Bioinformatics - Cambridge University...

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2004 Bioinformatics www.cambridge.org/bioinformatics

Transcript of Bioinformatics - Cambridge University...

Page 1: Bioinformatics - Cambridge University Pressassets.cambridge.org/052191/2946/full_version/0521912946...In this cutting-edge overview, the basic concepts of RNAi biology are discussed,

2004Bioinformatics

www.cambridge.org/bioinformatics

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‘The author does anexcellent job of coveringhigh-level analysis ofmicroarray data … [the book] provides thestatistically naivebiologist with a gentleintroduction to the datatransformations andmanipulations needed to deal with microarrays,and the workedexamples with publiclyavailable data are welldescribed … excellentvalue for any buddingarrayer …’Nature Genetics

GRADUATE TEXTBOOK

Microarray BioinformaticsDov Stekel

• A balanced and comprehensive guide to all microarray bioinformatics, accessible to students from both biology andbioinformatics backgrounds

• Based on the highly successful microarraybioinformatics course at Oxford Universityand written by the course’s director, anexperienced instructor

• Detailed glossary of terms provided by theMicroarray Gene Expression Data Society,who define the standard terms used in thefield internationally

Contents: 1. Microarrays: making them and usingthem; 2. Sequence databases for microarrays;3. Computer design of oligonucleotide probes;4. Image processing; 5. Normalization; 6. Measuringand quantifying microarray variability; 7. Analysis of differentially expressed genes; 8. Analysis ofrelationships between genes, tissues or treatments;9. Classification of tissues and samples;10. Experimental design; 11. Data storage,standards and sharing; Appendix A. Glossary.

2003 • 234 x 177 mm • 280pp • 112 line diagrams4 half-tones • 8 colour plates • 58 tables

0 521 81982 2 • HB • £75.000 521 52587 X • PB • £28.00

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Contents:Part I. Basic RNAi, siRNA andGene Silencing Mechanisms;Part II. Micro RNAS; Part III.Design, Synthesis of siRNAs;Part IV. Vector Development and in vivo, in vitro and in ovoDelivery Methods; Part V. GeneSilencing Model Studies;Part VI. Target Validation;Part VII Therapeutic Development;Part VIII. Drug Development;Part IX. High Through PutAnalysis.

The PhylogeneticHandbookA Practical Approach to DNA and ProteinPhylogenyEdited by Marco Salemi and Anne-Mieke Vandamme

‘… an excellent tutor forundergraduate or post-graduate study, or foranyone seeking to enterthe field … I wouldrecommend this book as a superb primer’Dan Roberts, Microbiology Today

2003 • 253 x 177 mm • 430pp120 line diagrams • 10 half-tones4 colour plates • 20 tables

0 521 80390 X • HB • £40.00

Web Resources:http://www.kuleuven.ac.be/aidslab/

phylogenybook/

FORTHCOMING

RNA Interference TechnologyFrom Basic Science to Drug DevelopmentEdited by Krishnarao AppasaniForword by Andrew Fire

RNA Interference (RNAi) technology has rapidlybecome one of the key methods used in functionalgenomics. In this cutting-edge overview, the basicconcepts of RNAi biology are discussed, as well as thecurrent and potential applications. Leading expertsfrom both academia and industry have contributed to this invaluable reference for graduate students,Post-docs and researchers from academia wanting toinitiate RNAi research in their own labs, as well as forthose working in research and development in biotechand pharmaceutical companies who need tounderstand this emerging technology.2004 228 x 152 mm • 500 pages • 30 colour plates • 100 halftones100 line diagrams

0 521 83677 8 • HB • c. £95.00Publication c. January 2005

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TEXTBOOK

InformationTheory, Inferenceand LearningAlgorithmsDavid J. C. MacKay

Advance Praise:‘This is an extraordinaryand important book,generous with insight andrich with detail in statistics,information theory, andprobabilistic modelingacross a wide swathe ofstandard, creatively original,and delightfully quirkytopics. David MacKay is an uncompromisingly lucidthinker, from whomstudents, faculty andpractitioners all can learn.’Peter Dayan and ZoubinGhahramani, GatsbyComputational NeuroscienceUnit, University College, LondonContents: 1. Introduction toinformation theory; 2. Probability,entropy, and inference; 3. More aboutinference; Part I. Data Compression;Part II. Noisy-Channel Coding; Part III.Further Topics in Information Theory;Part IV. Probabilities and Inference;Part V. Neural Networks; Part VI.Sparse Graph Codes; Part VII.Appendices; Bibliography; Index.

