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Books > Academic & Education > Professional & Technical
This is an all-encompassing and exhaustive exposition of the theory of infinite-dimensional Unitary Representations of Locally Compact Groups and its generalization to representations of Banach algebras. The presentation is detailed, accessible, and self-contained (except for some elementary knowledge in algebra, topology, and abstract measure theory). In the later chapters the reader is brought to the frontiers of present-day knowledge in the area of Mackey normal subgroup analysisand its generalization to the context of Banach *-Algebraic Bundles.
Two important new developments have occurred that have significant
impact on the evolution of econometrics, namely, the end of the
Cold War and the emergence of the information revolution in nearly
all economies of the world. The information revolution has had significant effect on data
flows, making them much more timely, accessible, and descriptive of
more parts of the economy. At the same time, it has changed the
industrial structure of many economies, giving rise to increasing
importance of the tertiary sectors (e.g. services). The new
generation of hardware and software enables econometricians to
handle larger and more complex problems, especially those that are
data intensive and computer intrusive. These major events require reconsideration and redrafting of
some of the materials of the original edition. The present volume retains the original structure of "Lectures
on Microeconomic Theory" and takes up principles of constructing
dynamic macroeconometric models and their use in economic analyses
and forecasting, while introducing many updates, revisions and
extensions. The description of the econometric methodology has been
limited to specific applications of time series analysis, and the
title has been changed to "Principles of Macroeconometric
Modeling."
"Brassica" crop species and their allies ("Raphanus, Sinapis,
Eruca, " etc.) are important sources of edible roots, stems,
leaves, buds and inflorescences, as well as of edible or industrial
oils, condiments and forage. Many well known names of plants or
plant products, such as kale, cabbage, brocolli, cauliflower,
Brussels sprouts, kohl-rabi, Chinese cabbage, turnip, rape,
rutabaga, swede, colza or rapeseed, canola, mustard, rocket, etc.
are directly associated to this botanical group.
As indicated by its title A History of Great Ideas in Abnormal Psychology, this book is not just concerned with the chronology of events or with biographical details of great psychiatrists and psychopathologists. It has as its main interest, a study of the ideas underlying theories about mental illness and mental health in the Western world. These are studied according to their historical development from ancient times to the twentieth century. The book discusses the history of ideas about the nature of mental illness, its causation, its treatment and also social attitudes towards mental illness. The conceptions of mental illness are discussed in the context of philosophical ideas about the human mind and the medical theories prevailing in different periods of history. Certain perennial controversies are presented such as those between the psychological and organic approaches to the treatment of mental illness, and those between the focus on disease entities (nosology) versus the focus on individual personalities. The beliefs of primitive societies are discussed, and the development of early scientific ideas about mental illness in Greek and Roman times. The study continues through the medieval age to the Renaissance. More emphasis is then placed on the scientific revolution of the seventeenth century, the enlightenment of the eighteenth, and the emergence of modern psychological and psychiatric ideas concerning psychopathology in the twentieth century.
From the Preface
The original concept for the Vision in Vehicle series of
international conferences was born from discussions within the
Applied Vision Association which led eventually to the first
conference being held in 1985. Ten years of progress later and this
volume presents the selected and edited proceedings of the Sixth
International Conference on Vision in Vehicles (VIV6) which was
held at the University of Derby, 13-16 September 1995. The meeting
was organised in association with the Applied Vision Association
and the Ergonomics Society.
In accordance with the developments in computation, theoretical
studies on numerical schemes are now fruitful and highly needed. In
1991 an article on the finite element method applied to
evolutionary problems was published. Following the method,
basically this book studies various schemes from operator
theoretical points of view. Many parts are devoted to the finite
element method, but other schemes and problems (charge simulation
method, domain decomposition method, nonlinear problems, and so
forth) are also discussed, motivated by the observation that
practically useful schemes have fine mathematical structures and
the converses are also true. This book has the following chapters:
1. Boundary Value Problems and FEM. 2. Semigroup Theory and FEM. 3.
Evolution Equations and FEM. 4. Other Methods in Time
Discretization. 5. Other Methods in Space Discretization. 6.
