Friday brings us to the close of the week and the usual recap of what’s fresh and new here at nap.edu. Next week’s post may be a little delayed by the Thanksgiving holiday, but if there’s new stuff, we’ll be sure you know.
Featured New Book
Experimentation and Rapid Prototyping in Support of Counterterrorism (final)
The U.S. military forces currently face a nontraditional threat from insurgents and terrorists who primarily employ improvised explosive devices, and have shown a cycle of adaptation of less than 12 months to responses by U.S. forces to counter these attacks. This constantly evolving threat requires U.S. military forces to adapt and respond more rapidly with modified tactics, technologies, and/or equipment.
In response to this need for new technologies, the Rapid Reaction Technology Office (RRTO) was established in 2006 to develop technologies that can mature in 6 to 18 months for purposes of counterterrorism. Although RRTO appears to be successfully fulfilling its mission, the agency seeks to understand and address barriers to and opportunities for meeting future counterterrorism needs–including the need to accelerate the transition of technologies for counterterrorism with an eye to countering emerging and anticipated threats. This book reviews RRTO approaches and provides a set of recommendations for potential improvements to help meet these needs for rapid technology development.
All New Books This Week
Disposal of Legacy Nerve Agent GA and Lewisite Stocks at Deseret Chemical Depot: Letter Report (final)
Research at the Intersection of the Physical and Life Sciences (prepublication)
Landscapes on the Edge: New Horizons for Research on Earth’s Surface (prepublication)
Crisis Standards of Care: Summary of a Workshop Series (prepublication)
Review of the Bureau of Reclamation’s Corrosion Prevention Standards for Ductile Iron Pipe (final)
Ensuring the Integrity, Accessibility, and Stewardship of Research Data in the Digital Age (final)
Veterans and Agent Orange: Update 2008 (final)
A New Biology for the 21st Century: Ensuring the United States Leads the Coming Biology Revolution (final)
Biographical Memoirs: V. 91