Electrophysiology indevelopmental neuropsychology(M. Steinschneider, M. Dunn).6. The neuropsychology ofchildhood seizure disorders(M.T. Stowe, D.M. Masur,S. Shinnar).7. Neuroimaging in thedevelopmental disorders(J. Juranek, P.A. Filipek).8. Positron emission tomography(PET) and single photon emissioncomputed tomography (SPECT) indevelopmental disorders(D.C. Chugani, H.T. Chugani).9. Conceptual and psychometricissues in the neuropsychologicassessment of children:measurement of abilitydiscrepancy and change(R.D. Morris, J.M. Fletcher,D.J. Francis).10. Neuropsychologicalassessment in infancy(V. Molfese, B. Price).11. Neuropsychologicalassessment of the preschool child(A.G. O’Shea, B. Harel, D. Fein).12. Neuropsychologicalassessment of school-agedchildren (S. Mattis, D.Z. Luck).13. Behavioral fluctuations and thedevelopment of manualasymmetries in infancy:contributions of the dynamicsystems approach (D. Corbetta,E. Thelen).14. Human handedness: abiological perspective (R.A. Yeo,R.J. Thoma, S.W. Gangestad).15. Motor soft signs anddevelopment (R.K. Deuel).16. Somatosensory perception inchildren (J.E. Casey, B.P. Rourke).Subject Index.

Part II

©2003 508 pages

ISBN 0-444-50955-0 Hardbound

Publication: February 2003

Price: EUR 175 / USD 175

ISBN 0-444-50956-9 Paperback

Publication: February 2003

Price: EUR 75 / USD 75

Part II begins with chapters onvisual development and ondevelopment in visually impairedchildren, followed by chapters oncognitive development in deafchildren and on central auditoryfunctions and their evaluation.This is followed by chapters onearly language development andits neural correlates,developmental languagedisorders, and on acquiredaphasia in childhood. Twochapters on dyslexia and anotheron dyscalculia follow. Next is achapter on disorders of memorywith a special focus on temporallobe disease and autism, one onattention disorders, and one onexecutive functions in normal andabnormal development. Followingthis are chapters on thedevelopment of emotionalregulation and on mechanismsand influences on addiction inchildren and adolescents. Finalchapters include one on eatingdisorders, and another focussingon autism spectrum disorders.

Contents: Preface. List ofContributors.17. Toward a neuropsychology ofvisual development (R.O. Gilmore).18. Cognitive development inchildren with visual impairments(D.H. Warren, D.D. Hatton).19. Central auditory function andevaluation of auditory processingdisorders (L.J. Hood, C.I. Berlin).

Neuroscience

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20. Cognitive development in deafchildren: the interface of languageand perception inneuropsychology (R.I. Mayberry).21. Early language developmentand its neural correlates (E. Bates,D. Thal et al.).22. Developmental languagedisorders (I. Rapin, M. Dunn,D.A. Allen). 23. Acquired aphasiain childhood (A. Van Hout).24. The neuropsychology ofdyslexia (S.E. Shaywitz,B.A. Shaywitz et al.).25. Neuropsychologicalperspectives on readingdevelopment and developmentalreading disorders (M.W. Lovett,R.W. Barron).26. Developmental dyscalculia(R.S. Shalev).27. Disorders of memory inchildhood with a focus ontemporal lobe disease and autism(G.R. DeLong).28. Neuropsychology of attentiondisorders (R. Tannock).29. Executive functioning innormal and abnormaldevelopment (L. Bennetto,B.F. Pennington).30. A frontal activation model ofemotion regulation: developmentalimplications (L.A. Schmidt,S.R. Waldstein, D.L. Santesso).31. Neurobiological anddevelopmental influences on theaddiction to psychotropic drugs(K. Erickson, K. Habib,J. Schulkin). 32. Eating disorders(A. Walker). 33. Autism spectrumdisorders (N.J. Minshew,J.A. Meyer, M. Dunn). SubjectIndex.