Nonlinear Problems. 7. Domain Decomposition Method.
The book is designed for researchers, students and practitioners
interested in using fast and efficient iterative methods to
approximate solutions of nonlinear equations. The following four
major problems are addressed. Problem 1: Show that the iterates are
well defined. Problem 2: concerns the convergence of the sequences
generated by a process and the question of whether the limit points
are, in fact solutions of the equation. Problem 3: concerns the
economy of the entire operations. Problem 4: concerns with how to
best choose a method, algorithm or software program to solve a
specific type of problem and its description of when a given
algorithm succeeds or fails. The book contains applications in
several areas of applied sciences including mathematical
programming and mathematical economics. There is also a huge number
of exercises complementing the theory.
This book contains a number of chapters on the control and execution of skilled movements, as well as more general chapters on theoretical issues in skilled performance. The contributors have summarised their most recent research, and general themes and issues are presented in discussion chapters at the end of each section, thus providing a good general summary of the kind of research and theoretical frameworks developing in this area. The first section is concerned with the theoretical issues of programming and co-ordination. Issues raised in the second section are basic to much of the research reviewed in the volume. This section summarises the various theoretical positions in the recent debates on the role of cognitive processes in motor control and the usefulness of the ``psychomotor'' approach, and contains chapters based on individual papers which present relevant empirical findings. The third section deals with the learning and performance of skilled movements, containing papers with practical implications for everyday skills. The final section contains chapters on cognitive processes in skilled performance.
The CMOS Cookbook contains all you need to know to understand and
successfully use CMOS (Complementary Metal-Oxide Semiconductor)
integrated circuits. Written in a "cookbook" format that requires
little math, this practical, user-oriented book covers all the
basics for working with digital logic and many of its end
appilations.
The Handbook brings together a systematic review of the research
topics, empirical findings, and methods that comprise modern labor
economics. It serves as an introduction to what has been done in
this field, while at the same time indicating possible future
trends which will be important in both spheres of public and
private decision-making.
The information in this book is from Technical resource document: treatment technologies for dioxin-containing wastes, by M. Arienti et al., prepared for the US EPA, October 1986. For decision-makers. Discusses regulations, thermal and nonthermal technologies, and factors involved in technology selection. No index. Annotation copyright Book News, I
This book serves not only as an introduction, but also as an
advanced text and reference source in the field of deterministic
optimal control systems governed by ordinary differential
equations. It also includes an introduction to the classical
calculus of variations.
Contains case studies conducted at six facilities to evaluate the technical, environmental and cost impacts associated with the implementation of technologies for reducing the volume and toxicity of printed circuit board metals-containing sludges and solvent wastes. Analyses of these data are the ba
Natural product chemistry covers a fascinating area of organic chemistry and its study has enriched organic chemistry in a myriad of different ways. In recent years the thrust has been in three major directions: advances in stereoselective synthesis of bioactive natural products, developments in structure elucidation of complex natural products through the applications of multidimensional NMR and mass spectroscopy, and the integration of bioassay procedures with the isolation processes leading to the isolation of active principles from the extracts. The present volume reflects these developments, and the growing emphasis on bioactive natural products, chemical constituents of echinoderms, diterpenoids from Rabdosia and Eremophila sp., structural studies on saponins, marine sesquiterpene quinones and antimicrobial activity of amphibian venoms. The reviews on bioactive metabolites of Phomophis, cardenolide detection by ELISA, xenocoumacins and bioactive dihydroisocoumarins, CD studies of carbohydrate-molybdate complexes, oncogene function inhibitors from microbial secondary metabolites and Gelsemium and Lupin alkaloids present frontier developments in several areas of natural product chemistry. It is hoped that the present volume, which contains articles by eminent authorities in each field, will be received with the same enthusiasm as the previous volumes of this series.
