Biology
Biology - Inquiry into Life
Author: Sylvia S. Mader
Publisher: McGraw-Hill, 2007, 766pp, 12th ed.
This introductory textbook introduces basic biological concepts and processes with a human emphasis. From the unique delivery of biology content, to the time tested art program, to the complete integration of the text with technology, Dr. Sylvia Mader has formed a teaching system that will both motivate and enable your students to understand and appreciate the wonders of all areas of biology.
Biology
Biology
Author: Neil A. Campbell, Jane B. Reece
Publisher: Benjamin Cummings, 2007, 1393pp, 8th ed.
Neil Campbell and Jane Reece's Biology remains unsurpassed as the most successful major's introductory biology textbook in the world. This introductory textbook has invited more than 4 million students into the study of this dynamic and essential discipline.
Biology
Video Lectures - Biology: The Science of Life
Author: Stephen Nowicki
Publisher: Teaching Company, 2005, 72pp, 1st ed.
One of the greatest scientific feats of our era is the astonishing progress made in understanding the intricate machinery of life. We are living in the most productive phase so far in this quest, as researchers delve ever deeper into the workings of living systems, turning their discoveries into new medical treatments, improved methods of growing food, and innovative new products. This intensive, 72-lecture course will give you the background and guidance to explore in depth the fundamental principles of how living things work—principles such as evolution by natural selection, the cellular structure of organisms, the DNA theory of inheritance, and other key ideas that will help you appreciate the marvelous diversity and complexity of life.
Biology
The Selfish Gene
Author: Richard Dawkins
Publisher: Oxford University Press, 2006, 384pp, 30th ed.
Inheriting the mantle of revolutionary biologist from Darwin, Watson, and Crick, Richard Dawkins forced an enormous change in the way we see ourselves and the world with the publication of The Selfish Gene. Suppose, instead of thinking about organisms using genes to reproduce themselves, as we had since Mendel's work was rediscovered, we turn it around and imagine that "our" genes build and maintain us in order to make more genes.
Biology
Blind Watchmaker
Author: Richard Dawkins
Publisher: W. W. Norton, 1996, 400pp, 1st ed.
Dawkins, author of The Selfish Gene, persuasively argues the case for Darwinian evolution. Twenty years after its original publication, The Blind Watchmaker, framed with a new introduction by the author, is as prescient and timely a book as ever.
Biology
Anatomy and Physiology - The Unity of Form and Function
Author: Kenneth S. Saladin
Publisher: McGraw-Hill, 2009, 1248pp, 5th ed.
Launch your students on a journey through the human body – form and function – bringing each fascinating system to life with Anatomy & Physiology: the Unity of Form and Function by Ken Saladin. From the unique organization to the exceptional art, to the complete integration of the text with technology, Saladin's introductory textbook has formed a teaching system that will both motivate and enable your students to understand and appreciate the wonders of anatomy and physiology.
Biology
Genetics - A Conceptual Approach
Author: Benjamin Pierce
Publisher: W. H. Freeman, 2007, 832pp, 3rd ed.
This introductory textbook is designed for introductory genetics courses and based on decades of teaching experience, Genetics: A Conceptual Approach focuses on the important concepts and mechanics of genetics without losing students in a sea of detail.
Biology
Integrated Principles of Zoology
Author: Cleveland P. Hickman, et al.
Publisher: McGraw-Hill, 2007, 910pp, 14th ed.
Emphasizing the central role of evolution in generating diversity, this best-selling introductory textbook describes animal life and the fascinating adaptations that enable animals to inhabit so many ecological niches. Featuring high quality illustrations and photographs set within an engaging narrative, Integrated Principles of Zoology is considered the standard by which other texts are measured. With its comprehensive coverage of biological and zoological principles, mechanisms of evolution, diversity, physiology, and ecology, organized into five parts for easy access, this textbook is suitable for one- or two-semester introductory courses.
Biology
Introductory Plant Biology
Author: Kingsley R. Stern, James Bidlack, Shelley Jansky
Publisher: McGraw-Hill, 2007, 616pp, 11th ed.
This introductory textbook assumes little prior scientific knowledge on the part of the student. It includes sufficient information for some shorter introductory botany courses open to both majors and nonmajors, and is arranged so that certain sections can be omitted without disrupting the overall continuity of the course. Stern's textbook emphasizes current interests while presenting basic botanical principles.
Biology
Video Lectures - Understanding the Human Body: An Introduction to Anatomy and Physiology
Author: Anthony A. Goodman
Publisher: Teaching Company, 2005, 32pp, 1st ed.
You live with it 24 hours a day. But how well do you really know it? These 32 lectures are your owner's manual to a remarkably complex, resilient, and endlessly fascinating structure: the human body. Your guide is Dr. Anthony A. Goodman—surgeon, professor, and writer—who takes you step by step through the major systems of the body, explaining exactly how things work and why they sometimes don't. Using detailed color illustrations, life-sized models, and, in one lecture, a video shot during surgery, Dr. Goodman gives clear descriptions of structure (anatomy) and function (physiology) aimed at the level of the interested layperson.
Biology
Video Lectures - Biology and Human Behavior: The Neurological Origins of Individuality
Author: Robert Sapolsky
Publisher: Teaching Company, 2005, 24pp, 2nd ed.