ELSEVIER

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0444509550

Neuroscience

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Social and Behavioural Sciences

BK�

Advances in LibraryAdministration andOrganization, Volume 20

Edited by D.E. Williams, Bierce

Library 161, The University of

Akron, OH 44325-1701, USA

E-mail: [email protected],E.D. Garten, Research Library,

University of Dayton, 300 College

Park, OH 45469-1360, USA

E-mail:

[email protected]

©2003 256 pages

ISBN 0-7623-1010-3 Hardbound

Publication: May 2003

Price: USD 90 / EUR 90

Advances in LibraryAdministration and Organization,Volume 20

Long regarded as the premiermonographic series in its area ofcoverage, Advances in LibraryAdministration and Organizationoffers research perspectives thatare both timely and lively. Throughits long-standing tradition ofbringing to its professional andacademic readership a mix ofscholarship and longish essays,volumes continue to becharacterized by a focusedeclecticism whose contributions,informed by theory and reflection,stretch the boundaries of practice.Volume 20 includes importantcontributions to the field dealingwith the evolving role of the chiefinformation officer, information

ethics, library services at adistance, e-metrics, andcontinuous quality improvement.Authors represent nationalbackgrounds from Australia,Germany, and the United States.

Contents: Introduction(E.D. Garten). Choice,responsibility and work: rhetoric ina university library reorganization(G. Bader et al.). The evolving roleof Chief Information Officers inHigher Education (J-M. Griffiths).Information ethics, a philosophicalapproach (M.J. Rootes).Learner-centered library service ata distance (D.K. Meyer). Libraryservices for overlapping distancelearning programs of two HigherEducation systems in WashingtonState H.R. Gover). The attributesof information as an asset(C. Oppenheim et al.).Management education for Libraryand Information Science(J.M. Budd). An examination ofpsychological characteristics andenvironmental influences offemale college students whochoose traditional versusnontraditional academic majors(B.N. Burgard). E-metrics:measures for electronic resources(R. Miller, S. Schmidt). Managingservice quality with the balancedscorecard (R. Poll). Performancemeasures of quality for academiclibraries implementing continuousimprovement projects: a Delphistudy (J.B. Harer).

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www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0762310103

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Flexible UrbanTransportation

By J.L. Gifford, The School of

Public Policy, George Mason

University, Arlington,

VA 22201, USA

E-mail: [email protected]

©2003 260 pages

ISBN 0-08-044053-3 Hardbound

Publication: April 2003

Price: EUR 85 / USD 85

Flexible Urban Transportation is asweeping reassessment ofAmerican highway and transitpolicy, which for the lasthalf-century has been fixated onthe Interstate highway systemand its aftermath - its planning,design and construction, and thecreative destruction it wrought.The Interstate fosteredsuburbanization, first of housing,then retail shopping, thenemployment, and it revolutionizedfreight logistics, making possiblethe tightly integrated, flexible andefficient supply chainscharacteristic of modern industry.But its aggressive constructiondivided and destroyed many urbancommunities and finallyprecipitated the furious backlashof the freeway revolt.American cities now face aprofound dilemma. The privateautomobile as a means ofpersonal travel has never beenmore popular. The retail economy

Social and Behavioural Sciences

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depends almost completely onhighways. Yet communities areincreasingly unwilling to build newhighways or to expand existinghighways. Traffic surges,congestion grows, along withfrustration.America needs a flexible, adaptivetransportation system to supportits highly dynamic and productiveeconomy. But its transportationdecision making process is miredin decades-old procedures thatwere forged in the wake of thefreeway revolt. Every majorAmerican city follows essentiallythe same process. And now thisprocess has broken down almosteverywhere.Flexible Urban Transportation is abold proposal for a new kind oftransportation decision makingprocess focused on helpingcommunities make transportationchoices with a clearunderstanding of theirconsequences. Its foundation ishonesty about what works - andwhat does not. Its cogentassessment of how Americantransportation planning got towhere it is today, and its bold,thoughtful proposal for changingit, are required reading for thoseconcerned about problems andprospects of transportation today.

AUDIENCE

For students, researchers andprofessionals concerned with theinteractions betweentransportation policy and urbandevelopment.

Contents: Preface.Transportation and the

Economic Vitality of

Communities. The urbantransportation dilemma.Transportation planning in context.

