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Buy Biomechanics At Micro and Nanoscale Levels by Hiroshi Wada available and for sale on Brightsurf
| View Larger Image | Biomechanics At Micro and Nanoscale Levels by Hiroshi Wada
| | List Price: | $67.00 |  | | Available: | Usually ships in 24 hours |  | |  | | Sales Rank: | 2478466 | | Studio: | World Scientific Publishing Company |  | | Binding: | Hardcover | | Number Of Pages: | 173 | | Publication Date: | March 30, 2005 | | Publisher: | World Scientific Publishing Company |
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EDITORIAL REVIEWS | Product Description This book is essential reading for those interested in understanding current research trends in biomechanics at micro- and nanoscale levels. It details the research carried out to date in this field by fourteen prominent researchers as part of a four-year government supported project which commenced in 2003. The coverage includes four broad areas: cell mechanics, cell response to mechanical stimulation, tissue engineering, and computational biomechanics. |
CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 3.0 based on 1 review)
| Needs substantial revision  This is collection of 14 manuscripts written by Japanese scientists and distributed among the subjects "Cell Mechanics," "Cell Response to Mechanical Stimulation," "Tissue Engineering," and "Computational Biomechanics." After a few pages of reading, I quickly became frustrated by the typographical and grammatical errors prevalent in almost every manuscript. Improperly or inaccurately labeled figures, malapropisms, and obvious spelling errors all create confustion and obscure the authors' ideas. I am willing to forgive clunky English, but a simple, professional review of the papers before publishing would have corrected a lot of the errors and made the book as a whole easier to read.
As for the content, the manuscripts cover some interesting territory. The main idea that resonates through all the manuscripts and is stated in the introduction is that interactions on the micro- and nano-scale amongst cellular constituents are responsible for the wide range of observed phenomena. This idea seems reasonable, and many of the papers effectively advance the idea to some extent. However, the authors explicitly exclude the importance of the genetic code in influencing these interactions, which I find baffling. Genetics must contribute on some level! Perhaps this is just another example of an oversight in translation.
The price of this book is high considering that the book seems so hastily thrown together. I believe the book would be much more effective if the material and data in the manuscripts were collected, rewritten, and reorganized into a part-and-chapter format with consistent figures and professionally proofread English. August 22, 2006 | |
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