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1

Computer network time synchronization. Boca Raton, FL: Taylor&Francis, 2005.

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2

Lu, Xin Biao. Synchronization in complex networks. New York: Nova Science Publisher's, 2011.

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3

Computer network time synchronization: The Network Time Protocol on Earth and in space. 2nd ed. Boca Raton: Taylor & Francis, 2011.

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4

Krichak, M. O. Input format guidelines for world radiometric network data. [Geneva]: World Meteorological Organization, 1987.

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5

Winer, Dov. Global Jewish networking handbook. Jerusalem: Department of Information, World Zionist Organization, 1994.

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6

Centre, World Radiation Data. Guidelines on the quality control of data from the world radiometric network. [Geneva]: World Meteorological Organization, 1987.

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7

Sugita, Shigeharu. Global digital museum (GDM) for museum education on the Internet. Osaka: National Museum of Ethnology, 2002.

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8

Hildén, Jonatan, and Laura Koivunen-Niemi. Learn to Create a Bullet Chart in Python With Data From Global Footprint Network (2016). 1 Oliver’s Yard, 55 City Road, London EC1Y 1SP United Kingdom: SAGE Publications, Ltd., 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9781529775204.

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9

Grossetete, Patrick. Global IPV6 strategies: From business analysis to operational planning. Indianapolis, IN: Cisco Press, 2008.

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10

Lang, Patricia M. Atmospheric methane data for the period 1986-1986 from the NOAA/CMDL global cooperative flask sampling network. Boulder, Colo: U.S. Dept. of Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Environmental Research Laboratories, Climate Monitoring and Diagnostics Laboratory, 1990.

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11

Lang, Patricia M. Atmospheric methane data for the period 1986-1986 from the NOAA/CMDL global cooperative flask sampling network. Boulder, Colo: U.S. Dept. of Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Environmental Research Laboratories, Climate Monitoring and Diagnostics Laboratory, 1990.

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12

Maria, Fox, Higham Desmond J, Oppo Gian-Luca, and SpringerLink (Online service), eds. Network Science: Complexity in Nature and Technology. London: Springer-Verlag London Limited, 2010.

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13

GCOS/GTOS/HWRP, Expert Meeting (2001 Koblenz Germany). Report of the GCOS/GTOS/HWRP Expert Meeting on the Implementation of a Global Terrestrial Network - Hydrology (GTN-H). Geneva: World Meteorological Organization, 2002.

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14

Information systems for global financial markets: Emerging developments and effects. Hershey, PA: Business Science Reference, 2012.

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15

Lin, Simon C. Production Grids in Asia: Applications, Developments and Global Ties. Boston, MA: Springer-Verlag US, 2010.

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16

Gleeson, Blue Scott, ed. Mapping security: The corporate security sourcebook for today's global economy. Boston: Addison-Wesley, 2005.

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17

Geospatial techniques in urban hazard and disaster analysis. Dordrecht: Springer, 2010.

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18

Mills, David L. Computer Network Time Synchronization: The Network Time Protocol. CRC, 2006.

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19

Robust Data Synchronization With IBM Tivoli Directory Integrator. Ibm, 2006.

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20

Axel, Bücker, and International Business Machines Corporation. International Technical Support Organization., eds. Robust data synchronization with IBM Tivoli Directory Integrator. [Austin, Tex.]: IBM International Technical Support Organization, 2006.

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21

Data Inaccuracy in the Global Transportation Network. Storming Media, 1996.

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22

Data Inaccuracy in the Global Transportation Network. Storming Media, 1996.

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23

Computer Network Time Synchronization: The Network Time Protocol on Earth and in Space (Second Edition). Boca Raton, Florida: CRC Press, LLC, 2010.

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24

Business Data Networks and Security, Global Edition. Pearson Education, Limited, 2015.

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25

Panko, Raymond R., and Julia Panko. Business Data Networks and Security, Global Edition. Pearson Education, Limited, 2015.

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26

Redbooks, IBM. Rdb Synchronization, Transcoding and Ldap Directory Services in IBM Websphere Everyplace Access Version 1.4.1. Ibm, 2002.

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27

William, Stallings. Cryptography and Network Security: Principles and Practice, Global Edition. Pearson Higher Education, 2016.

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28

K, Luke Nancy, and Intelligent Buildings Institute Foundation, eds. Global protocol review & end-user needs analysis. Washington, DC: The Foundation, 1993.

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29

M, Lang Patricia, and Climate Monitoring and Diagnostics Laboratory (U.S.), eds. Atmospheric methane data for 1989-1992 from the NOAA/CMDL global cooperative air sampling network. Boulder, Colo: U.S. Dept. of Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Environmental Research Laboratories, Climate Monitoring and Diagnostics Laboratory, 1994.

