`
`Declaration of Scott Bennett
`
`Declaration of Scott Bennett ---------------------------------------------- pages 1 - 4
`
`Exhibit A: Resume of Scott Bennett ------------------------------------- pages 5 - 11
`
`Attachment 1a: Document 1 from Springer Link ---------------------- pages 12 - 181
`
`Attachment 1b: Southern Illinois University Medical Library record for the Journal
`of
`Neurology ------------------------------------------------------------------- page 182
`
`Attachment 1c: General Affidavit and Copy of the Journal of Neurology
`
`
`
`Supplement cover and of Document 1 from the Southern Illinois University
`
`Medical Library ------------------------------------------------------------ pages 183 - 189
`
`Attachment 1d: Index entry for Document 1 from the online Final Programme of
`
`the May 2006 ENS meeting ---------------------------------------------- pages 190 –
`
`191
`
`Attachment 1e: Online Final Programme home page for the May 2006 ENS
`
`meeting----------------------------------------------------------------------- page 192
`
`Attachment 1f: Copy of Document 1 from the online Final Programme of the May
`
`2006 ENS meeting --------------------------------------------------------- page 193
`
`Attachment 1q: Web of Science record for Document 1 ------------- pages 194 -195
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`SCOTT BENNETT
`Managing Partner, Prior Art Documentation Services LLP
`
`25 September 2015
`
`DECLARATION
`
`I, Scott Bennett, am a retired academic librarian working at 711 South Race Street, Urbana, IL, 61801-
`4132. I was employed as a librarian as follows:
`
`
`
` University Librarian, Yale University, New Haven, CT., 1994-2001
` Director, The Milton S. Eisenhower Library, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, 1989-
`1994
`Assistant University Librarian for Collection Management, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL,
`1981-1989
`Instructor, Assistant, and Associate Professor of Library Administration, University of Illinois at
`Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, 1974-1981
`
`
`
`Over the course of my work as a librarian, professor of English, researcher, and author of nearly fifty
`scholarly papers and other publications, I have had extensive experience with cataloging and online
`library management systems and with online access to information resources. As a consultant, I have
`substantial experience in authenticating printed documents and establishing the date when they were
`available to diligent researchers.
`
`Exhibit A is my full resume. Information about my firm is available at www.priorartdocumentation.com.
`
`I have been asked to authenticate and establish the date of public availability for the following printed
`document:
`
`Document 1: L. Kappos and others. Efficacy of a novel oral single agent fumarate, BG00012, in patients
`with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis: results of a phase 2 study. Journal of Neurology = Zeitschrift
`für Neurologie, 253.Supplement 2 (May 2006), II/27
`
`INTRODUCTORY INFORMATION
`
`Library management of periodicals. For periodical publications, such as Document 1, a library will
`typically create a catalog record for the periodical when the library receives its first issue. When the
`institution receives subsequent issues/volumes of the periodical, the issues/volumes are checked in
`(often using a date stamp), added to the institution’s holdings records, and made available very soon
`thereafter—normally within a few days of receipt or (at most) within a few weeks of receipt.
`
`Conference papers. Conference papers, such as Documents 1 and 2, enter the realm of public discourse
`at the time they are presented at the conference. The circumstances of such presentation vary
`substantially, especially as regards the prominence of the conference, the number of conference
`participants, and the structure/organization of the conference. Formal publication of papers presented
`at conferences also varies widely. Sometimes the papers are published before the conference so as to
`be available to conference participants. Sometimes papers are published only after the conference, and
`in some cases only abstracts of the papers are published.
`
`Page 1 of 195
`
`
`
`Because of this variability, detailed information about the conference may often be required to establish
`the public availability of conference papers.
`
`Indexing. An ordinarily diligent researcher will typically begin his or her search for relevant information
`in an index of periodical and other publications. Having found relevant material, the researcher will
`then obtain it online, look for it in libraries, or purchase it from the publisher or other providers.
`Normally, the date of public availability will involve both indexing and library date information.
`
`AUTHENTICATION OF DOCUMENT 1
`
`Document 1 is an abstract of an oral presentation made at the 16th Annual Meeting of the European
`Neurological Society, held on 27-31 May 2006. Document 1 is available online from the proprietary Web
`site Springer Link (see http://link.springer.com/journal/415/253/2/suppl/page/1). Attachment 1a
`includes a copy of Document 1 from Springer Link (see p. II/27).
