Data Analysis for Chemists: Applications to QSAR and Chemical Product Design

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Oxford University Press, 1995 - 239 Seiten
Most chemists who wish to interpret and analyse data want to know how to use analytical techniques but are not concerned with the details of statistical theory. This practical guide provides just the information they need, and gives them the necessary tools to use analytical methodseffectively, interpret results, and avoid pitfalls. The most common mathematical and statistical methods used to analyse chemical data are described and explained through the use of a wide range of examples. These are drawn particularly from pharmaceutical and agrochemical design, with emphasis placed on the generation of quantitativestructure-activity relationships. By including multivariate methodology, the book shows chemists how to use and interpret important analytical techniques which are usually reserved for statisticians. This is a "how to" book written for chemists and other scientists who do not need to know the details of statistical theory but who want to use analytical methods, interpret results, and avoid pitfalls.

Autoren-Profil (1995)

One of the most remarkable explorers of the nineteenth century, Livingstone sought first as a missionary and devout Christian to end the slave trade in Africa and then to locate the source of the Nile. In these attempts, he lost his wife, who caught a fever on an expedition in which she joined him. He discovered Victoria Falls and the lands between Nyasa and Tanganyika, encountering other hardships and tragedies in his double quest. He was apparently much beloved by Africans who knew him. He never abated in his efforts on their behalf. His association with Sir Henry Morton Stanley is well known. The latter had been sent to find him by an American newspaper when Livingstone was feared lost. The formal approach of Stanley's first remark on finding him in a remote African village, "Dr. Livingstone, I presume," amused the world, and the greeting became a byword. Stanley was with Livingstone in northern Tanganyika when the latter died. "Missionary Travels" (1857) is essentially the contemporary record of Livingstone's two journeys to northwestern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) in 1851-1853.

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