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Back Matter Source: Proceedings: Biological Sciences, Vol. 249, No. 1326 (Sep. 22, 1992), pp. 327-332 Published by: The Royal Society Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/49762 . Accessed: 07/05/2014 17:30 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. . The Royal Society is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Proceedings: Biological Sciences. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 169.229.32.136 on Wed, 7 May 2014 17:30:24 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
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Back MatterSource: Proceedings: Biological Sciences, Vol. 249, No. 1326 (Sep. 22, 1992), pp. 327-332Published by: The Royal SocietyStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/49762 .

Accessed: 07/05/2014 17:30

Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp

.JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range ofcontent in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new formsof scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected].

.

The Royal Society is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Proceedings:Biological Sciences.

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Figure 7. Time-course of changes in fibre type composition during post-stimulation recovery. (a) Type 1 fibres. (b) Type 2A fibres, including the transitional fibres (asterisks) referred to in the text. (c) Type 2B fibres. Bands indicate the range (mean + s.d.) for the corresponding fibre type in

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Indexes to Voltume 249 (B) Author index

Abe, T. See Higashi et al. Adams, W. B. See Cooper et al. Amos, W., Barrett, J. A. & Pemberton, J. M. DNA finger-

printing: parentage studies in natural populations and the importance of linkage analysis, 157.

Ashmore, J. F. See Housley et al.

Baker, M. See Howe et al. Balding, D. J., Nichols, R. A. & Hunt, D. M. Detecting gene

conversion: primate visual pigment genes, 275. Barrett, J. A. See Amos et al. Baskin, R. J. See Sidick et al. Becker, C. See Reuter et al. Beckers, G. & Homberg, V. Cerebral visual motion blind-

ness: transitory akinetopsia induced by transcranial magnetic stimulation of human area V5, 173.

Beddington, J. R. See Milner-Gulland et al. Bell, G. See da Silva & Bell. Berger, P. J. See Griffiths et al. Bergersen, F. J. & Turner, G. L. Supply of 02 regulates ?2

demand during utilization of reserves of poly-3-hydroxy- butyrate in N2-fixing soybean bacteroids, 143.

Bouron, A. See Reuter et al. Brandl, R., Mann, W. & Sprinzl, M. Estimation of the

monocot-dicot age through tRNA sequences from the chloroplast, 13.

Budelmann, B. U. See Novicki et al. Bullard, B. See Fyrberg et al. Burns, T. P. See Higashi et al. Bush, B. M. H. See Skorupski & Bush.

Calabi, P. See Nonacs & Calabi. Carter, R. E. See Hauser et al. Carvalho, G. R. See Hauser et al. Cooper, R. L., Fernandez-de-Miguel, F., Adams, W. B. &

Nicholls, J. G. Anterograde and retrograde effects of synapse formation on calcium currents and neurite outgrowth in cultured leech neurons, 217.

da Silva, J. & Bell, G. The ecology and genetics of fitness in Chlamydomonas VI. Antagonism between natural selection and sexual selection, 227.

Doncaster, C. P. Testing the role of intraguild predation in regulating hedgehog populations, 113.

Dugatkin, L. A. & Godin, J.-GJ. J. Reversal of female mate choice by copying in the guppy (Poecilia reticulata), 179.

Edmonds, D. T. A magnetic null detector as the migrating bird's compass, 27.

Ehinger, B. See Zucker & Ehinger.

Fernandez-de-Miguel, F. See Cooper et al. Fredkin, D. R. & Rice, J. A. Maximum likelihood estimation

and identification directly from single-channel record- ings, 125.

Funriell, E. Progressive loss of semantic memory in a case of Alzheimer's disease, 287.

Fyrberg, C. C., Labeit, S., Bullard, B., Leonard, K. & Fyrberg, E. Drosophzila projectin: relatedness to titin and twitchin and correlation with lethal(4) 102 CDa and bent- Dominant mutants, 33.

Fyrberg, E. See Fyrberg et al.

Gaul, G. & Liubbert, H. Cortical astrocytes activated by basic fibroblast growth factor secrete molecules that stimulate differentiation of mesencephalic dopaminergic neurons, 57.