Infrastructure and economicgrowth. Structural changes.Changing government roles andresponsibilities. The need for anew approach.Order, Efficiency, and the

Struggle against Chaos. Orderand efficiency in the ItalianRenaissance. Chaos and thesearch for order. The Americanrenaissance. The progressive era.Scientific management.Standardization. Publicadministration. City planning andthe city beautiful.The American Highway

Program to 1956. Thefirst-generation highway program.The 1920s. The early Depression:1930-1936. The late Depression:1937-1941. Planning the interstatesystem. Toll roads versus freeroads. Urban versus interregionalhighways. Design standards.Limited mileage. Cost estimates,financing, and the highway trustfund. Beltways. Institutionalarrangements.The American Highway

Program since 1956. Building theInterstate: 1956-1991. The 1956Highway Acts. The “Golden Age”.The freeway revolt. Process,design, and values. Interstate 66,Fairfax and Arlington Counties.Virginia. Interstate 70, GlenwoodCanyon, Colorado. FranconiaNotch, New Hampshire.“Finishing” the Interstate. Thepost-interstate era. The IntermodalSurface Transportation EfficiencyAct of 1991 (ISTEA). NationalHighway System Designation Actof 1995. Transportation Equity Actfor the 21st Century (TEA-21).Transportation Planning

Methods. The institutionalcontext of transportation planning.The role of analysis intransportation planning.

Decision-making concepts.Indicative planning. Margin ofsafety analysis. Benefit-costanalysis. Distributional equity.Sources of uncertainty.Irreversibility, non-pecuniaryimpacts, and other limitations.Probabilistic risk assessment.Life-cycle cost analysis (LCCA).Least cost planning. Investingunder uncertainty. Varyingconstruction cost. Varyingdemand. Increasing uncertaintyover demand. “Bad newsprinciple”. Scale versus flexibility.Environmental applications.Investing under uncertainty:summary. Participatory decisionmaking.The Evolution of Transportation

Planning. Highway planning priorto World War II. Metropolitantransportation planning. Urbantravel modeling and the interstateprogram. National EnvironmentalPolicy Act. Alternatives analysis.ISTEA. Air quality planning.Period I: 1970-1990. Period II: the1990s. Transportation planningand the control of air quality.National-scale planning. Highwayneeds studies. Condition andperformance reports. Economicproductivity studies.Challenges to the neoclassical

economic paradigm:

complexity, adaptation, and

flexibility. Increasing returns.Sources of increasing returns.Properties of increasing returnssystems. The Austrian school.Choice under uncertainty.Competition as learning. Capitalstructure. Implications forinfrastructure planning.The Need for a New Approach.Four fallacies of the currentapproach. The exogenous goalfallacy. The predictive modelingfallacy. The efficiency fallacy.

Social and Behavioural Sciences

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The public involvement fallacy.A reinvented transportationplanning process. Control.Flexibility. Control and flexibility.Adaptive discovery. Chapterappendix: bibliography on conceptof flexibility.Transportation Planning: A

Flexible Approach for the

Twenty-First Century. Stabilityand agility. Reinventingtransportation planning.A commitment to honesty.Intelligence: a source of factualinformation. Decision support.Design and implementation.Design and procurement.Outreach and communityinvolvement. Monitoring.Performance indicators.Monitoring flexibility. Assessingfinancial and economic viability.Reality Check: Institutionalizing

Flexible Transportation

Planning. Going cold turkey. Thenational campaign. Consortia andinformal voluntary organizations.TRANSCOM. E-ZPass.The datasharing model. A local, state, andregional implementation strategy.Metropolitan planningorganizations. Informal voluntaryorganizations. The role of thestates. Flexible planning at thefederal level. Identify and addressuncertainty in program plans andanalyses. Shorten the time horizonfor project analysis. Adoptincentives based on measurableoutcomes. Facilitate sharing ofinformation.An Agenda for Action. Local,state, and regional actions.Establishment of an intelligencefunction. Develop a decisionsupport function. Design andimplementation. Conductmonitoring. National actions.Deregulate the metropolitantransportation planning process.

Revise federal policies to focus onmeasurable outcomes. Streamlinethe environmental approvalprocess. Shorten the time forproject cost-benefit analysis.Support a national or regional datainterchange standards process.Reorient national planning aroundmacroeconomic analysis.Conclusion. Index.