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30

M, Lang Patricia, and Climate Monitoring and Diagnostics Laboratory (U.S.), eds. Atmospheric methane data for 1989-1992 from the NOAA/CMDL global cooperative air sampling network. Boulder, Colo: U.S. Dept. of Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Environmental Research Laboratories, Climate Monitoring and Diagnostics Laboratory, 1994.

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31

Atmospheric methane data for 1989-1992 from the NOAA/CMDL global cooperative air sampling network. Boulder, Colo: U.S. Dept. of Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Environmental Research Laboratories, Climate Monitoring and Diagnostics Laboratory, 1994.

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32

Global IPv6 Strategies: From Business Analysis to Operational Planning (Network Business). Cisco Press, 2008.

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33

(Editor), Radha Poovendran, Cliff Wang (Editor), and Sumit Roy (Editor), eds. Secure Localization and Time Synchronization for Wireless Sensor and Ad Hoc Networks (Advances in Information Security). Springer, 2006.

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34

Climate radiation factors monitoring: (based on the data of the World Surface Observational Network) = Monitoring radiat͡s︡ionnykh faktorov klimata : (po dannym Mirovoĭ nazemnoĭ seti stant͡s︡iĭ). Leningrad: World Radiation Data Centre, 1990.

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35

Lin, Simon C., and Eric Yen. Production Grids in Asia: Applications, Developments and Global Ties. Springer, 2010.

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36

Lin, Simon C., and Eric Yen. Production Grids in Asia: Applications, Developments and Global Ties. Springer, 2014.

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37

Patterson, Tom, and Scott Gleeson Blue. Mapping Security: The Corporate Security Sourcebook for Today's Global Economy (Symantec Press). Addison-Wesley Professional, 2004.

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38

Lu, Yongmei, and Pamela S. Showalter. Geospatial Techniques in Urban Hazard and Disaster Analysis. Springer, 2009.

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39

Taferner, Manfred. Wireless Internet access over GSM and UMTS. 2002.

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40

Swire, Peter, and Justin Hemmings. Stakeholders in Reform of the Global System for Mutual Legal Assistance. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190685515.003.0021.

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This chapter briefly explains the reasons that Mutual Legal Assistance Treaties (MLATs) and other forms of trans-border access to electronic data are vital and becoming increasingly more so for law enforcement in this age of globalized evidence. It then presents the goals of key stakeholders in MLAT reform: national governments other than the United States; the US government, both for law enforcement and other goals; technology companies, such as email and social network providers; and civil society, seeking goals including privacy, free speech, and democracy. This chapter is part of a broader research and law reform project on law enforcement access to electronic evidence held in other nations. Our ultimate goal is to propose reforms (or meaningful alternatives) to the Mutual Legal Assistance (MLA) system. Any such reforms, however, will have to be built on an accurate understanding of the incentives and perspectives of the major stakeholders.
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41

Blömer, Michael, Stefan Riedel, Miguel John Versluys, and Engelbert Winter, eds. Common Dwelling Place of all the Gods. Commagene in its Local, Regional and Global Hellenistic Context. Franz Steiner Verlag, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.25162/9783515129268.

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The history and archaeology of Hellenistic Commagene is a rich field of study, not in the least because of the remarkable monuments and inscriptions of king Antiochos I (c. 70–36 BC). Over the last decades important new work has been done on Commagene proper, providing novel interpretations of the epigraphical and historical record or the archaeological data and individual sites, like Nemrud Dağ, Samosata or Arsameia. Simultaneously scholars have tried to better understand Hellenistic Commagene by situating the region and its history in a wider Mediterranean and Near Eastern context. This long-awaited e-book provides a critical evaluation of all these new data and ideas on the basis of a theoretically embedded, state-of-the-art overview for the history and archaeology of Hellenistic Commagene. From this volume a new picture emerges in which Hellenistic Commagene is no longer understood as peripheral and out-of-the-ordinary, but as an important node in a global Hellenistic network, from Ai-Khanoum to Pompeii and from Alexandria to Armawir.
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42

Bianconi, Ginestra. Multilayer Networks. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198753919.001.0001.