Georgeson, M. A. Human vision combines oriented filters to compute edges, 235.

Godin, J.-G. J. See Dugatkin & Godin. Greenwood, D. See Housley et al. Greenwood, P. H. See Heemstra & Greenwood. Griffiths, R. I., Shadwick, R. E. & Berger, P. J. Functional

importance of a highly elastic ligament on the mammalian diaphragm, 199.

Hastings, H. M., Juhasz, F. & Schreiber, M. A. Stability of structured random matrices, 223.

Hauser, L., Carvalho, G. R., Hughes, R. N. & Carter, R. E. Clonal structure of the introduced freshwater snail Potamopyrgus antipodarum (Prosobranchia: Hydrobiidae), as revealed by DNA fingerprinting, 19.

Haywood, S. & Perrins, C. M. Is clutch size in birds affected by environmental conditions during growth?, 195.

Heemstra, P. C. & Greenwood, P. H. New observations on the visceral anatomy of the late-term fetuses of the living coelacanth fish and the oophagy controversy, 49.

Herlitze, S. See Villarroel et al. Higashi, M., Abe, T. & Burns, T. P. Carbon-nitrogen

balance and termite ecology, 303. Hof, D. See Keynes et al. H6mberg, V. See Beckers & 1-16mberg. Housley, G. D., Greenwood, D. & Ashmore, J. F. Localiz-

ation of cholinergic and purinergic receptors on outer hair cells isolated from the guinea-pig cochlea, 265.

Houtman, A.M. Female zebra finches choose extra-pair copulations with genetically attractive males, 3.

Howe, J. R., Baker, M. & Ritchie, J. M. On the block of outward potassium current in rabbit Schwann cells by internal sodium ions, 309.

Hughes, R. N. See Hauser et al. lHukins, D. W. L. A simple model for the function of

proteoglycans and collagen in the response to com- pression of the intervertebral disc, 281.

Hunt, D. M. See Balding et al.

Johnstone, R. A. See Pagel & Johnstone. Juhasz, F. See Hastings et al.

Kadekaro, M. See Novicki et al. Keynes, R. D. A new look at the mechanism of activation

and inactivation of voltage-gated ion channels, 107. Keynes, R. D., Meves, H. & Hof, D. The dual effect of

internal tetramethylammonium ions on the open states of the sodium channel in the squid giant axon, 10].

Knoesen, A. See Sidick et al. Koenen, M. See Villarroel et al. Kros, C. J., Ruisch, A. & Richardson, G. P. Mechano-

electrical transducer currents in hair cells of the cultured neonatal mouse cochlea, 185.

Labeit, S. See Fyrberg et al. Leader-Williams, N. See Milner-Gulland et al. Leonard, K. See Fyrberg et al. Liibbert, H. See Gaul & Luibbert.

McLachlan, E. M. See Sah & McLachlan. Magleby, K. L. & Song, L. Dependency plots suggest the

kinetic structure of ion channels, 133. Mann, W. See Brandl et al. Mather, G., Radford, K. & West, S. Low-level visual

processing of biological motion, 149. Messenger, J. B. See Novicki et al. Meves, H. See Keynes et al.

329

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330 Author index

Milner-Gulland, E. J., Beddington,J. R. & Leader-Williams, N. Dehorning African rhinos: a model of optimal frequency and profitability, 83.

Moore, A. & Scott, A. P. 17ci,203-dihydroxy-4-pregenen-3- one 20-sulphate is a potent odorant in precocious male Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.) parr which have been pre-exposed to the urine of ovulated females, 205.

Moore, J. J. See Morin et al. Morin, P. A., Moore, J. J. & Woodruff, D. S. Identification

of chimpanzee subspecies with DNA from hair and allele-specific probes, 293.

Nager, R. G. & van Noordwijk, A. J. Energetic limitation in the egg-laying period of great tits, 259.