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www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0080440533

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Handbook of Transportand the Environment

Edited by K.J. Button, The School

of Public Policy, George Mason

University, USA

E-mail: [email protected],

D.A. Hensher, Institute of

Transport Studies, The University

of Sydney, Australia

E-mail: [email protected]

©2003 approx. 650 pages

ISBN 0-08-044103-3 Hardbound

Publication: June 2003

Pre-publication price:

EUR 128 / USD 128

(for orders placed before 31st

August 2003 )

Price: EUR 160 / USD 160

(for orders placed after 31st

August 2003)

Handbooks in Transport, Volume 4

Transport provides thetechnological means to facilitatemovement of passengers andgoods, but it is also at the centreof the growing concern aboutenvironmental degradation in theform of air pollution, global

warming, noise, and safety.Combined with traffic congestionin major conurbations - at theports, at the airports, and on theroads, the transport sector hasbeen cited as a major contributorto the ills of twentieth centurysociety.Despite the concerns aboutadverse environmental effects, itcannot be overlooked that thereare, however, many positivefeatures of transport. Thechallenge is to manage thebenefits of transportation better sothat the broad set ofenvironmental impacts arereduced to acceptable levels whileensuring acceptable outcomes interms of economic performanceand equity. Sustainable transportwill require careful considerationof technological innovation andincreasing consumer awareness.This volume was constructedusing a meta-analysis of relevantjournal contributions to identifythe key themes it would have toaddress. The outcome was 43chapters. These chapters coverenvironmental concepts; keyenvironmental concerns; the roleof fuel sources and vehicletechnology as means of reducingenvironmental externalities;appraisal, valuation and impactsof externalities; institutional andpolitical settings and policiesdesigned to combat growingenvironmental concerns; and therole of environmental legislation.A number of chapters highlightsome specific themes that cutacross many of the topic areaslisted above. Early in thehandbook seven chaptersoverview the contribution of eachmain transport sector to theconsumption of energy andcreation of emissions.

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Each chapter was speciallycommissioned from anacknowledged world expert on itstopic. Each offers an overview anduseful insights to those familiarwith the area as well as thosenew to it. Systematic andthorough in its creation, currentand accessible in its content, andauthoritative and international inits authorship, the Handbook of

Transport and the Environment

will be the definitive referencework on this important subject.

Contents: Introduction (D.Hensher, K. Button). Concepts.Environmental concepts - physicaland economic (W. Rothengatter).Global warming (M. Lenzen et al.).Air quality (D. Niemeier, B.Holmen). Noise (D. Gillen). Safety(I. Savage). Amenity andseverance (S. Handy).Transportation fuels includingbiomass (B. Johansson). Fueloptions (M. Khare, P. Sharma).Cleaner vehicles (D. Sperling).Sectoral Overviews. Carbondioxide emissions from transport(L. Schipper, L. Fulton). Transportenergy and emissions: buses(J. Stanley). Transport energy andemissions: urban public transport(S. Potter). Transport energy andemissions: aviation (H. Sommerville).Transport energy and emissions:shipping (W. Talley). Transportenergy and emissions: railincluding high speed rail(A. Bonnafous, C. Raux).Environmental impact assessmentof sustainable transport(S. Dhingra et al.). Appraisal and

Valuation Issues. Theenvironment in transportinvestment appraisal (P. Nijkampet al.). Evaluation of environmentalimpacts (E. Quinet). Valuation ofenvironmental externalities

(V. Adamowitz). Valuation casestudies in transport (J. de DiosOrtuzar, L. Rizzi). The healtheffects of motor vehicle related airpollution (D. McCubbin,M. Delucchi). Environmentalexternalities of the automobile(M. Delucchi). Valuation of safety(M. Jones-Lee, G. Loomes). Theeffects of location externalities onsocial values of land (F. Martinez).Policy Issues. Political challenges(P. Rietveld). History ofenvironmental legislation(P. Stopher). Macroeconomicpolicies and the environment(S. Hansen). Internationalcoordination of policies (J. Van deBerg, N. Castells). Environmentalpricing (E. Calthrop, S. Proost).Sustainable environmentalfutures: a planners view(D. Gillingwater, S. Ison).Transport and environmentaljustice (R. Alsnih, P. Stopher).Unintended consequences(P. Goodwin). Global warming andemissions trading (T. Truong).Travel, tourism and theenvironment (K. Button). Gender,transportation and theenvironment (A. Root,L. Schintler). Logistics and theenvironment (A. McKinnon).Green and reverse logistics(S. Rahman). Movement ofhazardous goods (B. Waters).Public attitudes (T. Garling et al.).TDN and win-win transportsolutions (T. Litman). Travelblending and calming (G. Rose,L. Ampt). Packaging policies toaddress environmental concerns:no single measure does it(E. Feitelson). The street:integrating transport and urbanenvironment (S. Marshal).Intelligent transport systems andthe environment (TBA). Integratedtransport models for

environmental assessment(D. Hensher).