When are we responsible for our own actions, and when are we in the grip of biological forces beyond our control? This intriguing question is the scientific province of behavioral biology, a field that explores interactions among the brain, mind, body, and environment that have a surprising influence on how we behave—from the people we fall in love with, to the intensity of our spiritual lives, to the degree of our aggressive impulses. In short, it is the study of how our brains make us the individuals that we are. Biology and Human Behavior: The Neurological Origins of Individuality, 2nd Edition, is an interdisciplinary approach to this fascinating subject. In 24 lectures, you will investigate how the human brain is sculpted by evolution, constrained or freed by genes, shaped by early experience, modulated by hormones, and otherwise influenced to produce a wide range of behaviors, some of them abnormal.
Biology
Molecular Biology
Author: Robert F. Weaver
Publisher: McGraw-Hill, 2007, 890pp, 4th ed.
Molecular Biology, 4/e by Robert Weaver, is an introductory textbook designed for an introductory course in molecular biology. The text is geared not only toward presenting concepts of molecular biology, but also the experiments that led to those concepts.
Biology
Molecular Cell Biology
Author: Harvey Lodish, et al.
Publisher: W.H.Freeman, 2007, 973pp, 6th ed.
This is the new edition of a college level textbook on molecular cell biology. The emphasis is on experimental basis of current understandings. New experimental methodologies and concepts are introduced in this edition. Thirteen chapters cover such topics as biomembranes and cell architecture, cell integration in tissues, cell transport mechanisms, cellular energetics, molecular genetic techniques, transcriptional control of gene expression, and signaling at the cell surface
Biology
Cell Biology
Author: Thomas D. Pollard, et al.
Publisher: Saunders, 2007, 928pp, 2nd ed.
This introductory Cell Biology textbook contains everything you want to know and more about cells. Each section covers a topic by beginning with the basic molecules and background principles and then continuing up to how these give full physiological function. It is well designed because it contains lots of detail on each subject without drowning out key information for understanding.
Biology
Ecology - From Individuals to Ecosystems
Author: Michael Begon, Colin A. Townsend, John L. Harper
Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell, 2006, 752pp, 4th ed.
Begon, Townsend, and Harper's Ecology has long been regarded as the definitive introductory textbook on all aspects of ecology. This new edition provides a comprehensive treatment of the subject, from the first principles of ecology to the current state of the field, and aims to improve students' preparedness to address the environmental problems of the new millennium.
Biology
Microbiology - An Introduction
Author: Gerard J. Tortora, Berdell R. Funke, et al.
Publisher: Benjamin Cummings, 2006, 960pp, 9th ed.
Emphasizing basic principles and health-related applications, this introductory textbook includes discussions of emerging infectious diseases, microscopy, recombinant DNA technology, domains in microbial classification, prions and infectious diseases, antibiotic resistance, diagnostic immunology, AIDS, bioremediation, biofilms, and industrial uses of microbes.
Biology
Neuroscience - Exploring the Brain
Author: Mark F. Bear, Barry Connors, Michael Paradiso
Publisher: Lippincott, 2006, 928pp, 3rd ed.
Widely praised for its student-friendly style and exceptional artwork and pedagogy, Neuroscience: Exploring the Brain is a leading undergraduate introductory textbook on the biology of the brain and the systems that underlie behavior.
Biology
Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry
Author: Albert L. Lehninger, David L. Nelson, Michael M. Cox
Publisher: W. H. Freeman, 2008, 1100pp, 5th ed.
This undergraduate introductory textbook describes the structure and function of the major classes of cellular constituents, and explains the physical, chemical, and biological context in which each biomolecule, reaction, and pathway operates.
Biology
Molecular Biology of the Cell - Reference Ed.
Author: Bruce Alberts, et al.
Publisher: Garland, 2007, 1728pp, 5th ed.
Molecular Biology of the Cell is the classic in-depth textbook and reference in cell biology. By extracting the fundamental concepts from this enormous and ever-growing field, the authors tell the story of cell biology, and create a coherent framework through which non-expert readers may approach the subject. Written in clear and concise language, and beautifully illustrated, the book is enjoyable to read, and it provides a clear sense of the excitement of modern biology.
Biology
Molecular Biology of the Gene
Author: James D. Watson, et al.
Publisher: Benjamin Cummings, 2007, 880pp, 6th ed.
Though completely up-to-date with the latest research advances, the Sixth Edition of James D. Watson’s classic textbook, Molecular Biology of the Gene retains the distinctive character of earlier editions that has made it the most widely used book in molecular biology. Twenty-two concise chapters, co-authored by six highly respected biologists, provide current, authoritative coverage of an exciting, fast-changing discipline.
Biology
Developmental Biology
Author: Scott F. Gilbert
Publisher: Sinauer Associates, 2006, 785pp, 8th ed.
Introductory textbook emphasizing a core of developmental biology paradigms and principles. The Eighth Edition of Developmental Biology expands its coverage of the mechanisms of development, the roles that environmental factors play in development, the medical applications of our knowledge of development, and the roles that development plays in evolution. Written primarily for undergraduate biology majors, the textbook also serves to introduce graduate students and medical students to developmental biology.
Biology
Principles of Neural Science
Author: Eric R. Kandel, J.H. Schwartz, Thomas M. Jessell
Publisher: McGraw-Hill, 2000, 1414pp, 4th ed.
Completely updated and reorganized, Principles of Neural Science, Fourth Edition provides an authoritative introduction to the brain: its structure, function, development, and control of behavior. The textbook presents an in-depth summary of the state of the science as well as a full discussion of historical issues. Neuroanatomy, cell and molecular mechanisms of signaling, development and plasticity are thoroughly described in the context of cognitive approaches to behavior.