Neuhaus, R. See Reuter et al. Nicholls, J. G. See Cooper et al. Nichols, R. A. See Balding et al. Nonacs, P. & Calabi, P. Competition and predation risk:

their perception alone affects ant colony growth, 95. Novicki, A., Messenger, J. B., Budelmann, B. U., Terrell,

M. L. & Kadekaro, M. ['4C]deoxyglucose labelling of functional activity in the cephalopod central nervous system, 77.

Pagel, M. & Johnstone, R. A. Variation across species in the size of the nuclear genome supports the junk-DNA explanation for the C-value paradox, 119.

Pemberton, J. M. See Amos et al. Perrins, C. M. See Haywood & Perrins.

Radford, K. See Mather et al. Reber, B. F. X. See Reuter et al. Reuter, H., Bouron, A., Neuhaus, R., Becker, C. & Reber,

B. F. X. Inhibition of protein kinases in rat pheochromo- cytoma (PC12) cells promotes morphological differen- tiation and down-regulates ion channel expression, 211.

Rice, J. A. See Fredkin & Rice. Richardson, G. P. See Kros et al. Ritchie, J. M. See Howe et al. Ruisch, A. See Kros et al.

Sah, P. & McLachlan, E. M. A slow voltage-activated potassium current in rat vagal neurons, 71.

Sakmann, B. See Villarroel et al. Schreiber, M. A. See Hastings et al.

Scott, A. P. See Moore & Scott. Seaton, G. G. R. & Walker, D. A. Validating chlorophyll

fluorescence measures of efficiency: observations on fluorimetric estimation of photosynthetic rate, 41.

Shadwick, R. E. See Griffiths et al. Sidick, E., Knoesen, A., Xian, J. K., Yeh, Y. & Baskin,

R. J. Rigorous analysis of light diffraction by a striated muscle fibre, 247.

Sillar, K. T., Simmers, A.J. & Wedderburn, J. F. S. The post-embryonic development of cell properties and synaptic drive underlying locomotor rhythm generation in Xenopus larvae, 65.

Simmers, A. J. See Sillar et al. Skorupski, P. & Bush, B. M. H. Parallel reflex and central

control of promotor and receptor motorneurons in crayfish, 7.

Slade, R. Limited MHC polymorphism in the southern elephant seal: implications for MHC evolution and marine mammal population biology, 163.

Song, L. See Magleby & Song. Sprinzl, M. See Brandl et al.

Taylor, P. D. Inclusive fitness in a homogeneous environ- ment, 299.

Terrell, M. L. See Novicki et al. Turner, G. L. See Bergersen & Turner.

van Noordwijk, A. J. See Nager & van Noordwijk. Villarroel, A., Herlitze, S., Witzemann, V., Koenen, M. &

Sakmann, B. Asymmetry of the rat acetylcholine receptor subunits in the narrow region of the pore, 317.

Walker, D. A. See Seaton & Walker. Wedderburn, J. F. S. See Sillar et al. West, S. See Mather et al. Witzemann, V. See Villarroel et al. Woodruff, D. S. See Morin et al.

Xian, J. K. See Sidick et al.

Yeh, Y. See Sidick et al.

Zucker, C. L. & Ehinger, B. Heterogeneity of receptor immunoreactivity at synapses of glycine-utilizing neurons, 89.

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Indexes to Volume 249 331

Subject index acetylcholine, 265, 317. A-current, 71. adenosine 5'-triphosphate, 265. akinetopsia, 173. altruism, 299. Alzheimer's disease, 287. 4-aminopyridine, 71. analysis, 247. anatomy, 199. angiosperms, 13. annulus fibrosus, 281. ant, Camponotusfioridanus, 95. astrocytes, 57. Atlantic salmon, 205. autogenetic reflex, 7. autoradiography, 77.

bacteroids, 143. badger, Meles meles, 113. biological motion, 149. bird compass, 27. brood biomass, 95.

calcium currents, 217. carbon-nitrogen balance, 303. catechol, 71. channel, 317. Chlamydomonas, 227. cholinergic, 265. clonal, 19. clutch size, 195. cochlea, 185, 265. coelacanth, 49. collagen, 281. colocalization, 89. colony growth, 95. community matrix, 223. comparative methods, 119. compass, magnetic, 27. competition, 95, 113, 299. copying, 179. coupled wave, 247. crayfish, 7. cuttlefish, 77. C-values, 119.

