A NATO Advanced Study Institute entitled "Algebraic K-theory:
Connections with Geometry and Topology" was held at the Chateau Lake
Louise, Lake Louise, Alberta, Canada from December 7 to December 11 of
1987. This meeting was jointly supported by NATO and the Natural
Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, and was sponsored
in part by the Canadian Mathematical Society. This book is the volume of
proceedings for that meeting. Algebraic K-theory is essentially the
study of homotopy invariants arising from rings and their associated
matrix groups. More importantly perhaps, the subject has become central
to the study of the relationship between Topology, Algebraic Geometry
and Number Theory. It draws on all of these fields as a subject in its
own right, but it serves as well as an effective translator for the
application of concepts from one field in another. The papers in this
volume are representative of the current state of the subject. They are,
for the most part, research papers which are primarily of interest to
researchers in the field and to those aspiring to be such. There is a
section on problems in this volume which should be of particular
interest to students; it contains a discussion of the problems from
Gersten's well-known list of 1973, as well as a short list of new
problems.