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Cambridge University Press (10)
Funding your Career in Science
From Research Idea to Personal Grant
2013 || Paperback || Ritsert C. Jansen || Cambridge University Press
How can you get the funding to establish or consolidate a career in science? This concise guide offers step-by-step advice, real-life stories and practical exercises to help you prepare effective career grant applications and optimise your funding opportunities. A must-read for students, postdocs, professors, and anyone else serious about science.
How to Write and Publish a Scientific Paper
2017 || Paperback || Barbara Gastel e.a. || Cambridge University Press
An essential guide for succeeding in today's competitive environment, this book provides beginning scientists and experienced researchers with practical advice on writing about their work and getting published. This brand new, updated edition also includes a new chapter on editing one's own work, a section on publicizing and archiving one's paper, and updates on authorship, including information on new authorship criteria and on the author identification number ORCID. The book guides readers ...
An Introduction to Uncertainty in Measurement
Using the GUM (Guide to the Expression of Uncertainty in Measurement)
2006 || Paperback || L. Kirkup e.a. || Cambridge University Press
Measurement shapes scientific theories, characterises improvements in manufacturing processes and promotes efficient commerce. In concert with measurement is uncertainty, and students in science and engineering need to identify and quantify uncertainties in the measurements they make. This book introduces measurement and uncertainty to second and third year students of science and engineering.
Its approach relies on the internationally recognised and recommended guidelines for calculating and...
Measurement in Medicine
A Practical Guide
2011 || Paperback || Henrica C. W. de Vet e.a. || Cambridge University Press
The success of the Apgar score demonstrates the astounding power of an appropriate clinical instrument. This down-to-earth book provides practical advice, underpinned by theoretical principles, on developing and evaluating measurement instruments in all fields of medicine. It equips you to choose the most appropriate instrument for specific purposes.
The book covers measurement theories, methods and criteria for evaluating and selecting instruments. It provides methods to assess measurement p...
A Student's Guide to Vectors and Tensors
2011 || Paperback || Daniel A. Fleisch || Cambridge University Press
Adopting the same approach used in his highly popular A Student's Guide to Maxwell's Equations, Fleisch explains vectors and tensors in plain language to give undergraduate and beginning graduate students a better understanding of how to use vectors and tensors to solve problems in physics and engineering.
Quantitative Models in Marketing Research
2010 || Paperback || Philip Hans Franses e.a. || Cambridge University Press
Advances in data collection and data storage techniques have enabled marketing researchers to study the individual characteristics of a large range of transactions and purchases, in particular the effects of household-specific characteristics. This 2001 book presents important and practically relevant quantitative models for marketing research. Each model is presented in detail with a self-contained discussion, which includes: a demonstration of the mechanics of the model, empirical analysis,...
Research Methods for Science
2011 || Paperback || Michael P. Marder || Cambridge University Press
A unique introduction to the design, analysis, and presentation of scientific projects, this is an essential textbook for undergraduate majors in science and mathematics. The textbook gives an overview of the main methods used in scientific research, including hypothesis testing, the measurement of functional relationships, and observational research. It describes important features of experimental design, such as the control of errors, instrument calibration, data analysis, laboratory safety...
An Introduction to the Philosophy of Science
2014 || Paperback || Kent W. Staley || Cambridge University Press
This book guides readers by gradual steps through the central concepts and debates in the philosophy of science. Using concrete examples from the history of science, Kent W. Staley shows how seemingly abstract philosophical issues are relevant to important aspects of scientific practice.
Structured in two parts, the book first tackles the central concepts of the philosophy of science, such as the problem of induction, falsificationism, and underdetermination, and important figures and movemen...
Programming in Haskell / 2nd edition
2016 || Paperback || Graham Hutton || Cambridge University Press
Haskell is a purely functional language that allows programmers to rapidly develop clear, concise, and correct software. The language has grown in popularity in recent years, both in teaching and in industry. This book is based on the author's experience of teaching Haskell for more than twenty years.
All concepts are explained from first principles and no programming experience is required, making this book accessible to a broad spectrum of readers. While Part I focuses on basic concepts, Pa...
Representing and Intervening
Introductory Topics in the Philosophy of Natural Science
1983 || Paperback || Ian Hacking || Cambridge University Press
This 1983 book is a lively and clearly written introduction to the philosophy of natural science, organized around the central theme of scientific realism. It has two parts. 'Representing' deals with the different philosophical accounts of scientific objectivity and the reality of scientific entities.
The views of Kuhn, Feyerabend, Lakatos, Putnam, van Fraassen, and others, are all considered. 'Intervening' presents the first sustained treatment of experimental science for many years and uses...