`
`The Journal of Neurology, published by Springer and in which Document 1 appeared, is held by 237
`libraries world-wide, in both print and in electronic form. Attachment 1b is a copy of the Southern
`Illinois University School of Medicine Library record for the Journal of Neurology
`(http://vufind.carli.illinois.edu/vf-sim/Record/sim_44111). Attachment 1c is a copy of the title page of
`the journal’s Supplement in which Document 1 was published; this attachment also includes a copy of
`Document 1 itself (p 5).
`
`DATE OF PUBLIC AVAILABILITY OF DOCUMENT 1
`
`Availability at the May 2006 Meeting. The European Neurological Society (ENS) hosts annual meetings,
`or congresses. The ENS list of past congresses indicates that 2,200 participants from 77 countries
`attended the 2006 meeting in Lausanne, Switzerland (see
`http://www.ensinfo.org/congress_past/index.html). The scope of the 2006 meeting is suggested by the
`fact that it featured 16 symposium sessions, 127 oral presentations (in which Document 1 figured), and
`471 poster sessions (Attachment 1a).
`
`It is reasonable to infer from the recurring nature of the ENS meetings and from the large attendance at
`them that the May 2006 meeting was well known among investigators interested in the treatment of
`neurological diseases.
`
`Document 1 may be understood to have entered the realm of public discourse when it was presented at
`the meeting on the afternoon of 30 May 2006, as indicated by the Final Programme for the meeting (see
`Attachment 1d, from
`http://registration.akm.ch/einsicht.php?XNSPRACHE_ID=2&XNKONGRESS_ID=31&XNMASKEN_ID=400&
`XSSEARCH=kappos ), which was last updated on 22 May 2006 (see date on Attachment 1e, from
`http://www.congrex.ch/2006/ens2006/, the online program home page). Attachment 1f is a copy of
`Document 1, taken from the online site for the May 2006 meeting.
`
`Formal publication. The abstract for Document 1 was published in Journal of Neurology = Zeitschrift für
`Neurologie, 253.Supplement 2 (May 2006), II/2. Attachment 1c shows a date stamp (p. 4) indicating that
`
`Page 2 of 195
`
`
`
`this Supplement was received by the Southern Illinois School of Medicine Library on 14 June 2006. It
`would have been available to readers very soon thereafter
`
`Document 1 was indexed in the Web of Science (Attachment 1g). In describing the publication of
`conference proceedings in the biomedical sciences, the Web of Science emphasizes that the “rapid
`dissemination of critical information is essential”
`(http://wokinfo.com/products_tools/multidisciplinary/webofscience/cpci/cpciessay/). One may
`reasonably assume that the Web of Science indexes journals in the biomedical sciences promptly after
`their publication, so as to facilitate this rapid dissemination of information.
`
`The evidence presented here indicates that the oral presentation for which Document 1 is an abstract
`entered the realm of public discourse on 30 May 2006. Document 1 was formally published in the
`May 2006 Supplement to the Journal of Neurology, in the same month as the Congress, suggesting a
`wish for the contents of the 2006 meeting to become widely available as soon as possible. The Web
`of Science record for Document 1 would have further ensured wide knowledge of Document 1.
`The Southern Illinois University Medical Library received the May 2006 Supplement to the Journal of
`Neurology on 14 June 2006.
`Based on these facts, it is my opinion that Document 1 was publicly available to an ordinarily diligent
`researcher concerned with multiple sclerosis by no later than 1 July 2006.
`
`ATTACHMENTS
`
`The following attachments are true and accurate representations of online documents and records and
`of library material, as they are identified above. All attachments were created on 22-25 September
`2015, and all URLs referenced in this declaration were available on 24 September 2015.