dehorning, rhino, 83. delayed rectifier K' channels, 309. dependency, 133. diaphragm, 199. dicot, 13. differentiation, 211. diffraction, 247. D-loop, 293. DNA fingerprinting, 19, 157. dopaminergic neurons, 57. Drosophila genetics, 33.

ear, internal, 185. early vision, 235. edge detection, 235. egg size, 195. egg volume, 259. electrophysiology, 205. elephant seal, 163. energetic limitation, 259. eusociality, 303. evolution, 13, 303. extra-pair copulations, 3.

fitness, 227.

flight muscle proteins, 33. freshwater snail, 19. functional localization, 173. functional specialization, 173.

gating, 133. gene conversion, 275. genetic typing, 293. genome size, 119. glycine receptor, 89. great tit, Parus major, 195. guppy, Poecilia reticulata, 179.

hair cell, 185. hedgehog, Erinaceus europaeus, 113. horn growth, 83. host-pathogen coevolution, 163. human area V5, 173.

inclusive fitness, 299. intervertebral disc, 281. intraguild predation, 113. ion channels, 107, 125, 133. ionic currents, 211.

junk DNA, 119.

kinetics, 133.

Latimeria, 49. laying date, 259. leech, 217. life history, 227. ligaments, 199. light, 247. linkage, 157. locomotor rhythm generation, 65. loosely coupled subsystems, 223. low-level motion detection, 149.

magnetic field sensor, 27. magnetite, 27. management, 293. marine mammal, 163. Markov, 133. mate choice, 3, 179. maximum likelihood, 125. May-Wigner stability theorem, 223. mechano-electrical transducer, 185. mesencephalon, rat, 57. metabolic mapping, 77. MHC, 163. migration, 27. modulated chlorophyll fluorescence,

41. molecular evolution, 119. monocot, 13. monogamy, 3. motorneuron, Xenopus, 65. motorneurons, 7. mtDNA, 293. muscle fibre, 247. muscle receptor, 7. myofibrils, 33.

N2 fixation, 143. natural selection, 227. nestbuilding behaviour, 259. nestling growth, 195. neurotransmission, 89. neurotrophic factors, 57.

nicotinic, 317. nucleus pulposus, 281.

02 fixation, 143. octopus, 77. olfaction, 205. oophagy, 49. optic lobe, 77. outbreeding, 293. outer hair cells, 265. ovoviviparous, 49.

palaeobotany, 13. parentage, 157. Parus major, 259. paternity, 157. PC12 cells, 211. PCR, 293. permeation, 317. permutation tests, 275. perturbation experiment, 113. photochemical quenching, 41. photopigment genes, 275. photosynthetic oxygen evolution,

41. photosynthetic rate estimation, 41. physiological stress, 41. poaching, 83. poly-f3-hydroxybutyrate, 143. populationi regulation, 113. Potamopyrgus antipodarum, 19. potassium channels, 309. predation risk, 95. progressive disorder, 287. projectin, 33. protein kinases, 211. proteoglycans, 281. purinergic, 265.

quantum efficiency, 41.

receptor, 317. reproduction, 49. respiratory mechanics, 199. retina, 89. Retzius cells, 217. rhino, 83.

Schwann cells, 309. selectivity filter, 317. selfish DNA, 119. semantic memory, 287. sexual selection, 3, 179, 227. sodium channel, 101, 107. sodium ion block, 309. soybean nodules, 143. spatial filtering, 235. sprouting, 217. squid axon, 101, 107. states, 133. statistics, 1. steroid, 205. structured population, 299. subconductance, 125. swimming, Xenopus larvae, 65. symbiosis, 303. synapse, 89. synapse formation, 217.

TCMIRO, 7. temperature manipulation, 259.

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332 Indexes to Volume 249

termite (Isoptera), 303. tetramethylammonium, 10 1. tissue culture, 217. transcranial magnetic stimulation, 173. transducer current, 185. tRNA, 13. trophic level, 223.

visual features, 235. visual motion perception, 173. visual processing, 149. viviparity, 49. voltage gating, 107.

worker ant, 95.

worker caste, 303.