2003 • 246 x 189 mm • 640pp40 tables • 390 exercises • 410 figures1 colour figure

0 521 64298 1 • HB • £30.00

BiologicalSequence AnalysisProbabilistic Models ofProteins and Nucleic AcidsRichard Durbin, Sean R. Eddy,Anders Krogh and GraemeMitchison

‘… fills an important gap in the bioinformaticsliterature and should be required reading foranyone who is interested in doing serious work in biological sequenceanalysis. … This bookseems destined to become a classic.I highly recommend it.’Trends in Biochemical Sciences

1998 • 247 x 174 mm • 368pp100 line diagrams • 50 tables

0 521 62971 3 • PB • £28.00

DNA Microarraysand GeneExpressionFrom Experiments to DataAnalysis and ModelingPierre Baldi and G. Wesley Hatfield

DNA microarrays arerevolutionizing biology andmedicine. This inter-disciplinaryintroduction will be essentialreading for researchers of alldisciplines.‘The book, written by Baldiand Hatfield, is an importantand timely addition to theDNA microarray literature… the first several chaptersof the book provide aneasy-to-digest overview of the current state of DNAmicroarrays.’Briefings in Functional Genomics& Proteomics

2002 • 228 x 152 mm • 230pp16 line diagrams • 1 half-tone16 figures

0 521 80022 6 • HB • £35.00

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NEW EDITION TEXTBOOK

An Introduction to GeneticEngineeringSecond editionDesmond S. T. Nicholl

‘… fills an important niche and should be brought to the attention of upper-levelundergraduate studentsand beginning graduatestudents in any branch ofbiology that makes use ofmolecular techniques.’ASM NewsContents: Preface to the secondedition; 1. Introduction; Part I. TheBasis of Genetic Engineering:2. Introducing molecular biology;3. Working with nucleic acids;4. The tools of the trade; Part II. TheMethodology of Gene Manipulation:5. Host cells and vectors; 6. Cloningstrategies; 7. The polymerase chainreaction; 8. Selection, screening, andanalysis of recombinants; Part III.Genetic Engineering in Action:9. Understanding genes andgenomes; 10. Genetic engineeringand biotechnology; 11. Medical and forensic applications of genemanipulation; 12. Transgenic plantsand animals; 13. The other sort ofcloning; 14. Brave new world orgenetic nightmare?; Suggestions forfurther reading; Using the World WideWeb; Glossary; Index.

Studies in Biology2002 • 228 x 152 mm • 304pp111 line diagrams • 11 half-tones27 tables • 121 figures

0 521 80867 7 • HB • £45.000 521 00471 3 • PB • £16.99

GRADUATE TEXTBOOK

Kernel Methodsfor PatternAnalysisJohn Shawe-Taylor and Nello Cristianini

The kernel functionsmethodology described here provides a powerful and unified framework fordisciplines ranging fromneural networks and patternrecognition to machinelearning and data mining.This book providespractitioners with a largetoolkit of algorithms, kernelsand solutions ready to beimplemented, suitable forstandard pattern discoveryproblems.Contents: Preface; Part I. BasicConcepts: 1. Pattern analysis; 2. Kernelmethods: an overview; 3. Properties ofkernels; 4. Detecting stable patterns;Part II. Pattern Analysis Algorithms:5. Elementary algorithms in featurespace; 6. Pattern analysis using eigen-decompositions; 7. Pattern analysisusing convex optimisation; 8. Ranking,clustering and data visualisation;Part III. Constructing Kernels: 9. Basickernels and kernel types; 10. Kernelsfor text; 11. Kernels for structured data:strings, trees, etc.; 12. Kernels fromgenerative models; Part IV. Appendices;Appendix A. Proof omitted from themain text; Appendix B. Notationalconventions; Appendix C. List ofpattern analysis methods; Appendix D.List of kernels; Bibliography; Index.

