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 <title ArticleCode="108005">Abstraction in Recovery Management.</title>
 <authors>
 <author AuthorPosition="00">J. Eliot B. Moss</author>
 <author AuthorPosition="02">Marc H. Graham</author>
 <author AuthorPosition="01">Nancy D. Griffeth</author>
 </authors>
 <confName>ACM SIGMOD Conference</confName>
 <confYear>1986</confYear>
 <volume>15</volume>
 <number>2</number>
 <initPage>72</initPage>
 <endPage>83</endPage>
 <fullText >
 	<size></size>
 </fullText>
 <abstract>There are many examples of actions on abstract data types which can be correctly implemented with nonserializable and nonrecoverable schedules of  reads and writes. We examine a model of multiple layers of abstraction that explains this phenomenon and  su</abstract>
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