`
`Attachment 1a: Document 1 from Springer Link
`Attachment 1b: Southern Illinois University Medical Library record for the Journal of Neurology
`Attachment 1c: Copy of the Journal of Neurology Supplement cover and of Document 1 from the
`Southern Illinois University Medical Library
`Attachment 1d: Index entry for Document 1 from the online Final Programme of the May 2006 ENS
`meeting
`Attachment 1e: Online Final Programme home page for the May 2006 ENS meeting
`Attachment 1f: Copy of Document 1 from the online Final Programme of the May 2006 ENS meeting
`Attachment 1g: Web of Science record for Document 1
`
`In making this Declaration, I have been retained on behalf of Neifeld IP Law, PC. I understand thatthis
`Declaration may be filed by Neifeld IP Law, PC in a contested case before the Patent Trial and Appeal
`Board of the United States Patent Office, in which Neifeld IP Law, PC is challenging the patentability of
`patent claims. I am being paid my company’s standard hourly rate, and no part of my compensation is
`dependent onthe conclusions that I reach or the outcome of the case.
`
`I reserve the right to supplement my opinion in the future to respond to any arguments that the Patent
`Owner raises and to take into account new information as it becomes available.
`
`Page 3 of 195
`
`
`
`I declare that all statements made herein of my own knowledge are true and that all statements made
`on information and belief are believed to be true; and further that these statements were made with
`the knowledge that willful false statements and the like so made are punishable by fine or
`imprisonment, or both, under Section 1001 of Title 18 of the United States Code.
`
`Dated 25 September 2015.
`
`Sincerely,
`
`Scott Bennett
`Managing Partner
`Prior Art Documentation Services LLP
`
`Page 4 of 195
`
`
`
`Exhibit A: Resume
`
`EMPLOYMENT
`
`SCOTT BENNETT
`Yale University Librarian Emeritus
`
`711 South Race
`Urbana, Illinois 61801-4132
`2scottb@prairienet.org
`217-367-9896
`
`
`
`Retired, 2001. Retirement activities include:
` Managing Partner in Prior Art Documentation Services, LLP, 2015-. This firm provides
`documentation services to patent attorneys; more information is available at
`http://www.priorartdocumentation.com
`Consultant on library space design, 2004- . This consulting practice is rooted in a research,
`publication, and public speaking program conducted since I retired from Yale University in
`2001. I have served more than 50 colleges and universities in the United States and abroad
`with projects ranging in likely cost from under $50,000 to over $100 million. More
`information is available at http://www.libraryspaceplanning.com/
`Senior Advisor for the library program of the Council of Independent Colleges, 2001-2009
`
` Member of the Wartburg College Library Advisory Board, 2004-
`Visiting Professor, Graduate School of Library and Information Science, University of Illinois
`
`at Urbana-Champaign, Fall 2003
`
`University Librarian, Yale University, 1994-2001
`
`Director, The Milton S. Eisenhower Library, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland,
`1989-1994
`
`Assistant University Librarian for Collection Management, Northwestern University, Evanston,
`Illinois, 1981-1989
`
`Instructor, Assistant and Associate Professor of Library Administration, University of Illinois at
`Urbana-Champaign, 1974-1981
`
`Assistant Professor of English, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1967-1974
`
`Woodrow Wilson Teaching Intern, St. Paul’s College, Lawrenceville, Virginia, 1964-1965
`
`EDUCATION
`
`University of Illinois, M.S., 1976 (Library Science)
`Indiana University, M.A., 1966; Ph.D., 1967 (English)
`Oberlin College, A.B. magna cum laude, 1960 (English)
`
`Page 5 of 195
`
`
`
`HONORS AND AWARDS
`
`Morningside College (Sioux City, IA) Doctor of Humane Letters, 2010
`
`American Council of Learned Societies Fellowship, 1978-1979; Honorary Visiting Research Fellow,
`Victorian Studies Centre, University of Leicester, 1979; University of Illinois Summer Faculty
`Fellowship, 1969
`
`Indiana University Dissertation Year Fellowship and an Oberlin College Haskell Fellowship, 1966-
`1967; Woodrow Wilson National Fellow, 1960-1961
`
`PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES
`
`American Association for the Advancement of Science: Project on Intellectual Property and
`Electronic Publishing in Science, 1999-2001
`
`American Association of University Professors: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Chapter
`Secretary and President, 1975-1978; Illinois Conference Vice President and President, 1978-1984;
`national Council, 1982-1985, Committee F, 1982-1986, Assembly of State Conferences Executive
`Committee, 1983-1986, and Committee H, 1997-2001 ; Northwestern University Chapter
`Secretary/Treasurer, 1985-1986