2004 • 247 x 174 mm • 476pp 6 tables • 33 figures

0 521 81397 2 • HB • £40.00

ALSO AVAILABLE

An Introduction toSupport Vector Machinesand Other Kernel-basedLearning MethodsNello Cristianini and John Shawe-Taylor

2000 • 247 x 174 mm • 204pp 12 line diagrams • 5 colour plates 25 exercises

0 521 78019 5 • HB • £35.00

For more information on all the books in this leaflet,please visit www.cambridge.org/bioinformatics

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TEXTBOOK

FundamentalGeneticsJohn Ringo

A concise textbook thatexplains major topics of moderngenetics in 42 mini-chapters.Students will find the short,focused chapters approachableand this structure maximisesflexibility for teaching. Ideal forintroductory genetics courses.Contents: 1. Life forms and theirorigins; 2. Nucleic acids; 3. Proteins;4. Simple chromosomes; 5. Chromo-somes of eukarya; 6. Genome content;7. RNA synthesis I: Transcription;8. RNA synthesis II: Processing;9. Abundance of RNAs in bacteria;10. Abundance of RNAs in eukarya;11. Protein synthesis; 12. DNAreplication; 13. Chromosomereplication; 14. Molecular events ofrecombination; 15. Micromutations;16. Repair of altered DNA;17. Reproduction of bacteria;18. Horizontal gene transfer inbacteria; 19. Cell cycles of eukarya;20. Meiosis; 21. Chromosomalabnormalities; 22. Life cycles ofeukarya; 23. Reproduction of viruses;24. Genetic processes in development;25. Sex determination and dosagecompensation; 26. Cancer; 27. Cutting,sorting, and copying DNA; 28. Geno-typing by DNA analysis; 29. Geneticallyengineered organisms; 30. Genomics;31. Behavior of genes and alleles;32. Probability and statistics toolkit;33. Genes, environment, andinteractions; 34. Locating genes;35. Finding and detecting mutations;36. Cytoplasmic inheritance;37. Genetic variation in populations;38. Mutation, migration, and geneticdrift; 39. Natural selection;40. Quantitative genetics;41. Speciation; 42. Molecularevolution and phylogeny; Glossary.

2004 • 246 x 189 mm • 476pp 272 line diagrams

0 521 80934 7 • HB • £80.000 521 00633 3 • PB • £29.95

TEXTBOOK

Anatomy of Gene RegulationA Three-dimensionalStructural AnalysisPanagiotis A. Tsonis

‘… beautiful andinformative three-dimensional images of the nucleosome, RNA andDNA polymerases and theribosome. … a terrific ideaand a laudable effort.’Nature Structural BiologyContents: Preface; 1. A generalintroduction to 3-D structures;2. The higher organization of thegenome; 3. Structure of DNA andtelomeres; 4. DNA replication;5. Transcription in prokaryotes;6. Transcription in eukaryotes;7. Splicing; 8. Modifications of mRNA; 9. Compartmentalization oftranscription; 10. Protein synthesis;11. The birth and death of proteins;Index.

2003 • 253 x 177 mm • 296pp67 line diagrams • 9 half-tones253 colour plates

0 521 80030 7 • HB • £90.000 521 80474 4 • PB • £33.00

TEXTBOOK

Human MolecularBiologyAn Introduction to theMolecular Basis of Health and DiseaseRichard J. Epstein

An introduction to themolecular basis of health and disease, which integratesmolecular genetics andbiochemistry with the latestclinical information.Contents: 1. Introduction – adisease for every gene? Part I.From Molecular Biology to HumanGenetics; Part II. From MolecularGenetics to Human Biochemistry;Part III. From Molecular Biochemistryto Human Cell Biology; Part IV. FromMolecular Cell Biology to HumanPhysiology; Part V. From MolecularPhysiology to Human MolecularBiology; Index.

2002 • 276 x 219 mm • 656pp329 line diagrams • 29 half-tones156 colour plates

0 521 64285 X • HB • £80.000 521 64481 X • PB • £30.00

Human Molecular Biology scoopedboth the Richard Asher prize for bestnew textbook and the overall ‘MedicalBook of the Year’ in the Society ofAuthors and Royal Society of MedicineMedical Book Awards 2003.