This book is the first attempt to develop systematically a general
theory of the initial-boundary value problems for nonlinear
evolution equations with pseudodifferential operators Ku on a
half-line or on a segment. We study traditionally important
problems, such as local and global existence of solutions and their
properties, in particular much attention is drawn to the asymptotic
behavior of solutions for large time. Up to now the theory of
nonlinear initial-boundary value problems with a general
pseudodifferential operator has not been well developed due to its
difficulty. There are many open natural questions. Firstly how many
boundary data should we pose on the initial-boundary value problems
for its correct solvability? As far as we know there are few
results in the case of nonlinear nonlocal equations. The methods
developed in this book are applicable to a wide class of dispersive
and dissipative nonlinear equations, both local and nonlocal.
Optics has become one of the most dynamic fields of science since the first volume of Progress in Optics was published, forty years ago. At the time of inception of this series, the first lasers were only just becoming operational, holography was in its infancy, subjects such as fiber optics, integrated optics and optoelectronics did not exist and quantum optics was the domain of only a few physicists. The term photonics had not yet been coined. Today these fields are flourishing and have become areas of specialisation for many science and engineering students and numerous research workers and engineers throughout the world. Some of the advances in these fields have been recognized by awarding Nobel prizes to seven physicists in the last twenty years. The volumes in this series which have appeared up to now contain 240 review articles by distinguished research workers, which have become permanent records for many important developments. They have helped optical scientists and optical engineers to stay abreast of their fields. There is no sign that developments in optics are slowing down or becoming less interesting. We confidently expect that, just like their predecessors, future volumes of Progress in Optics will faithfully record the most important advances that are being made in optics and related fields.
The ideas of Fourier have made their way into every branch of mathematics and mathematical physics, from the theory of numbers to quantum mechanics. Fourier Series and Integrals focuses on the extraordinary power and flexibility of Fourier's basic series and integrals and on the astonishing variety of applications in which it is the chief tool. It presents a mathematical account of Fourier ideas on the circle and the line, on finite commutative groups, and on a few important noncommutative groups. A wide variety of exercises are placed in nearly every section as an integral part of the text.
The second volume in a series which aims to focus on advances in computational biology. This volume discusses such topics as: statistical analysis of protein sequences; progress in large-scale sequence analysis; and the architecture of loops in proteins.
The technical advances in molecular biology have endowed us with a
wealth of knowledge, which has allowed us to identify the cause of
diseases not only at a single gene level but at a greater
magnitude, where a substitution or deletion of a single base pair
can be identified. Our present task is to establish a clear link
between phenotype and nucleotide sequence. Obviously, a gene is no
longer an imaginary entity. Recent discoveries in a number of
bewildering traits, whose inheritance do not follow simple
mendelian rules, have caused much amazement. For example, fragile
X-syndrome, spine and bulbar muscular atrophy and myotic dystrophy
arise from "triples repeat mutation" and amplification in future
generations. Genetic diseases which are inherited, can now be
diagnosed prenatally; an idea that was once inconceivable.
Spatial Neglect is one of the few areas in Neuropsychology where clinicians, psychologists and animal experimenters have succeeded in adopting a common language. The result of interaction between these three approaches has been some important new advances, which are presented in this volume. Apart from its clinical significance in neuropsychology, Spatial Neglect raises important questions in the field of behavioral neurosciences. In this volume, three aspects are examined: a) normal subjects, where new findings on spatial behavior are described. b) brain-lesioned subjects, where the classical studies on neglect are reconsidered in the light of new findings. c) animals, where new experimental situations allow a deeper understanding of the neural substrate.
From the Preface
This is the 19th volume in a series of reviews of research in organizational behaviour. This volume covers such topics as: motivational traits and skills; the dispositional causes of job satisfaction; the ways and means of studying group processes; and managing grand scale construction projects.
The contributors to this text, who are all biochemists who worked during the 1950s and 60s, describe what appears to them to be the conceptually significant developments in biochemistry since the mid 1950s and how these were achieved. Their aim is to make their subjects intelligible to other scientists not expert in their field.
The main purpose of this book is to address the statistical issues
for integrating independent studies. There exist a number of papers
and books that discuss the mechanics of collecting, coding, and
preparing data for a meta-analysis, and we do not deal with these.
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