`
`Association of American Universities: Member of the Research Libraries Task Force on Intellectual
`Property Rights in an Electronic Environment, 1993-1994, 1995-1996
`
`Association of Research Libraries: Member of the Preservation Committee, 1990-1993; member of
`the Information Policy Committee, 1993-1995; member of the Working Group on Copyright, 1994-
`2001; member of the Research Library Leadership and Management Committee, 1999-2001;
`member of the Board of Directors, 1998-2000
`
`Carnegie Mellon University: Member of the University Libraries Advisory Board, 1994
`
`Center for Research Libraries: Program Committee, 1998-2000
`
`Johns Hopkins University Press: Ex-officio member of the Editorial Board, 1990-1994; Co-director of
`Project Muse, 1994
`
`Library Administration and Management Association, Public Relations Section, Friends of the
`Library Committee, 1977-1978
`
`Oberlin College: Member of the Library Visiting Committee, 1990, and of the Steering Committee
`for the library’s capital campaign, 1992-1993; President of the Library Friends, 1992-1993, 2004-
`2005; member, Friends of the Library Council, 2003-
`
`Research Society for Victorian Periodicals: Executive Board, 1971-1983; Co-chairperson of the
`Executive Committee on Serials Bibliography, 1976-1982; President, 1977-1982
`
`Page 6 of 195
`
`
`
`A Selected Edition of W.D. Howells (one of several editions sponsored by the MLA Center for
`Editions of American Authors): Associate Textual Editor, 1965-1970; Center for Editions of American
`Authors panel of textual experts, 1968-1970
`
`Victorian Studies: Editorial Assistant and Managing Editor, 1962-1964
`
`Wartburg College: member, National Advisory Board for the Vogel Library, 2004-
`
`Some other activities: Member of the Illinois State Library Statewide Library and Archival
`Preservation Advisory Panel; member of the Illinois State Archives Advisory Board; member of a
`committee advising the Illinois Board of Higher Education on the cooperative management of
`research collections; chair of a major collaborative research project conducted by the Research
`Libraries Group with support from Conoco, Inc.; active advisor on behalf of the Illinois Conference
`AAUP to faculty and administrators on academic freedom and tenure matters in northern Illinois.
`
`Delegate to Maryland Governor’s Conference on Libraries and Information Service; principal in
`initiating state-wide preservation planning in Maryland; principal in an effort to widen the use of
`mass deacidification for the preservation of library materials through cooperative action by the
`Association of Research Libraries and the Committee on Institutional Cooperation; co-instigator of
`a campus-wide information service for Johns Hopkins University; initiated efforts with the Enoch
`Pratt Free Library to provide information services to Baltimore’s Empowerment Zones; speaker or
`panelist on academic publishing, copyright, scholarly communication, national and regional
`preservation planning, mass deacidification.
`
`Consultant for the University of British Columbia (1995), Princeton University (1996), Modern
`Language Association, (1995, 1996), Library of Congress (1997), Center for Jewish History (1998,
`2000-), National Research Council (1998); Board of Directors for the Digital Library Federation,
`1996-2001; accreditation visiting team at Brandeis University (1997); mentor for Northern Exposure
`to Leadership (1997); instructor and mentor for ARL’s Leadership and Career Development
`Program (1999-2000)
`
`At the Northwestern University Library, led in the creation of a preservation department and in the
`renovation of the renovation, for preservation purposes, of the Deering Library book stacks.
`
`At the Milton S. Eisenhower Library, led the refocusing and vitalization of client-centered services;
`strategic planning and organizational restructuring for the library; building renovation planning.
`Successfully completed a $5 million endowment campaign for the humanities collections and
`launched a $27 million capital campaign for the library.
`
`At the Yale University Library, participated widely in campus-space planning, university budget
`planning, information technology development, and the promotion of effective teaching and
`learning; for the library has exercised leadership in space planning and renovation, retrospective
`conversion of the card catalog, preservation, organizational development, recruitment of minority
`librarians, intellectual property and copyright issues, scholarly communication, document delivery
`services among libraries, and instruction in the use of information resources. Oversaw
`approximately $70 million of library space renovation and construction. Was co-principal
`investigator for a grant to plan a digital archive for Elsevier Science.