Xenopas, post-embryonic development, 65.

zebra finch, Taeniopygia gutlata, 3, 195. zero crossings, 235.

End of the two hundred andforty-ninth volume (Series B)

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CORRESPONDING EDITORS

Australia Professor W. J. Ewens, 1 January-20 August: Department of Mathematics, Monash University, Clayton, Victoria 3168 (Fax. 613 565 4403) Professor P. W. Gage, Department of Physiology, The John Curtin School of Medical Research, The Australian National University, P.O. Box 334, Canberra,

ACT 2601 (Tel. 062 49 2893; Fax. 062 47 4823) Dr M. D. Hatch, Division of Plant Industry, CSIRO, G.P.O. Box 1600, Canberra, ACT 2601 (Tel. 062 465 264; Fax. 062 473785) Sir Gustav Nossal, The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, Post Office, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Victoria 3050 (Tel. 613 345 2550;

Fax. 613 347 0852) Dr W.J. Peacock, Division of Plant Industry, CSIRO, G.P.O. Box 1600 Canberra, ACT 2601 (Tel. 61 62 465250; Fax. 61 62 576844) ProfessorJ. D. Pettigrew, Vision, Touch and Hearing Research Centre, Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, University of Queensland, St Lucia, Queensland 4067

(Tel. 07 377 2396; Fax. 07 371 7433) Canada

Dr L. Siminovitch, Mount Sinai Hospital Research Institute, 600 University Avenue, Toronto, Ontario M5G IX5 (Tel. 416 586 8224; Fax. 416 586 8588) Professor M. Smith, Roomn 237, Westbrook Building, University of British Columbia, 6174 University Boulevard, Vancouver, British Columbia V6T IW5

(Tel. 604 228 4838; Fax. 604 228 2114) Federal Republic of Germany

Professor B. Sakmann, Max-Planck-Institut fur Medizinische Forschung, Abteilung Zellphysiologie, Jahnstrasse 29, Postfach 10 38 20, D-6900 Heidelberg I (Tel. 6221 486 460/461; Fax. 6221 486 351)

France Professor P. Chambon, Unite de Biologie Moleculaire et de Genie Genetique, CNRS-LGME, Institut de Chimie Biologique, 11 rue Humann, 67085 Strasbourg Cedex (Tel.

33 8837 1255; Fax. 33 8837 0148) ProfessorJ.-P. Changeux, Section de Neurobiologie Moleculaire, Institut Pasteur, 28 rue du Dr Roux, 75724 Paris Cedex 15 (Tel. 1 4568 8000; Fax. 1 4306 9835) Dr A. Coutinho, Unite d'Immunobiologie, Institut Pasteur, 25 rue du Dr Roux, 75724 Paris Cedex 15 (Tel. 1 4568 8593; Fax. 1 4568 8639) Professor F. Jacob, Departement de Biologie Moleculaire, Institut Pasteur, 25 rue du Dr Roux, 75724 Paris Cedex 15 (Tel. 4783 8312; Fax. 1 4568 8521)

Hungary ProfessorJ. Szentagothai, Semmelweis University Medical School, Tuzolt6 utca 58, 1450 Budapest (Tel. 00 36 11 138 806; Fax. 00 36 11 135 405)

India Professor P. Narain, Principle Scientist (Statistics), Directors Office, Indian Agricultural Research Institute, Pusa, New Delhi 110 012 (Tel. 582817) Professor 0. Siddiqi, Molecular Biology Unit, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Homi Bhabha Road, Colaba, Bombay 400 005 (Tel. 495 2971) Professor M. S. Swaminathan, M. S. Swaminathan Research Foundation, 14, 11 Main Road, Kottur Gardens, Kotturpuram, Madras 600 085 (Tel. 044 41 6923;

Fax. 9144 478148) Professor G. P. Talwar, National Institute of Immunology, Shahidjeet Singh Marg, New Delhi 110 067 (Tel. 662608; Fax. 9111 686 2316)