PERGAMON

www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0080441033

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Studies in Law, Politicsand Society, Volume 28

Edited by A. Sarat, Department of

Political Science, Amherst

College, MA 01002-5000, USA

E-mail: [email protected],P. Ewick, Department of

Sociology, Clark University,

Worcester, MA 01610, USA

E-mail: [email protected]

©2003 206 pages

ISBN 0-7623-1015-4 Hardbound

Publication: May 2003

Price: USD 90 / EUR 90

Studies in Law, Politics andSociety, Volume 28

This volume of Studies in Law,

Politics, and Society presents adiverse array of articles by aninterdisciplinary and internationalgroup of scholars. Their workspans the social sciences,humanities, and law. It examinesnew perspectives onconstitutional interpretation, onrights, and the law’s efforts toregulate bodies. The articlespublished here exemplify theexciting and innovative work nowbeing done in interdisciplinarylegal scholarship.

Contents: List of contributors.Issues in Constitutional

Interpretation. Revisitingconstitutional interpretation: a

Social and Behavioural Sciences

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comparative perspective onAmerican debates (M. Moore).Minority representation, thesupreme court, and the politics ofdemocracy (Y. Dawood).“Missing Persons”. Accountingfor absent bodies: the politics andjurisprudence of the MissingPersons Act (T. Hawley).Surviving law: death communityculture (P. Hanafin). Extraterritorialcriminal jurisdiction: replacing‘objective territoriality’ with‘defensive territoriality’.(E.S. Podgor). The Challenges of

(and to) Rights. ‘Subjectivity is acitizen’: representation,recognition, and thedeconstruction of rights (JonathanGoldberg-Hiller).

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www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/0762310154

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Studies in SymbolicInteraction, Volume 26

Edited by N.K. Denzin, Institute of

Communications Research,

University of Illinois, Urbana,

IL 61801, USA E-mail:

[email protected]

©2003 322 pages

ISBN 0-7623-1009-X Hardbound

Publication: March 2003

Price: USD 90 / EUR 90

Studies in Symbolic Interaction,Volume 26

Volume 26 of Studies in Symbolic

Interaction emphasizes newdevelopment in interactionisttheory and practice, as well asexamples of post-modern

ethnography and performancetexts focused on border crossingsand border performances. Thevolume also presents essayshonoring Peter Hall’s contributionsto Communications andSociological inquiry.

Contents: Peter Hall’s

Contributions to

Communications and

Sociological Inquiries (Special

Partial Issue). Engaging PeterHall’s work concerning socialorganization, power, policy, andcommunication (W.K. Rawlins).Conversations and engagements:contributions to theory in the workof Peter M. Hall (M.J. Neitz ).Communication as power in PeterHall’s work (D. Altheide).Mesodomain analysis andconsiderations of a healthysociety (D.R. Maines). Peter Hall’scontributions to public policyresearch: applications toeducational reform (H. Mehan et

al.). Transversing intra, inter-, andtranspersonal communication: thelarcenous leads of Peter M. Hall(S.E. Cahill). Resting, reflecting,renewing (P.M. Hall). New

Development in Interactionist

Theory and Practice. Towards acommunicative model for mentalhealth research and practice(W.D. Woodward). Voices ofsocial problems: a dialogicalconstructionist model(L.T. Nichols). Rethinkingconstructionist agency:claimsmakers as conditions,audiences, types and symbols(L.T. Nichols). Status disclosure:genetic counseling as an arena fornegotiation (A.E. Raz). Emotionand film theory (N. Wiley).[Post]Modern Ethnography.

From flanerie to pseudo-flanerie:the postmodern tourist in Las

Vegas (K. Borchard). Ethnographysince postmodernism (A. Fontana,T. Mcginnis). Traversing the greatdivide: writing the self intoqualitative research and narrative(R.A. Rhoads). Border

Crossings/Border

Performances. Chicken wings(R. Bai). Remembering me(J.K.T. Laraviere). Crossing theborder and crossing myself(H. Campuzano). Touched...to hereknows when (C.M. Elavsky).Soloing (M. Chandler). Theinterview (A. Padilla). Survivingthe American dream: con la almapor dentro (A. Padilla). DeliveringMalinche (A. Filmer). Things wesaid tomorrow... (M.D. Giardina).Talking about alchemy, the grid,the wing, and the crystal ball(D. Yomtoob).