`
`Page 7 of 195
`
`
`
`Numerous to invitations speak at regional, national, and other professional meetings and at alumni
`meetings. Lectured and presented a series of seminars on library management at the Yunnan
`University Library, 2002. Participated in the 2005 International Roundtable for Library and
`Information Science sponsored by the Kanazawa Institute of Technology Library Center and the
`Council on Library and Information Resources.
`
`PUBLICATIONS
`
`“Putting Learning into Library Planning,” portal: Libraries and the Academy, 15, 2 (April 2015), 215-
`231.
`
`“How librarians (and others!) love silos: Three stories from the field “ available at the Learning
`Spaces Collaborary Web site, http://www.pkallsc.org/
`
`“Learning Behaviors and Learning Spaces,” portal: Libraries and the Academy, 11, 3 (July 2011), 765-
`789.
`
`“Libraries and Learning: A History of Paradigm Change,” portal: Libraries and the Academy, 9, 2
`(April 2009), 181-197. Judged as the best article published in the 2009 volume of portal.
`
`“The Information or the Learning Commons: Which Will We Have?” Journal of Academic
`Librarianship, 34 (May 2008), 183-185. One of the ten most-cited articles published in JAL, 2007-
`2011.
`
`“Designing for Uncertainty: Three Approaches,” Journal of Academic Librarianship, 33 (2007), 165–
`179.
`
`“Campus Cultures Fostering Information Literacy,” portal: Libraries and the Academy, 7 (2007), 147-
`167. Included in Library Instruction Round Table Top Twenty library instruction articles published in
`2007
`
`“Designing for Uncertainty: Three Approaches,” Journal of Academic Librarianship, 33 (2007), 165–
`179.
`
`“First Questions for Designing Higher Education Learning Spaces,” Journal of Academic
`Librarianship, 33 (2007), 14-26.
`
`“The Choice for Learning,” Journal of Academic Librarianship, 32 (2006), 3-13.
`
`With Richard A. O’Connor, “The Power of Place in Learning,” Planning for Higher Education, 33
`(June-August 2005), 28-30
`
`“Righting the Balance,” in Library as Place: Rethinking Roles, Rethinking Space (Washington,DC:
`Council on Library and Information Resources, 2005), pp. 10-24
`
`Page 8 of 195
`
`
`
`Libraries Designed for Learning (Washington, DC: Council on Library and Information Resources,
`2003)
`
`“The Golden Age of Libraries,” in Proceedings of the International Conference on Academic
`Librarianship in the New Millennium: Roles, Trends, and Global Collaboration, ed. Haipeng Li
`(Kunming: Yunnan University Press, 2002), pp. 13-21. This is a slightly different version of the
`following item.
`
`“The Golden Age of Libraries,” Journal of Academic Librarianship, 24 (2001), 256-258
`
`“Second Chances. An address . . . at the annual dinner of the Friends of the Oberlin College Library
`November 13 1999,” Friends of the Oberlin College Library, February 2000
`
`“Authors’ Rights,” The Journal of Electronic Publishing (December 1999),
`http://www.press.umich.edu/jep/05-02/bennett.html
`
`“Information-Based Productivity,” in Technology and Scholarly Communication, ed. Richard Ekman
`and Richard E. Quandt (Berkeley, 1999), pp. 73-94
`
`“Just-In-Time Scholarly Monographs: or, Is There a Cavalry Bugle Call for Beleaguered Authors and
`Publishers?” The Journal of Electronic Publishing (September 1998),
`http://www.press.umich.edu/jep/04-01/bennett.html
`
`“Re-engineering Scholarly Communication: Thoughts Addressed to Authors,” Scholarly Publishing,
`27 (1996), 185-196
`
`“The Copyright Challenge: Strengthening the Public Interest in the Digital Age,” Library Journal, 15
`November 1994, pp. 34-37
`
`“The Management of Intellectual Property,” Computers in Libraries, 14 (May 1994), 18-20
`
`“Repositioning University Presses in Scholarly Communication,” Journal of Scholarly Publishing, 25
`(1994), 243-248. Reprinted in The Essential JSP. Critical Insights into the World of Scholarly
`Publishing. Volume 1: University Presses (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2011), pp. 147-153
`
`“Preservation and the Economic Investment Model,” in Preservation Research and Development.