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Multilayer networks are formed by several networks that interact with each other and co-evolve. Multilayer networks include social networks, financial markets, transportation systems, infrastructures and molecular networks and the brain. The multilayer structure of these networks strongly affects the properties of dynamical and stochastic processes defined on them, which can display unexpected characteristics. For example, interdependencies between different networks of a multilayer structure can cause cascades of failure events that can dramatically increase the fragility of these systems; spreading of diseases, opinions and ideas might take advantage of multilayer network topology and spread even when its single layers cannot sustain an epidemic when taken in isolation; diffusion on multilayer transportation networks can significantly speed up with respect to diffusion on single layers; finally, the interplay between multiplexity and controllability of multilayer networks is a problem with major consequences in financial, transportation, molecular biology and brain networks. This field is one of the most prosperous recent developments of Network Science and Data Science. Multilayer networks include multiplex networks, multi-slice temporal networks, networks of networks, interdependent networks. Multilayer networks are characterized by having a highly correlated multilayer network structure, providing a significant advantage for extracting information from them using multilayer network measures and centralities and community detection methods. The multilayer network dynamics (including percolation, epidemic spreading, diffusion, synchronization, game theory and control) is strongly affected by the multilayer network topology. This book will present a comprehensive account of this emerging field.
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43

Murdie, Amanda, and Marc Polizzi. Human Rights and Transnational Advocacy Networks. Edited by Jennifer Nicoll Victor, Alexander H. Montgomery, and Mark Lubell. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190228217.013.31.

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Human rights advocates have been argued to be working as part of a larger “network” of actors supporting the respect and security of individuals. However, until recently, much scholarship in this area has used “network” as a synonym for “connected actors” instead of examining the network characteristics of advocacy actors and the ways in which the nature of the advocacy network could influence human rights outcomes. This chapter examines the growing literature that focuses on human rights advocacy using network theory and methodologies. It outlines both global and local data collection efforts and the state of the literature and addresses how this literature has drawn on the larger political networks literature. It concludes with a call for future work on how the network characteristics of advocacy actors influences both which human rights issues receive international attention and whether this attention translates into improvements in human rights practices on the ground.
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44

Kinsella, David, and Alexander H. Montgomery. Arms Supply and Proliferation Networks. Edited by Jennifer Nicoll Victor, Alexander H. Montgomery, and Mark Lubell. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190228217.013.33.

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Network analyses of global and regional arms flows (including small arms and light weapons, major conventional weapons, and weapons of mass destruction) and related international insecurity and criminality have so far been limited. Yet the literature contains hypotheses that could be explored or tested using network analysis. This chapter discusses supply and demand effects, structural tradeoffs between security and efficiency, pressures to become more or less centralized, and the effects of geography and other network layers. It concludes by reviewing existing data sets and analyses and gauges the potential for network analysis to inform the study of arms transfer networks. Given the general import of these networks for both security studies and policy, there should be a renaissance in the study of arms supply and proliferation networks.
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45

Knaack, Peter. A Web without a Center. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190864576.003.0009.

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G20 leaders vowed to collect and share OTC derivatives trade data so that regulators can obtain a global picture of market and risk evolution. This chapter employs a network perspective to explain why they have failed to meet this commitment to date. It examines three networks: the OTC derivatives market itself, and those of its private and public governance. The analysis shows that the Financial Stability Board (FSB), the public supervisory entity, struggles to establish itself at the center of the global regulatory network. It failed to act as a first mover in setting global trade identification standards (legal entity identifiers), and it has not been able to establish a core of global data warehouses. This is largely the result of unilateral action by FSB members. In particular, legislators in member countries have undermined FSB-led efforts by refusing to remove legal barriers to transnational regulatory cooperation and, in some instances, by erecting new ones.
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46

Protocol for Enhanced Isolate-Level Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance in the Americas. Primary Phase: Bloodstream Infections. Pan American Health Organization, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.37774/9789275122686.

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Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) surveillance plays an important role in the early detection of resistant strains of public health importance and prompt response to outbreaks in hospitals and the community. Surveillance findings are needed to inform medical practice, antibiotic stewardship, and policy and interventions to combat AMR. Appropriate use of antimicrobials, informed by surveillance, improves patients’ treatment outcomes and reduces the emergence and spread of AMR. This protocol describes the steps and procedures to establish/enhance AMR surveillance in Latin America and the Caribbean. It provides technical guidance to integrate patient, laboratory, and epidemiological data to monitor AMR emergence, trends, and effects in the population. It also provides the necessary elements to move from aggregated data to isolate-level data surveillance starting with blood isolates. It facilitates uniform data collection processes, methods, and tools to ensure data comparability within the Region of the Americas. Finally, it builds on over a decade of experience of the regional AMR surveillance network—ReLAVRA by its Spanish acronym—and its procedures are aligned with the Global Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance System (GLASS) methodology, enabling countries to participate in the global GLASS AMR surveillance.
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47

Greenland, David, Douglas G. Goodin, and Raymond C. Smith, eds. Climate Variability and Ecosystem Response in Long-Term Ecological Research Sites. Oxford University Press, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195150599.001.0001.