Japan Professor S. Ebashi, National Institute for Physiological Sciences, Myodaiji, Okazaki 444 (Tel. 0564 54 11 1 1; Fax. 0564 52 7913) Professor M. Kimura, National Institute of Genetics, Yata 1, 111, Mishima 411 (Tel. 0559 75 0771; Fax. 0559 71 3651) Professor Y. Nishizuka, Department of Biochemistry, Kobe University School of Medicine, Kobe 650 (Tel. 81 78 341 7451; Fax. 81 78 351 0082)

New Zealand Professor G. B. Petersen, Department of Biochemistry, University of Otago, P.O. Box 56, Dunedin (Tel. 03 479 1100; Fax. 03 474 1607) DrJ. R. Slack, Department of Physiology, University of Auckland, Private Bag, Auckland (Tel. 0649 795 780; Fax. 0649 770 956)

Spain Professor A. Garcia-Bellido, Centro de Biologia Molecular, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Aut6noma de Madrid, 28049 Madrid (Tel. 91 397 5070; Fax. 91 397 4799)

Switzerland ProfessorJ.-C. Cerottini, Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, Ch. Boveresses 155, CH-1066 Epalinges (Tel. 021 336 275; Fax. 021 334 474) ProfessorJ. G. Nicholls, Biocenter, Universitat Basel, Klingelbergstrasse 70, CH-4056 Basel (Tel. 41 61 267 2230; Fax. 4161261 6760) Professor H. Reuter, Pharmakologisches Institut, Univeritat Bem, Friedbuhlstrasse 49, CH-3010 Bern (Tel. 31 643 281; Fax. 31 262 419) Professor W. Wahli, Institut de Biologie Animale, Universite de Lausanne, Batiment de Biologie, CH-1015 Lausanne-Dorigny (Tel. 41 21692 2492; Fax. 41 21692 2540)

U.S.A. Dr A. Celada, Cancer Research Center, La Jolla Cancer Research Foundation, 10901 North Torrey Pines Road, La Jolla, California 92037 (Tel. 619 455 6480;

Fax. 619 453 6217) Professor B. Chance, Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19014-6089

(Tel. 215 898 4342; Fax. 215 898 1806) Professor Nam-Hai Chua, Laboratory of Plant Molecular Biology, The Rockefeller University, 1230 York Avenue, New York, New York 10021-6399 (Tel. 212 570 8126;

Fax. 212 570 8327) Dr R. F. Doolittle, Center for Molecular Genetics M-034, University of Califomia, LaJolla, Califomia 92093-0634 (Tel. 619 534 4417; Fax. 619 534 4985) Professor P. R. Ehrlich, Department of Biological Sciences, Stanford University, Stanford, Califomia 94305 Professor W. J. Ewens, 21 August-31 December: Department of Biology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104 (Tel. 215 898 7109; Fax. 215 898 8780) Professor G. D. Fischbach, Department of Neurobiology, Washington University School of Medicine, Box 8108, 660 South Euclid Avenue, St Louis, Missouri 63110 (Tel.

314 362 7043; Fax. 314 362 9862) Dr N. B. Gilula, Department of Molecular Biology, Research Institute of Scripps Clinic, 10666 North Torrey Pines Road, Lajolla, Califomia 92037 (Tel. 619 554 9770; Fax.

619 554 9960) Professor S. F. Heinemann, Molecular Neurobiology Laboratory, The Salk Institute, P.O. Box 85800, San Diego, Califomia 92138-9216 (Tel. 619 453 9313;

Fax. 619 450 0509) Professor G. Hess, Section of Biochemistry, Molecular and Cell Biology, 216 Biotechnology Building, Comell University, Ithaca, New York 14853-2703 (Tel. 607 255 4809;

Fax. 604 255 2428) Professor R. 0. Hynes, Center for Cancer Research, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139 (Tel. 617 253 6422;

Fax. 617 253 8357) Professor Y. W. Kan, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Califomia, San Francisco, Califomia 94143-0724 (Tel. 415 476 5841; Fax. 415 566 4969) ProfessorJ. R. Knowles, Department of Chemistry, Harvard University, 12 Oxford Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138 (Tel. 617 495 5219; Fax. 617 495 1333) Dr E. G. Krebs, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Research Laboratories, University of Washington School of Medicine, Mail Stop SL-15, Seattle, Washington 98195 (Tel.