`Round Table Proceedings, September 28-29, 1992, ed. Carrie Beyer (Washington, D.C.: Library of
`Congress, 1993), pp. 17-18
`
`“Copyright and Innovation in Electronic Publishing: A Commentary,” Journal of Academic
`Librarianship, 19 (1993), 87-91; reprinted in condensed form in Library Issues: Briefings for Faculty
`and Administrators, 14 (September 1993)
`
`with Nina Matheson, “Scholarly Articles: Valuable Commodities for Universities,” Chronicle of Higher
`Education, 27 May 1992, pp. B1-B3
`
`“Strategies for Increasing [Preservation] Productivity,” Minutes of the [119th] Meeting [of the
`Association of Research Libraries] (Washington, D.C., 1992), pp. 39-40
`
`Page 9 of 195
`
`
`
`“Management Issues: The Director’s Perspective,” and “Cooperative Approaches to Mass
`Deacidification: Mid-Atlantic Region,” in A Roundtable on Mass Deacidification, ed. Peter G. Sparks
`(Washington, D.C.: Association of Research Libraries, 1992), pp. 15-18, 54-55
`
`“The Boat that Must Stay Afloat: Academic Libraries in Hard Times,” Scholarly Publishing, 23 (1992),
`131-137
`
`“Buying Time: An Alternative for the Preservation of Library Material,” ACLS Newsletter, Second
`Series 3 (Summer, 1991), 10-11
`
`“The Golden Stain of Time: Preserving Victorian Periodicals” in Investigating Victorian Journalism,
`ed. Laurel Brake, Alex Jones, and Lionel Madden (London: Macmillan, 1990), pp. 166-183
`
`“Commentary on the Stephens and Haley Papers” in Coordinating Cooperative Collection
`Development: A National Perspective, an issue of Resource Sharing and Information Networks, 2
`(1985), 199-201
`
`“The Editorial Character and Readership of The Penny Magazine: An Analysis,” Victorian Periodicals
`Review, 17 (1984), 127-141
`
`“Current Initiatives and Issues in Collection Management,” Journal of Academic Librarianship, 10
`(1984), 257-261; reprinted in Library Lit: The Best of 85
`
`“Revolutions in Thought: Serial Publication and the Mass Market for Reading” in The Victorian
`Periodical Press: Samplings and Soundings, ed. Joanne Shattock and Michael Wolff (Leicester:
`Leicester University Press, 1982), pp. 225-257
`
`“Victorian Newspaper Advertising: Counting What Counts,” Publishing History, 8 (1980), 5-18
`
`“Library Friends: A Theoretical History” in Organizing the Library’s Support: Donors, Volunteers,
`Friends, ed. D.W. Krummel, Allerton Park Institute Number 25 (Urbana: University of Illinois
`Graduate School of Library Science, 1980), pp. 23-32
`
`“The Learned Professor: being a brief account of a scholar [Harris Francis Fletcher] who asked for
`the Moon, and got it,” Non Solus, 7 (1980), 5-12
`
`“Prolegomenon to Serials Bibliography: A Report to the [Research] Society [for Victorian
`Periodicals],” Victorian Periodicals Review, 12 (1979), 3-15
`
`“The Bibliographic Control of Victorian Periodicals” in Victorian Periodicals: A Guide to Research, ed.
`J. Don Vann and Rosemary T. VanArsdel (New York: Modern Language Association, 1978), pp. 21-51
`
`“John Murray’s Family Library and the Cheapening of Books in Early Nineteenth Century Britain,”
`Studies in Bibliography, 29 (1976), 139-166. Reprinted in Stephen Colclough and Alexis Weedon,
`eds., The History of the Book in the West: 1800-1914, Vol. 4 (Farnham, Surrey: Ashgate, 2010), pp.
`307-334.