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www.elsevier.com/locate/isbn/076231009X

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Keyword Index

A

Accounting, 10Analytical Chemistry, 6Applied Geophysics, 8

B

Behavioral Neuroscience, 24

C

Catalysis, 3, 4Chemical Engineering, 3Chemical Kinetics, 3Chemical Reaction Engineering, 3Clinical Neurology, 24Clinical Neuropsychology, 24Clinical Psychology (General), 24Coastal / Hydraulic Engineering, 8Cognitive Neuroscience, 24Cognitive Psychology, 24Computers and Chemical

Engineering, 3Computers and Chemistry, 3Computers in Geosciences, 8Condensed Matter: Structure,

Thermal and MechanicalProperties, 5

Cosmology, 8

D

Distance Education, 27

E

Earth / Surface Processes, 8Economic History (General), 11Environmental Management, 29Environmental Policy, 29

G

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics, 8Geophysics, 8Groundwater Chemistry /

Contaminant Hydrology, 8

H

Health, Education, and Welfare(General), 11

Higher Education, 27Higher Education Administration,

27Hydrology, 8

I

Information / KnowledgeManagement, 27

Inorganic Chemistry, 4

L

Laboratory Instrumentation andAutomation, 5

Library Science (General), 27

M

Marine Data and Modelling, 8Mathematical Geology, 8Mechanical Engineering, 16Medicine, General and Internal, 17Microsociology, 31

N

Neural Aging, 24Neurobiology, 24Neurochemistry, 24Neuroimaging, 24

Neurolinguistics andPsycholinguistics, 24

Neurological Research, 24Neurology, 24Neuropathology, 24Neuropharmacology, 24Neuropsychology, 24Neuroscience, 24Numerical Analysis, 16

P

Petroleum Geology andEngineering, 8

Political Sociology, 30Pollution Control, 14

S

Seismic Exploration, 8Seismology, 8Sociology (General), 30, 31Solid State Chemistry, 5Speech / Language Pathology, 24

T

Tectonophysics, 8Thermochemistry and

Thermodynamics, 5Thermodynamics, 5Transportation Policy and Practice,

27Transportation Research (General),

27, 29

U

Urban and Regional Planning(General), 27

User and Usage Studes, 27

NFP 384/33

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Author Index

A

Alegret S., 6Alonso R., 14Amiel Y., 11Arbaugh M.J., 14

B

Biddle J.E., 11Bishop J.A., 11Boller F., 24Brinkman B., 17Button K.J., 29Bytnerowicz A., 14

C

Carracedo A., 17Ciarlet P.G., 16

D

Denzin N.K., 31

E

Epstein M.J., 10Ewick P., 30

G

Gallagher P.K., 5Garten E.D., 27Gifford J.L., 27Grafman J., 24Guinot V., 8

H

Hensher D.A., 29

K

Kurosawa H., 4

L

Lee J.Y., 10Lions† J.L., 16

R

Rice N.M., 3

S

Samuels W.J., 11Sarat A., 30

W

Wang Y., 8

Williams D.E., 27Wojciechowski B.W., 3

Y

Yamamoto A., 4

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Title Index

A

Advances in LibraryAdministration andOrganization, Volume 20, 27

Advances in ManagementAccounting, Volume 11, 10

E

Experimental Methods in KineticStudies, Revised Edition, 3

F

Flexible Urban Transportation, 27Fundamentals of Molecular

Catalysis, 4

G

Godunov-type Schemes, 8

H

Handbook of Neuropsychology,2nd Edition, Volume 8, 24

Handbook of Numerical Analysis,Volume XI, 16

Handbook of Thermal Analysisand Calorimetry, Volume 3, 5

Handbook of Transport and theEnvironment, 29

I

Inequality, Welfare and Poverty:Theory and Measurement, 11

Integrated Analytical Systems, 6

O

Ozone Air Pollution in the SierraNevada - Distribution andEffects on Forests, 14

P

Progress in Forensic Genetics 9,17

R

Research in the History ofEconomic Thought andMethodology, Volume 21, 11

S

Seismic Amplitude Inversion inReflection Tomography, 8

Studies in Law, Politics andSociety, Volume 28, 30

Studies in Symbolic Interaction,Volume 26, 31

NFP 384/37

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REPRESENTATIVES’ INDEX

Director of Sales, Europe, Middle East and Africa

Jonathan Bunkell,

+44 (0) 1844 214494, Mobile: +44 (0)7801 664914E-mail: [email protected]

