The fIrst edition of the Science 0/ Photobiology edited by Kendric C.
Smith (plenum Press, 1977) was a comprehensive textbook of photobiology,
devoting a chapter to each of the subdisciplines of the fIeld. At the
end of many of these chapters there were brief descriptions of simple
experiments that students could perform to demonstrate the principles
discussed. In the succeeding years some photobiologists felt that a more
complete publica- tion of experiments in photobiology would be a useful
teaching tool. Thus, in the 1980s the American Society for Photobiology
(ASP) attempted to produce a laboratory manual in photobiology.
Cognizant of these efforts, Kendric Smith elected to publish the second
edition of The Science o/Photobiology (1989) without experiments;
anticipating the comple- tion of the ASP laboratory manual.
Unfortunately, the initial ASP efforts met with limited success, and
several years were to pass before a photobiology laboratory manual
became a reality. One of the major stumbling blocks to production of an
accurate and reliable laboratory manual was the requirement that the
experiments be tested, not just by the author who is familiar with the
techniques, but by students who may be quite new to photobiology. How
could this be accomplished with limited resources? Many ideas were
considered and discarded, before a workable solution was found. The
catalyst that enabled the careful screening of all experiments in this
book was a NATO Advanced Study Institute (ASI) devoted entirely to this
purpose.