`
`Page 10 of 195
`
`
`
`with Robert Carringer, “Dreiser to Sandburg: Three Unpublished Letters,” Library Chronicle, 40
`(1976), 252-256
`
`“David Douglas and the British Publication of W. D. Howells’ Works,” Studies in Bibliography, 25
`(1972), 107-124
`
`as primary editor, W. D. Howells, Indian Summer (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1971)
`
`“The Profession of Authorship: Some Problems for Descriptive Bibliography” in Research Methods in
`Librarianship: Historical and Bibliographic Methods in Library Research, ed. Rolland E. Stevens
`(Urbana: University of Illinois Graduate School of Library Science, 1971), pp. 74-85
`
`edited with Ronald Gottesman, Art and Error: Modern Textual Editing (Bloomington: Indiana
`University Press, 1970)--also published in London by Methuen, 1970
`
`“Catholic Emancipation, the Quarterly Review, and Britain’s Constitutional Revolution,” Victorian
`Studies, 12 (1969), 283-304
`
`as textual editor, W. D. Howells, The Altrurian Romances (Bloomington: Indiana University Press,
`1968); introduction and annotation by Clara and Rudolf Kirk
`
`as associate textual editor, W. D. Howells, Their Wedding Journey (Bloomington: Indiana University
`Press, 1968); introduction by John Reeves
`
`“A Concealed Printing in W. D. Howells,” Papers of the Bibliographic Society of America, 61 (1967),
`56-60
`
`editor, Non Solus, A Publication of the University of Illinois Library Friends, 1974-1981
`
`editor, Robert B. Downs Publication Fund, University of Illinois Library, 1975-1981
`
`reviews, short articles, etc. in Victorian Studies, Journal of English and German Philology, Victorian
`Periodicals Newsletter, Collection Management, Nineteenth-Century Literature, College & Research
`Libraries, Scholarly Publishing Today, ARL Newsletter, Serials Review, Library Issues, S[ociety for]
`S[cholarly] P[ublishing] Newsletter, and Victorian Britain: An Encyclopedia
`
`Page 11 of 195
`
`
`
`JON_Suppl_Abstract_02_06 05.05.2006 10:42 Uhr Seite 1
`
`J Neurol (2006) 253 [Suppl 2]: II/1–II/170
`DOI 10.1007/s00415-006-2001-2
`
`Sixteenth Meeting of the
`European Neurological Society
`27–31 May 2006, Lausanne, Switzerland
`Symposia and Free Communications
`
`The abstracts have been reviewed by:
`Z. Argov, O. A. Bajenaru, J. Bogousslavsky, O. Combarros, G. Comi,V. Dietz,
`M. Donaghy, C. Elger, J. M. Ferro, C. Krarup, I. Milonas, G. Moonen,
`Y. Parman,V. Planté-Bordeneuve, G. Said, E. Scarpini, R. Soffietti,
`E. Schmutzhard, A. Steck, E. Tolosa, J.Valls-Solé, M. J. D.Vidailhet
`
`Attachment 1a: Document 1 from Springer Link
`
`Page 12 of 195
`
`
`
`JON_Suppl_Abstract_02_06 05.05.2006 10:42 Uhr Seite 2
`
`II/2
`
`Contents
`
`Presidential symposium
`Brain ischaemia, new patterns and treatments
`
`II/3
`
`Symposia
`Neurology of sleep II/3
`II/4
`Imaging brain diseases
`New trends in treatment of neurological disorders
`
`II/5
`
`FREE COMMUNICATIONS
`Oral Sessions
`
`II/16
`II/18
`
`II/21
`
`Session 1: Multiple sclerosis 1 II/6
`Session 2: Multiple sclerosis 2 II/8
`Session 3: Peripheral neuropathies 1 – Hereditary neuropathies
`Session 4: Peripheral neuropathies 2
`II/11
`Session 5: Extrapyramidal disorders
`II/13
`Session 6: Headache and pain II/14
`Session 7: Cerebrovascular disorders 1
`Session 8: Cerebrovascular disorders 2
`Session 9: Epilepsy
`II/19
`Session 10: Higher function disorders and dementia
`Session 11: Infection of the nervous system II/22
`Session 12: Neuro-oncology
`II/23
`Session 13: Multiple sclerosis 3
`II/25
`Session 14: Multiple sclerosis 4
`II/27
`Session 15: Neuro-ophthalmology
`II/28
`Session 16: Motor neuron disease
`II/29
`Session 17: Clinical neuroscience
`II/31
`Session 18: Clinical neurophysiology
`II/32
`Session 19: Cerebrovascular disorders 3
