edited by Gary F. Birkenmeier, Jae Keol Park, Young Soo Park.
.PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC
Place of Publication, Distribution, etc.
Boston, MA :
Name of Publisher, Distributor, etc.
Imprint: Birkhäuser,
Date of Publication, Distribution, etc.
2001.
SERIES
Series Title
Trends in Mathematics
CONTENTS NOTE
Text of Note
Generalized Deviations of Posets with Applications to Chain Conditions on Modules -- Stability Properties of Exchange Rings -- Good Conditions for the Total -- Semicentral Reduced Algebras -- On Generalizations of Injectivity -- Auslander-Gorenstein Rings for Beginners -- The Flat Cover Conjecture and Its Solution -- Some Results on Skew Polynomial Rings over a Reduced Ring -- Derived Equivalences and Tilting Theory -- CS-Property of Direct Sums of Uniform Modules -- Generalized Principally Injective Maximal Ideals -- The Module of Differentials of a Noncommutative Ring Extension -- Dual Bimodules and Nakayama Permutations -- The Coinduced Functor and Homological Properties of Hopf Modules -- Hopf Algebra Coaction and Its Application to Group-Graded Rings -- Non-Commutative Valuation Rings and Their Global Theories -- On the Maximal t-Corational Extensions of Modules -- On Values of Cyclotomic Polynomials -- Generalized Jordan Derivations -- On Quasi-Frobenius Rings -- Theories of Harada in Artinian Rings and Applications to Classical Artinian Rings -- On Some Dimensions of Modular Lattices and Matroids -- On Torsion-free Modules over Valuation Domains -- Hecke Orders, Cellular Orders and Quasi-Hereditary Orders -- Some Kind of Duality -- On Inertial Subalgebras of Certain Rings -- Some Recent Results on Hopficity, Co-hopficity and Related Properties -- Some Studies on QcF-coalgebras -- Finitely Pseudo-Frobenius Rings -- Surjectivity of Linkage Maps -- Infinite Quivers and Cohomology Groups -- Open Problems.
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SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
This volume is the Proceedings of the Third Korea-China-Japan Inter national Symposium on Ring Theory held jointly with the Second Korea Japan Joint Ring Theory Seminar which took place at the historical resort area of Korea, Kyongju, June 28-July 3, 1999. It also includes articles by some invited mathematicians who were unable to attend the conference. Over 90 mathematicians from 12 countries attended this conference. The conference is held every 4 years on a rotating basis. The first con ference was held in 1991 at Guilin, China. In 1995 the second conference took place in Okayama, Japan. At the second conference it was decided to include Korea, who hosted this conference of 1999. During the past century Ring Theory has diversified into many subar eas. This is reflected in these articles from over 25 well-known mathemati cians covering a broad range of topics, including: Classical Ring Theory, Module Theory, Representation Theory, and the theory of Hopf Algebras. Among these peer reviewed papers are invited survey articles as well as research articles. The survey articles provide an overview of various areas for researchers looking for a new or related field to investigate, while the research articles give the flavor of current research. We feel that the variety of related topics will stimulate interaction between researchers. Moreover the Open Problems section provides guidance for future research. This book should prove attractive to a wide audience of algebraists. Gary F. Birkenmeier, Lafayette, U. S. A.