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TEXTBOOK

BasicBiotechnologySecond editionEdited by Colin Ratledge andBjorn Kristiansen

‘… the book is wellpresented, with clear andinstructive diagrams anduseful glossaries … a good resource for anybodywho wants to studybiotechnology.’Chemistry in BritainContents: Part I. Fundamentals:1. Public perception of biotechnology;2. Biochemistry and physiology of growth and metabolism;3. Stoichiometry and kinetics ofmicrobial growth from a thermo-dynamic perspective; 4. Genomemanagement and analysis: prokaryotes;5. Genetic engineering: yeasts andfilamentous fungi; 6. Microbial processkinetics; 7. Bioreactor design; 8. Masstransfer; 9. Downstream processing inbiotechnology; 10. Measurement andcontrol; 11. Process economics; PartII. Applications: 12. The business ofbiotechnology; 13. Amino acids;14. Organic acids; 15. Microbialpolyhydroxyalkanoates, polysaccharidesand lipids; 16. Antibiotics; 17. Baker’syeast; 18. Production of enzymes;19. Synthesis of chemicals usingenzymes; 20. Recombinant proteins of high value; 21. Mammalian cellculture; 22. Biotransformations;23. Immunochemical applications;24. Environmental applications.

2001 • 246 x 189 mm • 584pp258 line diagrams • 11 half-tones86 tables • 269 figures

0 521 77917 0 • PB • £30.00

NEW EDITION TEXTBOOK

BiotechnologyFourth editionJohn E. Smith

The ideal textbook for a short introductory course inbiotechnology for beginningundergraduate students.Contents: Preface; 1. The nature of biotechnology; 2. Substrates forbiotechnology; 3. Genetics andbiotechnology; 4. Bioprocess andfermentation technology; 5. Enzymetechnology; 6. Biological fuelgeneration; 7. Single cell protein(SCP); 8. Biotechnology and medicine;9. Environmental biotechnology;10. Biotechnology in the agro andforestry industries; 11. Food andbeverage biotechnology; 12. Protectionof biotechnological inventions;13. Safety in biotechnology; 14. Publicperception of biotechnology: geneticengineering - safety, social, moral andethical considerations; 15. Looking tothe future; Glossary; Further reading;Index.

Studies in Biology2004 • 228 x 152 mm • 284pp 47 line diagrams • 3 half-tones 50 figures

0 521 83332 9 • HB • £45.000 521 54077 1 • PB • £17.95

TEXTBOOK

Principles andTechniques ofPracticalBiochemistryFifth editionEdited by Keith Wilson and John Walker

‘… this book deserves a place in any modernpathology department and brings together a bodyof information which istraditionally scatteredacross several texts …excellent value for money.’Annals of Clinical BiochemistryContents: Preface to the fifthedition; Abbreviations and SI units;1. General principles of biochemicalinvestigations; 2. Molecular biologyand basic techniques; 3. RecombinantDNA and genetic analysis; 4. Immuno-chemical techniques; 5. Centrifugationtechniques; 6. Protein structure,purification and characterisation;7. Biomolecular interactions I. Enzymes;8. Biomolecular interactions II. Cellsurface receptors and transporters;9. Spectroscopic techniques I. Atomicand molecular electronic spectroscopy;10. Spectroscopic techniques II.Vibrational spectroscopy and electronicand nuclear spin orientation inmagnetic fields; 11. Mass spectrometrictechniques; 12. Electrophoretictechniques; 13. Chromatographictechniques; 14. Radioisotopetechniques; 15. Electrochemicaltechniques.

2000 • 246 x 189 mm • 802pp 298 line diagrams • 13 half-tones 68 tables • 311 figures

0 521 65873 X • PB • £30.00

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GRADUATE TEXTBOOK

InformationTheory, Evolutionand the Origin ofLifeHubert P. Yockey

A timely introduction to theuse of information theory andcoding theory in molecularbiology. The author discusseshow these tools can be usedto analyse the sequences ofthe genome and the proteome,and thereby aid our under-standing of the nature andorigin of life.Contents: 1. The genetic informationsystem; 2. James Watson, Francis Crick,George Gamow and the genetic code;3. The central dogma of molecularbiology; 4. The measure of informationcontent in the genetic message;5. Communication of informationfrom the genome to the proteome;6. The information content or complexityof protein families; 7. Evolution of the genetic code and its moderncharacteristics; 8. Haeckel’s Urschliemand the role of the central dogma inthe origin of life; 9. Philosophicalapproaches to the origin of life;10. Error catastrophe and thehypercycles of Eigen and Schuster;11. Randomness, complexity, theunknowable and the impossible;12. Does evolution need an intelligentdesigner?