`II/34
`Session 20: Cerebrovascular disorders 4
`II/35
`Session 21: Genetics
`II/37
`Session 22: Muscle disorders
`Session 23: Dementia
`II/39
`
`II/38
`
`POSTER SESSIONS
`
`Poster Session 1
`Cerebrovascular disorders
`Clinical neurophysiology
`
`II/41
`II/45
`
`II/46
`
`Extrapyramidal disorders
`General neurology
`II/48
`Genetics
`II/50
`Infection II/53
`Multiple sclerosis
`Neuro-oncology
`
`II/55
`II/59
`
`Poster session 2
`II/64
`Cerebrovascular disorders
`II/68
`Clinical neurophysiology
`Dementia/Higher function disorders
`Epilepsy
`II/74
`Extrapyramidal disorders
`General neurology
`II/78
`Multiple sclerosis
`II/80
`Peripheral neuropathy
`
`II/76
`
`II/84
`
`II/9
`
`Poster session 3
`II/88
`Cerebrovascular disorders
`Dementia/Higher function disorders
`Extrapyramidal disorders
`II/93
`Infection II/95
`II/97
`Motor neuron disease
`Multiple sclerosis
`II/99
`Muscle disorders
`II/103
`Peripheral neuropathy
`II/107
`
`II/111
`
`Poster session 4
`Cerebrovascular disorders
`General neurology
`II/114
`Immunology
`II/117
`II/120
`Motor neuron disease
`Multiple sclerosis
`II/123
`Neurobiology
`II/127
`Pain and headache
`II/129
`Sleep disorders
`II/132
`
`II/70
`
`II/89
`
`II/135
`
`II/140
`
`Poster session 5
`Cerebrovascular disorders
`Child neurology
`II/139
`Extrapyramidal disorders
`Multiple sclerosis
`II/142
`Neuro-ophthalmology
`II/147
`Neurorehabilitation II/149
`Pain and headache
`II/154
`Sleep disorders
`II/156
`
`Author index II/160
`
`Attachment 1a: Document 1 from Springer Link
`
`Page 13 of 195
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`4P
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`enumbra is brain: targeted neuro-imaging in hyperacute stroke
`J. Bogousslavsky, P. Michel, M. Reichhart, M. Wintermark, P. Maeder, R.Meuli
`Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois (Lausanne, CH); University of
`California (San Francisco, USA)
`
`Given the millions of neurons dying every hour in acute ischemic stroke, we
`need more advanced methods to treat the appropriate patient with the ap-
`propriate method. Shortening symptom-to-treatment delays is mandatory
`for all stroke patients, but clinicians and scientists have recognized for quite
`a while that stroke is highly variable from one individual to the other. This
`applies particularly to the amount of irreversibly damaged and salvageable
`tissue (“core”and “penumbra”) and to the localisation of arterial occlusions.
`Measuring tissue perfusion with various methods (PET, SPECT, Xenon-
`Ct, PWI-DWI MRI, perfusion-CT etc.), we are recognizing that time is not
`the gold standard but a surrogate marker when it comes to predicting the
`presence of penumbra. Mounting evidence, most recently from the DEFUSE
`trial, confirms that patients without penumbra do not benefit from recanal-
`isation, and may even be harmed. On the other hand, the DIAS trial has
`shown that patients may benefit from thrombolysis well beyond the 3 hour
`limit if they have a persistent penumbra.These data strongly support the no-
`tion that “penumbra is brain” rather than “time is brain”, and that the time
`clock should be replaced by a pathophysiological clock in most patients
`when it comes to acute treatment decisions.
`The second, similarly important requirement for successful stroke treat-
`ment is rapid, complete, and persistent recanalisation. Early recanalisation,
`whether spontaneous or treatment-related, has been associated in most
`studies with better radiological and clinical outcomes. We therefore should
`use all efforts available to recanalize arteries in acute stroke.
`Thirdly, advanced neuroimaging may predict of the neurovascular com-
`plications. Examples are haemorrhagic transformatio