03100nam 22006134a 450 991101897520332120200520144314.09786610648986978128064898412806489889780470042205047004220697804700421990470042192(CKB)1000000000355002(EBL)273997(OCoLC)476017670(SSID)ssj0000266480(PQKBManifestationID)11206713(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000266480(PQKBWorkID)10304824(PQKB)11757582(MiAaPQ)EBC273997(Perlego)2788071(EXLCZ)99100000000035500220051220d2006 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrValidating chromatographic methods a practical guide /David M. BliesnerHoboken, N.J. Wileyc20061 online resource (301 p.)Description based upon print version of record.9780471741473 0471741477 Includes bibliographical references (p. 283) and index.VALIDATING CHROMATOGRAPHIC METHODS; CONTENTS; PREFACE; 1. OVERVIEW OF METHODS VALIDATION; 2. COMPONENTS OF METHODS VALIDATION; 3. STEP 1: METHOD EVALUATION AND FURTHER DEVELOPMENT; 4. STEP 2: FINAL METHOD DEVELOPMENT AND TRIAL METHODS VALIDATION; 5. STEP 3: FORMAL METHODS VALIDATION AND REPORT GENERATION; 6. STEP 4: FORMAL DATA REVIEW AND REPORT ISSUANCE; 7. SUMMARY; APPENDICES; I. GLOSSARY OF METHODS VALIDATION TERMS; II. TEMPLATE FOR AN EXAMPLE METHODS VALIDATION STANDARD OPERATING PROCEDURE (SOP); III. TEMPLATE FOR AN EXAMPLE END-USER REQUIREMENTS QUESTIONNAIREIV. TEMPLATE FOR AN EXAMPLE METHOD REVIEW CHECKLISTV. TEMPLATE FOR AN EXAMPLE STANDARD TEST METHOD; VI. TEMPLATE FOR AN EXAMPLE METHODS VALIDATION PROTOCOL; VII. TEMPLATE FOR AN EXAMPLE METHODS VALIDATION REPORT; REFERENCES; INDEXAll the information and tools needed to set up a successful method validation system Validating Chromatographic Methods brings order and Current Good Manufacturing Practices to the often chaotic process of chromatographic method validation. It provides readers with both the practical information and the tools necessary to successfully set up a new validation system or upgrade a current system to fully comply with government safety and quality regulations. The net results are validated and transferable analytical methods that will serve for extended periods of time with minimalChromatographic analysisValidityScienceMethodologyChromatographic analysisValidity.ScienceMethodology.543/.8Bliesner David M890967MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9911018975203321Validating chromatographic methods4416881UNINA05097nam 22007455 450 991103156150332120251001130539.0981-9500-39-710.1007/978-981-95-0039-0(CKB)41521019000041(MiAaPQ)EBC32323306(Au-PeEL)EBL32323306(DE-He213)978-981-95-0039-0(EXLCZ)994152101900004120251001d2025 u| 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierReading Science/Fiction Practices, Pleasures and Publics /by Amy C. Chambers, Lisa Garforth, Miranda Jeanne Marie Iossifidis, Joanna Verran1st ed. 2025.Singapore :Springer Nature Singapore :Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan,2025.1 online resource (180 pages)Social Sciences Series981-9500-38-9 Chapter 1 Reading science/fiction: an introduction -- Chapter 2 Making science fiction readers -- Chapter 3 Reading together: remaking worlds with science fiction -- Chapter 4 Book Clubs: Bad Bugs and bioscience fictions -- Chapter 5 Research methods, meeting readers: concluding thoughts.This book explores the relationship between reading science in fiction and engaging with science. Focusing on embodied readers and empirical approaches to fiction reading, the authors examine contemporary social, cultural, biographical and political contexts in which science fictions come to matter. Drawing together a distinctive set of research studies and conceptual resources, the book outlines theories, epistemologies and methodologies for understanding how and why we read science fictions and fictions about science. Dr Amy C. Chambers, Manchester Metropolitan University, UK, is a science and screen media scholar focused on the intersection of entertainment media and the public understanding of science. Her research interrogates public and popular cultures of science; marginalised scientific expertise on screen; and women-created science fiction and horror. Her current research project, 'Women Make Science Fiction', constitutes the first comprehensive study of women (inclusive of trans and non-binary) creators of science fiction. Dr Lisa Garforth, Newcastle University, UK, is a sociologist focusing on the relationship between speculative fiction and social futures. A substantial programme of research on Western post-war environmental imaginaries culminated in her monograph Green Utopias: Environmental Hope Before and After Nature (2017). She led the Newcastle part of the 3-year, 3-centre AHRC project 'Unsettling Scientific Stories investigating contemporary reading practices, speculative fiction and science. Dr Miranda Iossifidis, Newcastle University, UK, is a sociologist interested the collective and creative negotiation of environmental futures in everyday urban culture, speculative fiction, and collective action. She is currently working on a project using creative methods to explore climate anxiety and speculative ecofascist present(s) and futures. Joanna Verran is Professor of Microbiology (Emeritus) at Manchester Metropolitan University, UK. She is a Principal Fellow of the HEA and a National Teaching Fellow. Her laboratory research focuses on the interaction of microorganisms and inert surfaces, but she has also published widely on innovative practices in teaching and in public engagement with science. She set up the Bad Bugs Bookclub in 2009 with the aim of engaging scientists and non-scientists in discussion about novels of fiction that feature infectious disease or microorganisms.Social Sciences SeriesScienceSocial aspectsCommunication in scienceScience in popular cultureFictionPopular cultureTechnologySociological aspectsScience and Technology StudiesScience CommunicationPublic Understanding of ScienceFiction LiteraturePopular CultureScience, Technology and SocietyScienceSocial aspects.Communication in science.Science in popular culture.Fiction.Popular culture.TechnologySociological aspects.Science and Technology Studies.Science Communication.Public Understanding of Science.Fiction Literature.Popular Culture.Science, Technology and Society.809.3936Chambers Amy C1850713Garforth Lisa1850714Iossifidis Miranda Jeanne Marie1850715Verran Joanna1850716MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9911031561503321Reading Science4443906UNINA