“…An attractive alternative approach, potentially capable of overcoming the aforementioned limitations, is based on enforcing the antisymmetry requirements of Pauli’s principle “ex-post-facto” by unitary transformation of a Hamiltonian matrix which is considerably simpler to evaluate than those of conventional developments, also offering additional flexibility in choice of forms of product representations employed for this purpose. − In the case of simple atomic- or molecular-orbital representations in Hartree-product forms, for example, it has been shown that results identical with conventional use of Slater determinants are obtained, employing either finite or arbitrarily large orbital basis sets, and adding confidence to the approach, but not providing any particular computational advantage in orbital-product cases. By contrast, use of Hartree-like products of universal many-electron atomic eigenstates as an orthonormal representation for purposes of analysis and for support suitable for molecular computations, as described in the original formulation of the method, , has led to a continuing series of investigations in clarification of aspects of the theory, ,,− , and for purposes of implementation. ,,,, These developments also incorporate in a unified ab initio formalism earlier attempts to employ atomic-based representations in combined descriptions of van der Waals and chemical forces, semiempirical “atoms-in-molecules” calculations of chemical bond strengths, adoption of atomic-pair energies in semiempirical “diatomics-in-molecules” approximations to potential energy surfaces, and clarification of the role of electron permutation symmetry in long-range atomic interactions. , …”