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The electric utility industry and its stakeholders in the.United
States appear to be at a critical juncture in time. Powerful forces
of global proportions are propelling the industry instinctively and
in a secular fashion towards restructuring. That the industry will
change is a fait accomplii. The nature and timing of the change is
still a matter of intense debate, however. Because of the evolution
of the industry into its present-day form, i.e. regulated local
monopolies in their designated franchise service territories, the
relative roles and expectations of various institutions would have
to change to conform to the new state in the future. In either
encouraging, or allowing this change to happen, society is
essentially saying that future societal welfare would be better
served by the changed structure contemplated. What that assumption
translates into in more direct terms is that creation of future
wealth would be better accomplished through redistribution of
wealth today. Thoughtful individuals recognize the enormous
responsibility placed upon the various entities empowered with
jurisdiction over the timing and nature of the structural change.
They are trying hard to bring analytical rigor to bear on the
debate. One very critical element of this debate on restructuring
is the issue of the treatment of transmission. The issue has been
variously labeled transmission access, or pricing. Volumes have
been written and spoken on this topic.
This volume contains a number of contributions, which concern basic
issues in the field of brain-behavioural development in the human,
especially with regard to the young child. They have been written
by distinguished scientists, active in this field, who have all
been participating in an Erasmus teachers exchange program,
entitled 'Biopsychology of Development' (ICP-NL-3026/14). This
volume is the product of this cooperation. The book is intended for
scientists in this and related fields as well as for graduate
students and advanced undergraduates, as a means of updating their
knowledge about human brain-behaviour development. It offers a
contemporary review, methodologically and theoretically, of some
basic issues in early human brain-behaviour development. Attention
is paid to normal development and also to deviance as exemplified
by discussions on child abuse and on early development of preterms
and children of deaf mothers. For the title of the book we have
choosen for the term 'Developmental Psychology' with as a subtitle
'biopsychological perspectives' in order to express our interest in
the basic requirements in the organism for an optimal adaptation
during ontogeny as well as in the mechanisms underlying maladaptive
behaviour. The term may indicate that we are not just focusing on
'higher brain functions' which would be suggested by the term
'Developmental Neuropsychology' . Further, it is meant to express
our interest in the integrated study of normal and deviant
development, without a particular focus on abnormality, which would
be suggested by the term 'Developmental Psychopathology'.
The electric utility industry and its stakeholders in the.United
States appear to be at a critical juncture in time. Powerful forces
of global proportions are propelling the industry instinctively and
in a secular fashion towards restructuring. That the industry will
change is a fait accomplii. The nature and timing of the change is
still a matter of intense debate, however. Because of the evolution
of the industry into its present-day form, i.e. regulated local
monopolies in their designated franchise service territories, the
relative roles and expectations of various institutions would have
to change to conform to the new state in the future. In either
encouraging, or allowing this change to happen, society is
essentially saying that future societal welfare would be better
served by the changed structure contemplated. What that assumption
translates into in more direct terms is that creation of future
wealth would be better accomplished through redistribution of
wealth today. Thoughtful individuals recognize the enormous
responsibility placed upon the various entities empowered with
jurisdiction over the timing and nature of the structural change.
They are trying hard to bring analytical rigor to bear on the
debate. One very critical element of this debate on restructuring
is the issue of the treatment of transmission. The issue has been
variously labeled transmission access, or pricing. Volumes have
been written and spoken on this topic.
This volume contains a number of contributions, which concern basic
issues in the field of brain-behavioural development in the human,
especially with regard to the young child. They have been written
by distinguished scientists, active in this field, who have all
been participating in an Erasmus teachers exchange program,
entitled 'Biopsychology of Development' (ICP-NL-3026/14). This
volume is the product of this cooperation. The book is intended for
scientists in this and related fields as well as for graduate
students and advanced undergraduates, as a means of updating their
knowledge about human brain-behaviour development. It offers a
contemporary review, methodologically and theoretically, of some
basic issues in early human brain-behaviour development. Attention
is paid to normal development and also to deviance as exemplified
by discussions on child abuse and on early development of preterms
and children of deaf mothers. For the title of the book we have
choosen for the term 'Developmental Psychology' with as a subtitle
'biopsychological perspectives' in order to express our interest in
the basic requirements in the organism for an optimal adaptation
during ontogeny as well as in the mechanisms underlying maladaptive
behaviour. The term may indicate that we are not just focusing on
'higher brain functions' which would be suggested by the term
'Developmental Neuropsychology' . Further, it is meant to express
our interest in the integrated study of normal and deviant
development, without a particular focus on abnormality, which would
be suggested by the term 'Developmental Psychopathology'.
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