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This volume in the Long-Term Ecological Research Network Series would present the work that has been done and the understanding and database that have been developed by work on climate change done at all the LTER sites. Global climate change is a central issue facing the world, which is being worked on by a very large number of scientists across a wide range of fields. The LTER sites hold some of the best available data measuring long term impacts and changes in the environment, and the research done at these sites has not previously been made widely available to the broader climate change research community. This book should appeal reasonably widely outside the ecological community, and because it pulls together information from all 20 research sites, it should capture the interest of virtually the entire LTER research community.
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48

Wright, Dawn J., and Christian Harder, eds. GIS for Science, Volume 3: Maps for Saving the Planet. Esri Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.17128/9781589486713.

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GIS for Science: Maps for Saving the Planet, Volume 3, highlights real-world examples of scientists creating maps about saving life on Earth and preserving biodiversity. With Earth and the natural world at risk from various forces, geographic information system (GIS) mapping is essential for driving scientifically conscious decision-making about how to protect life on Earth. In volume 3 of GIS for Science, explore a collection of maps from scientists working to save the planet through documenting and protecting its biodiversity. In this volume, learn how GIS and data mapping are used in tandem with: global satellite observation forestry marine policy artificial intelligence conservation biology, and environmental education to help preserve and chronicle life on Earth. This volume also spotlights important global action initiatives incorporating conservation, including Half-Earth, 30 x 30, AI for Earth, the Blue Nature Alliance, and the Sustainable Development Solutions Network. The stories presented in this third volume are ideal for the professional scientist and conservationist and anyone interested in the intersection of technology and the conservation of nature. The book’s contributors include scientists who are applying geographic data gathered from the full spectrum of remote sensing and on-site technologies. The maps and data are brought to life using ArcGIS® software and other spatial data science tools that support research, collaboration, spatial analysis, and science communication across many locations and within diverse communities. The stories shared in this book and its companion website present inspirational ideas so that GIS users and scientists can work toward preserving biodiversity and saving planet Earth before time runs out.
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49

Pezzella, Francesco, Mahvash Tavassoli, and David J. Kerr, eds. Oxford Textbook of Cancer Biology. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198779452.001.0001.

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The study of the biology of tumours has grown to become markedly interdisciplinary, involving chemists, statisticians, epidemiologists, mathematicians, bioinformaticians, and computer scientists alongside medical scientists. Oxford Textbook of Cancer Biology brings together the developments from different branches of research into one volume. Structured in seven sections, the book starts with a review of the development and biology of multicellular organisms, how they maintain a healthy homeostasis in an individual, and a description of the molecular basis of cancer development. The book then illustrates how, once cells become neoplastic, their signalling network is altered and pathological behaviour follows. Changes that cancer cells can induce in nearby normal tissue are explored, and the new relationship established between them and the stroma is explicated. Finally, the authors illustrate the contribution provided by high throughput techniques to map cancer at different levels, from genomic sequencing to cellular metabolic functions, and how information technology with its vast amounts of data are integrated with traditional cell biology to provide a global view of the disease. The book concludes by summarizing what we know to date about cancer, and in what direction our understanding of cancer is moving.
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50

Fleury, James, Bryan Hikari Hartzheim, and Stephen Mamber, eds. The Franchise Era. Edinburgh University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474419222.001.0001.

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As Hollywood shifts towards the digital era, the role of the media franchise has become more prominent. Over a series of essays by a range of international scholars, this edited collection argues that the franchise is now an integral element of American media culture. As such, the collection explores the production, distribution, and marketing of franchises as a historical form of media-making. In particular, the essays analyze the complex industrial practice of managing franchises across interconnected online platforms with a global scope, presenting a network of scholarly texts that critically look at the collision of new and old industrial logics against an ever more fragmented and consolidated mediascape. The authors address how traditional incumbents like film studios and television networks have responded to the rise of big data, Silicon Valley companies like Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Netflix, and Google; the ways in which legacy franchises are adapting to new media platforms and technologies; the significant historical continuities and deviations in franchise-making and how they shape the representation of on-screen texts across digital displays; and, finally, how emerging media formats are expanding the possibility for transmedia experiences. In this regard, The Franchise Era: Managing Media in the Digital Economy offers an in-depth analysis of the tectonic shifts that have disrupted entertainment companies in the twenty-first century, demonstrating that the media franchise stands front and center in this high-stakes environment.
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