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George Andrews is one of the most influential figures in number
theory and combinatorics. In the theory of partitions and
q-hypergeometric series and in the study of Ramanujan's work, he is
the unquestioned leader. To suitably honor him during his 70th
birthday year, an International Conference on Combinatory Analysis
was held at The Pennsylvania State University during December 5-7,
2008. Three issues of the Ramanujan Journal comprising Volume 23
were published in 2010 as the refereed proceedings of that
conference. The Ramanujan Journal was proud to bring out that
volume honoring one of its Founding Editors. In view of the great
interest that the mathematical community has in the influential
work of Andrews, it was decided to republish Volume 23 of The
Ramanujan Journal in this book form, so that the refereed
proceedings are more readily available for those who do not
subscribe to the journal but wish to possess this volume. As a
fitting tribute to George Andrews, many speakers from the
conference contributed research papers to this volume which deals
with a broad range of areas that signify the research interests of
George Andrews. In reproducing Volume 23 of The Ramanujan Journal
in this book form, we have included two papers-one by Hei-Chi Chan
and Shaun Cooper, and another by Ole Warnaar-which were intended
for Volume 23 of The Ramanujan Journal, but appeared in other
issues. The enormous productivity of George Andrews remains
unabated in spite of the passage of time. His immensely fertile
mind continues to pour forth seminal ideas year after year. He has
two research papers in this volume. May his eternal youthfulness
and his magnificent research output continue to inspire and
influence researchers in the years ahead.
George Andrews is one of the most influential figures in number
theory and combinatorics. In the theory of partitions and
q-hypergeometric series and in the study of Ramanujan's work, he is
the unquestioned leader. To suitably honor him during his 70th
birthday year, an International Conference on Combinatory Analysis
was held at The Pennsylvania State University during December 5-7,
2008. Three issues of the Ramanujan Journal comprising Volume 23
were published in 2010 as the refereed proceedings of that
conference. The Ramanujan Journal was proud to bring out that
volume honoring one of its Founding Editors. In view of the great
interest that the mathematical community has in the influential
work of Andrews, it was decided to republish Volume 23 of The
Ramanujan Journal in this book form, so that the refereed
proceedings are more readily available for those who do not
subscribe to the journal but wish to possess this volume. As a
fitting tribute to George Andrews, many speakers from the
conference contributed research papers to this volume which deals
with a broad range of areas that signify the research interests of
George Andrews. In reproducing Volume 23 of The Ramanujan Journal
in this book form, we have included two papers-one by Hei-Chi Chan
and Shaun Cooper, and another by Ole Warnaar-which were intended
for Volume 23 of The Ramanujan Journal, but appeared in other
issues. The enormous productivity of George Andrews remains
unabated in spite of the passage of time. His immensely fertile
mind continues to pour forth seminal ideas year after year. He has
two research papers in this volume. May his eternal youthfulness
and his magnificent research output continue to inspire and
influence researchers in the years ahead.
This is a new release of the original 1962 edition.
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
Myosins are a diverse superfamily of molecular motor proteins,
which share the ability to reversibly bind actin and hydrolyse
MgATP. They are capable of either translocating actin filaments or
translocating vesicles or other cargo on fixed actin filaments.
There are currently 15 distinct classes in the myosins superfamily,
based on sequence homology. Myosin II and myosin I proteins are
familiar and well studied; while Classes III-XV are less well
characterized. All myosins examined to date are multimeric and
appear to possess at least three functional domains, a head, neck,
and tail. Myosins (second edition) explores the structure and
functional properties of myosins, their regulation, and mutational
analysis. It has been thoroughly updated since the first edition
was published in 1995 including sections on the three additional
classes defined by new sequences, information provided by the
crystal structure of seven new Dicytostelium motor domains, and
data from new techniques such as molecular imaging and tagging
proteins with GFP 20. The three human diseases that are now known
to be linked to mutations in different myosin heavy or light chains
are also covered, including more than 50 mutations associated with
hyperotrophic cardiomyopathy.
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