2005 • 228 x 152 mm • 400 pp 5 halftones • 50 line diagrams

0 521 80293 8 • HB • c. £30.00Publication c. Jan 2005

TEXTBOOK

MathematicalModels in BiologyAn IntroductionElizabeth S. Allman and John A. Rhodes

Focuses on discrete modelsacross a variety of biologicalsubdisciplines, including linearand non-linear models ofpopulations, Markov modelsof molecular evolution,phylogenetic tree construction,genetics, and infectiousdisease models. The bookassumes no calculus. Computerinvestigations with MATLABare incorporated throughout.Contents: 1. Dynamic modeling withdifferent equations; 2. Linear modelsof structured populations; 3. Non-linearmodels of interactions; 4. Modelingmolecular evolution; 5. Constructingphylogenetic trees; 6. Genetics;7. Infectious disease modeling;8. Curve fitting and biologicalmodeling; Appendix A. Basic analysisof numerical data; Appendix B. Forfurther reading.

2003 • 228 x 152 mm • 384pp65 line diagrams • 40 tables375 exercises

0 521 81980 6 • HB • £65.000 521 52586 1 • PB • £24.99

Pathway Analysisand Optimizationin MetabolicEngineeringNéstor V. Torres and Eberhard O. Voit

This book introduces methodsof optimizing biochemicalsystems of biotechnologicalrelevance. It examines thedevelopment of strategies for manipulating metabolicpathways and discusses thedesign and analysis of systemsmodels.2002 • 247 x 174 mm • 320pp56 line diagrams • 11 half-tones28 tables

0 521 80038 2 • HB • £65.00

ComputationalAnalysis ofBiochemicalSystemsA Practical Guide forBiochemists andMolecular BiologistsEberhard O. Voit

‘… is not only a fine, but along overdue, book … thisis an excellent introductionto a complex field, which Iam happy to recommend toanyone.’Chemistry in Britain

2000 • 253 x 203 mm • 544pp182 line diagrams • 37 tables235 exercises

0 521 78087 X • HB • £90.000 521 78579 0 • PB • £33.00

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Data Analysis andGraphics Using RAn Example-basedApproachJohn Maindonald and John Braun

Text explaining basic statisticalmethods in the R programminglanguage.Cambridge Series in Statistical andProbabilistic Mathematics, 102003 • 253 x 177 mm • 386pp26 tables • 79 exercises • 52 figures6 colour figures

0 521 81336 0 • HB • £42.50

GRADUATE TEXTBOOK

Spiking NeuronModelsSingle Neurons,Populations, PlasticityWulfram Gerstner and Werner M. Kistler

An introduction to spikingneurons for advanced students.Contents: 1. Introduction; Part I. SingleNeuron Models; Part II. PopulationModels; Part III. Models of SynapticPlasticity.

2002 • 247 x 174 mm • 494pp162 figures

0 521 81384 0 • HB • £75.000 521 89079 9 • PB • £26.00

Flexible PatternMatching inStringsPractical On-Line SearchAlgorithms for Texts andBiological SequencesGonzalo Navarro and Mathieu Raffinot

‘If you need efficientpattern matching for anykind of string then this isthe only book I know thatcomes even close toproviding you [with] thetools for the job.’The Journal of the ACCU

2002 • 253 x 177 mm • 232pp90 line diagrams

0 521 81307 7 • HB • £40.00

Numerical Recipesin C++The Art of ScientificComputingSecond editionWilliam H. Press,Saul A. Teukolsky,William T. Vetterling and Brian P. Flannery

‘… an instant ‘classic,’ a book that should bepurchased and read byanyone who uses numericalmethods …’American Journal of Physics

2002 • 246 x 168 mm • 1032pp100 line diagrams

0 521 75033 4 • HB • £45.00

For more information on this and theother Numerical Recipes products,including the full source code CD-ROMs, please visitwww.cambridge.org/numericalrecipes

GRADUATE TEXTBOOK

Genomic PerlFrom BioinformaticsBasics to Working CodeRex A. Dwyer

Explains many computationalmolecular biology problemsand how to implementsolutions to them in Perl.Contents: 1. The central dogma;2. RNA secondary structure;3. Comparing DNA sequences;4. Statistical models; 5. Substitutionmatrices for amino acids; 6. Sequencedatabases; 7. Local alignment and theBLAST heuristic; 8. Statistics of BLASTdatabase searches; 9. Multiplesequence alignment I; 10. Multiplesequence alignment II; 11. Phylogenyreconstruction; 12. Protein motifs and PROSITE; 13. Fragment assembly;14. Coding sequence prediction withdicodon frequencies; 15. Satelliteidentification; 16. Restrictionmapping; 17. Hybridization mapping;18. Genome rearrangement: gatesand hurdles; 19. Now what?;A. Drawing RNA cloverleaves;B. Space-saving strategies foralignment; C. A data structure fordisjoint sets; D. A data structure forset operations.