UK SALES TEAM

Mark Hunt, UK Sales Manager,+44 (0) 1903 882725, Mobile: +44 (0) 7801664952, Fax: +44 (0) 1903 882725,

E-mail: [email protected]

Karen McWhirter, Field Academic Manager, Scotland and Ireland,

+44 (0) 1786 841798, Mobile: +44 (0) 7711225855, Fax: + 44 1786 841 798,E-mail: [email protected]

Lynne Saunderson, Trade & Academic Representative,Midlands and North,

+44 (0) 1423 561758, Mobile: +44 (0) 7768348682,E-mail: [email protected]

Nicola Haden, Trade & Academic Representative,South and West,

+44 (0) 1922 411903, Mobile: +44 (0) 07768348681,E-mail: [email protected]

Nikki Beard, Trade & Academic Representative, Greater London and Home Counties,

+44 (0) 1865 712085, Mobile: +44 (0)7876035241,E-mail: [email protected]

KEY ACCOUNTS

Nigel Berkeley, Key Account Manager, London and South,

+44 (0) 1442 216329, Mobile: +44 (0) 7768348680, Fax: +44 (0) 1442 216329,E-mail: [email protected]

Chris Hossack, Key Account Manager, Midlands and North,

+44 (0) 116 2415153, Mobile: +44 (0) 7711225857, Fax: 0116 2415553,E-mail: [email protected]

SPECIAL SALES

David Burton, Special Sales Manager,

+44 (0) 1865 314577, Mobile: +44 (0) 7711225858, Fax: +44 (0) 1865 314519,E-mail: [email protected]

Rosie Moss, Special Sales Executive,

+44 (0) 1865 314456, Fax: +44 (0) 1865314519,E-mail: [email protected]

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EUROPEAN SALES TEAM

Rosanna Ramacciotti, European Sales Manager,

+39 (0) 49 612229, Mobile: +39 335 6011098, Fax: +39 (0) 49 8897019,E-mail: [email protected]

Catherine Anderson, Area Sales Manager, Germany, Austria & Switzerland,

+49 (0) 69 54890960, Mobile: + 49 (0) 172 682 0278, Fax: +49 (0) 69 54890961,E-mail: [email protected]

Kai Wuerfl-Davidek, Sales Representative, South Germany, Austria & Switzerland,

+43 (0) 1 4942376, Mobile: +43 (0) 6764842341, Fax: +43 (0) 1 4943672,E-mail: [email protected]

Miguel Sanchez Gatell, Area Sales Manager, Southern Europe,

+34 (0) 91 8060934, Mobile: +34 666511603, Fax: +34 (0) 91 8060935,E-mail: [email protected]

Cristina Dalla Muta, Sales Representative, Italy, France & Greece,

+ 39 (0) 49 9925651, Mobile: + 39 3485839191, Fax: + 39 (0) 49 9929063,E-mail: c.dalla [email protected]

Bob Fairbrother, Area Sales Manager, Benelux & Scandinavia,

+31(0) 20 4853848, Mobile: + 31 (0) 622808563, Fax: + 31 (0) 20 485 3848,E-mail: [email protected]

Anne Wals Gutenkunst, Academic Representative, Benelux,

+31 (0) 317 424505, Mobile: + 31(0) 651011048, Fax: + 31(0) 317 424262,E-mail: [email protected]@elsevier.com

Radek Janousek, Area Sales Manager, Eastern Europe,

+420 2 33544076, Mobile: + 420 (0) 602294014, Fax: + 420 2 335 44 076,E-mail: [email protected] or [email protected]

MIDDLE EAST & AFRICA

Klaus Beran, Area Sales Middle East & Africa,

+ 44 (0) 1753 822570, Mobile + 44 (0) 780 1664942, Fax: + 44 (0) 1753 822570,E-mail: [email protected]

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40/NFP 384