Overview
- Editors:
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Richard L. Doty
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University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, USA
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Dietland Müller-Schwarze
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College of Environmental Science and Forestry, State University of New York, Syracuse, USA
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Table of contents (92 chapters)
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Semiochemicals and the Major Histocompatibility Complex
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- C. Jo Manning, Wayne K. Potts, Edward K. Wakeland, Donald A. Dewsbury
Pages 229-235
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- Heather M. Schellinck, Richard E. Brown
Pages 237-241
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Semiochemicals and Endocrine Processes
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Front Matter
Pages 243-243
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- S. A. Pelengaris, D. H. Abbott, J. Barrett, H. D. M. Mocre
Pages 253-257
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- Vladimir E. Sokolov, Nina Yu. Vasilieva, Edvard P. Zinkevich
Pages 259-262
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- Fan Zhiqin, John G. Vandenbergh
Pages 263-266
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- V. E. Sokolov, V. V. Voznessenskaya, E. P. Zinkevich
Pages 267-270
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- A. Marchlewska-Koj, M. Kruczek, M. Zacharczuk-Kakietek
Pages 271-276
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- Rhonda R. Gardner, John J. Lepri, Robert E. Gatten Jr.
Pages 277-280
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- V. V. Voznessenskaya, C. J. Wysocki, E. P. Zinkevich
Pages 281-284
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- T. M. Dmitrieva, P. L. Katsel, R. B. Valeyev, V. A. Ostroumov, Y. P. Kozlov
Pages 285-287
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Chemical Repellents and Chemosensory Aversions
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Front Matter
Pages 289-289
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- Pankaj S. Shah, J. Russell Mason, Larry Clark
Pages 291-296
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- Federico Bermúdez-Rattoni, Martha L. Escobar, Ana Luisa Piña, Ricardo Tapia, Juan Carlos López-García, Marcia Hiriart
Pages 297-303
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- E. Vernet-Maury, B. Constant, J. Chanel
Pages 305-310
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- J. Russell Mason, Larry Clark, Pankaj S. Shah
Pages 311-317
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- Michael L. Avery, David G. Decker, Curtis O. Nelms
Pages 319-322
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- Richard A. Dolbeer, Paul P. Woronecki, Roger W. Bullard
Pages 323-330
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Behavior and Chemically-Medicated Social Communication
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Front Matter
Pages 331-331
About this book
This volume is an up-to-date treatise of chemosensory vertebrate research performed by over 200 scientists from 22 countries. Importantly, data from over 25 taxa of vertebrates are presented, including those from human beings. Unlike other volumes on this topic, a significant nurober of the contributions come from leading workers in the former Soviet Union and reflect studies within a wide variety of disciplines, including behavior, biochemistry, ecology, endocrinology, genetics, psychophysics, and morphol ogy. Most of the studies described in this volume were presented at the Chemical Signals in Vertbrates VI (CSV VI) symposium held at the University of Pennsylvania in the summer of 1991. This international symposium was the largest and the most recent of a series of six such symposia, the first of which was held in Saratoga Springe, New York (June 6-9, 1976) and the last in Oxford, England (August 8-10, 1988). Unlike the previous symposia, Chemical Signals in Vertabrates VI lasted a full week, reflecting the increased number of participants and the desire of many to present their research findings orally to the group as a whole.
Editors and Affiliations
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University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, USA
Richard L. Doty
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College of Environmental Science and Forestry, State University of New York, Syracuse, USA
Dietland Müller-Schwarze