2003 • 253 x 177 mm • 352pp100 exercises

0 521 80177 X • HB • £45.00

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NEW IN PAPERBACK

Bayesian MethodsAn Analysis forStatisticians andInterdisciplinaryResearchersThomas Leonard and John S. J. Hsu

‘The book makes interestingreading and the breadth of ideas tackled by theauthors is enormous …deserves a place in theuniversity library as well as in the personal librariesof researchers who areinterested in the Bayesianapproach.’The Statistician

Cambridge Series in Statistical andProbabilistic Mathematics, 52001 • 253 x 177 mm • 348pp 69 line diagrams • 27 tables150 exercises

0 521 00414 4 • PB • £24.99

GRADUATE TEXTBOOK

Mathematics ofGenome AnalysisJerome K. PercusNew York University

‘… a suitable textbook for a mathematics courseaimed at raising awarenessof the challenges that areposed by computationalbiology.’Ralf Bundschuh, Physics TodayContents: Preface; 1. DecomposingDNA; 2. Recomposing DNA;3. Sequence statistics; 4. Sequencecomparison; 5. Spatial structure anddynamics of DNA; Bibliography;Index.

Cambridge Studies in MathematicalBiology, 172001 • 228 x 152 mm • 150pp

0 521 58517 1 • HB • £40.000 521 58526 0 • PB • £14.99

IndependentComponentAnalysisPrinciples and PracticeEdited by Stephen Roberts andRichard Everson

‘… is ideal for graduatestudents and researchers in the field.’Zentralblatt MATH

2001 • 228 x 152 mm • 352pp 99 figures

0 521 79298 3 • HB • £50.00

Algorithms onStrings, Trees andSequencesComputer Science andComputational BiologyDan Gusfield

‘… anybody working inbio-computing will find thebook of immense practical,scientific and commercialimportance …’Times Higher EducationSupplement

1997 • 253 x 177 mm • 554pp145 line diagrams

0 521 58519 8 • HB • £50.00

Bootstrap Methods and their ApplicationA. C. Davison and D. V. Hinkley

‘… an extremely readable book. I wouldhave no hestitation inrecommending it as themost useful referenceavailable for peoplewishing to learn or teach this subject.’Royal Statistical Society Bulletin

Cambridge Series in Statistical andProbabilistic Mathematics, 11997 • 253 x 177 mm • 592pp 120 line diagrams • 70 tables200 exercises

0 521 57471 4 • PB • £32.00

The Nature ofMathematicalModelingNeil GershenfeldMassachusetts Institute ofTechnology

‘… a great compendium oftechniques.’Science

1998 • 247 x 174 mm • 356pp93 line diagrams

0 521 57095 6 • HB • £35.00

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Behavioral andBrain SciencesBehavioral and Brain Sciences,with its imposing ISI impactfactor of 14.25, is theinternationally renownedjournal with the innovativeformat known as Open PeerCommentary.www.journals.cambridge.org/jid_BBS

VisualNeuroscienceVisual Neuroscience is aninternational journal devotedto the publication of high-quality reports of experimentaland theoretical research inbasic visual neuroscience.www.journals.cambridge.org/jid_VNS

Quarterly Reviewsof BiophysicsQRB publishes invited reviewarticles covering the wholefield of biophysics, frommicroscopic imaging of cells to enyzme biochemistry,and has gained a worldwidereputation (demonstrated by its high ranking in the ISI Science Citation Index) as a forum for general andspecialised communicationbetween biophysicists workingin various areas.www.journals.cambridge.org/jid_QRB

Journals

Genetical ResearchGenetical Research is aprestigious, well-establishedjournal which publishesoriginal work of high qualityand wide interest on allaspects of genetics.www.journals.cambridge.org/jid_GRH

NEW

Biofilmswww.journals.cambridge.org/jid_BFM

Combinatorics,Probability andComputingwww.journals.cambridge.org/jid_CPC

MathematicalStructures inComputer Sciencewww.journals.cambridge.org/jid_MSC

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June 2004

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