206 543 8500; Fax. 206 543 0858) Professor K. L. Magleby, Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Miami School of Medicine, P.O. Box 016430 (R-430), Miami, Florida 33101

(Tel. 305 547 6236; Fax. 305 547 5931) Professor P. Marler, Department of Zoology, University of Califomia, Storer Hall, Davis, Califomia 95616; Fax. 916 752 1449 Professor V. A. McKusick, Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University Hospital, Baltimore, Maryland 21205 (Tel. 301 955 6641; Fax. 301 955 4999) Professor A. G. Motulsky, Center for Inherited Diseases, RG-25, School of Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195 (Tel.

206 543 3593; Fax. 206 545 8675) Dr R. A. Nicoli, Departmlent of Pharmacology, School of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, California 94143-0450 Dr W. E. Paul, Laboratory of Immunology, Building 10, Room 1 IN31 1, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland

20892 (Tel. 301 496 5046; Fax. 301 496 0222) Professor J. M. Ritchzie, Department of Pharmacology, Yale University School of Medicine, Sterling Hall of Medicine, 333 Cedar Street, New Haven, Connecticut 0651l0-8066

(Tel. 203 785 7670; Fax. 203 785 6537) Professor G. Westheimer, Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, Division of Neurobiology, Life Sciences Addition, Box 211, University of California, Berkeley,

California 94720 (Tel. 510 642 4828; Fax. 510 643 6791) Professor E. 0. Wilson, Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138 (Tel. 617 495 2466)

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THE ROYAL SOCIETY

Proceedings: Biological Sciences

Series B Volume 249 Number 1326 22 September 1992 CONTENTS

H. M. HASTINGS, F. JUHASZ & M. A. SCHREIBER pages 223-225 Stability of structured random matrices

J. DA SILVA & G. BELL 227-233 The ecology and genetics of fitness in Chlamydomonas VI. Antagonism between natural selection and sexual selection

M. A. GEORGESON 235-245 Human vision combines oriented filters to compute edges

E. SIDICK, A. KNOESEN, J. K. XIAN, Y. YEH & R. J. BASKIN 247-257 Rigorous analysis of light diffraction by a striated muscle fibre

R. G. NAGER & A. J. VAN NOORDWIJK 259-263 Energetic limitation in the egg-laying period of great tits

G. D. HOUSLEY, D. GREENWOOD & J. F. AsHMoRE 265-273 Localization of cholinergic and purinergic receptors on outer hair cells isolated from the guinea-pig cochlea

D. J. BALDING, R. A. NICHOLS & D. M. HuNT 275-280 Detecting gene conversion: primate visual pigment genes

D. W. L. HUKINS 281-285 A simple model for the function of proteoglycans and collagen in the response to compression of the intervertebral disc

E. FUNNELL 287-291 Progressive loss of semantic memory in a case of Alzheimer's disease

P. A. MoRlN, J. J. MooRE & D. S. WOODRUFF 293-297 Identification of chimpanzee subspecies withx DNA from hair and allele-specific probes

P. D. TAYLOR 299-302 Inclusive fitness in a homogeneous environment

M. HIGASHI, T. ABE & T. P. BURNS 303-308 Carbon-nitrogen balance and termite ecology

J. R. HOwE, M. BAKER & J. M. RITCHE 309-316 On the block of outward potassium current in rabbit Schwann cells by internal sodium ions

A. VILLARROEL, S. HERLITZE, V. WITZEMANN, M. KOENEN & B. SAKMANN 317-324 Asymmetry of the rat acetylcholine receptor subunits in the narrow region of the pore

ERRATUM 325

INSTRUCTIONS TO AUTHORS 327-328

INDEXES 329-332 * * *

VOLUME TITLE PAGE AND CONTENTS

Published by the Royal Society, 6 Carlton HIouse Terrace, London SW1Y 5AG Printed in Great Britain for the Royal Society by the University Press, Cambridge

This content downloaded from 169.229.32.136 on Wed, 7 May 2014 17:30:24 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions


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