May, J. P. Matric Massey products. (English) Zbl 0192.34302 J. Algebra 12, 533-568 (1969). Page: −5 −4 −3 −2 −1 ±0 +1 +2 +3 +4 +5 Show Scanned Page Cited in 1 ReviewCited in 97 Documents Keywords:general algebraic structures PDF BibTeX XML Cite \textit{J. P. May}, J. Algebra 12, 533--568 (1969; Zbl 0192.34302) Full Text: DOI OpenURL References: [1] Clark, A., Homotopy commutativity and the Moore spectral sequence, Pac. J. math., 15, 65-74, (1965) · Zbl 0129.38805 [2] Eilenberg, S.; Moore, J.C., Limits and spectral sequences, Topology, 1, 1-23, (1961) · Zbl 0104.39603 [3] Hirsch, G., Quelques propriétés des produits de Steenrod, C. R. acad. sci. Paris, 241, 923-925, (1955) · Zbl 0065.16201 [4] Ivanovskii, N., Cohomology of the Steenrod algebra, Doklady, 157, 1284-1287, (1964) [5] Kraines, D., Massey higher products, Trans. am. math. soc., 124, 431-449, (1966) · Zbl 0146.19201 [6] Lawrence, R., () [7] Massey, W.S., Some higher order cohomology operations, (), 145-154 · Zbl 0123.16103 [8] May, J.P., The cohomology of restricted Lie algebras and of Hopf algebras, J. algebra, 3, 123-146, (1966) · Zbl 0163.03102 [9] May, J.P., The cohomology of principal bundles, homogeneous spaces, and two-stage postnikov systems, Bull. am. math. soc., 74, 334-339, (1968) · Zbl 0153.53402 [10] {\scMay, J. P.} The structure and applications of the Eilenberg-Moore spectral sequences. To appear. [11] {\scMay, J. P.} The cohomology of B Spin(n). To appear. [12] {\scMay, J. P.} The cohomology of the Steenrod algebra. To appear. [13] {\scMoss, R. M. F.} Secondary compositions and the Adams spectral sequence. To appear. [14] Stasheff, J.D.; Stasheff, J.D., Homotopy associativity ofH-spaces II, Trans. am. math. soc., Trans. am. math. soc., 108, 293-312, (1963) · Zbl 0114.39402 This reference list is based on information provided by the publisher or from digital mathematics libraries. Its items are heuristically matched to zbMATH identifiers and may contain data conversion errors. It attempts to reflect the references listed in the original paper as accurately as possible without claiming the completeness or perfect precision of the matching.