3,743 research outputs found

    C. C. Mehta

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    On the life and works of Chandravadan Chimanlal Mehta, b. 1901, Gujarati author

    sj-pdf-2-vmj-10.1177_1358863X231171948 – Supplemental material for Machine learning demonstrates top predictors of lipid-rich necrotic core modulation over 1 year in psoriasis

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    Supplemental material, sj-pdf-2-vmj-10.1177_1358863X231171948 for Machine learning demonstrates top predictors of lipid-rich necrotic core modulation over 1 year in psoriasis by Christin G Hong, Haiou Li, Philip M Parel, Alexander R Berg, Nidhi Patel, Harry Choi, Heather L Teague, Eric Munger, Andrew J Buckler, Alexander V Sorokin and Nehal N Mehta in Vascular Medicine</p

    sj-pdf-1-vmj-10.1177_1358863X231171948 – Supplemental material for Machine learning demonstrates top predictors of lipid-rich necrotic core modulation over 1 year in psoriasis

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    Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-vmj-10.1177_1358863X231171948 for Machine learning demonstrates top predictors of lipid-rich necrotic core modulation over 1 year in psoriasis by Christin G Hong, Haiou Li, Philip M Parel, Alexander R Berg, Nidhi Patel, Harry Choi, Heather L Teague, Eric Munger, Andrew J Buckler, Alexander V Sorokin and Nehal N Mehta in Vascular Medicine</p

    Mobilities in Religious Knowledge: Phiroz Mehta and the Logics of Transreligiosity in 1970s–80s South London

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    This paper examines transreligiosity in the context of the transmission of South Asian concepts of spirituality to the UK in the 20th century. Between the 1920s and 1990s, Indian teacher and author Phiroz Mehta (1902–1994) crossed borders in a colonial and postcolonial shuttling between India and the UK but also transgressed conceptual and practice borders of religion, teaching Indian religious concepts to post-Christian spiritual seekers in 1970s–80s South London. Mehta cultivated an elasticity between many religious and philosophical traditions, recognising the post-institutional fatigue of subjects who sought alternative forms of ‘belonging without believing’. Privileging the domestic space for teaching, as well as transitory ‘camp’ gatherings in the UK and Germany, Mehta often operated in the social margins, combining teachings from Hinduism, Buddhism, and Christianity with Zoroastrianism, Judaism (specifically Kabbalah), and Daoism. He offered his tutees the freedom to practice religion in whatever way they chose by drawing on a broad range of traditions concurrently to create a transreligiosity. This paper examines Panagiotopoulos and Roussou’s ‘transgressional webs of practising individualised forms of alternative spirituality’ in relation to Mehta’s followers in the 1970s-1980s and asks how transreligiosity relates to other theoretical analyses, such as religious exoticism, bricolage, religious appropriation, cultural re-articulation or assemblage. This paper focuses on qualitative interviews with original members of the Mehta community conducted between 2021 and 2022.</p

    Baker-Akhiezer functions and generalised Macdonald-Mehta integrals

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    For the rational Baker-Akhiezer functions associated with special arrangements of hyperplanes with multiplicities we establish an integral identity, which may be viewed as a generalisation of the self-duality property of the usual Gaussian function with respect to the Fourier transformation. We show that the value of properly normalised Baker-Akhiezer function at the origin can be given by an integral of Macdonald-Mehta type and explicitly compute these integrals for all known Baker-Akhiezer arrangements. We use the Dotsenko-Fateev integrals to extend this calculation to all deformed root systems, related to the non-exceptional basic classical Lie superalgebras

    Design and development of a mechatronic training simulator for adult ECMO

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    Widespread adoption of Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation (ECMO) in adults has been limited by unfamiliarity with the procedure, including cannulation and safe handling of the ECMO equipment. We present the design and development of a mechatronic training simulator for ECMO that can help medical professionals acquire the needed skills, gain familiarity, and reduce errors by practicing before performing the procedure on real patients. The trainer is designed as an ultrasound-compatible, wholesome simulator with realistic components such as synthetic blood vessels, cannulation pads, and a color-changing blood simulant to simulate oxygenation and deoxygenation. The simulator is integrated with a mathematical model of human physiology to simulate real-time patient vitals and training scenarios, and to control the trainer hardware. We present results related to successful cannulation under ultrasound scanning and a simple patient scenario of hypovolemia.Submission published under a 24 month embargo labeled 'U of I Access', the embargo will last until 2021-05-01The student, Iti Mehta, accepted the attached license on 2019-04-24 at 10:58.The student, Iti Mehta, submitted this Thesis for approval on 2019-04-24 at 11:11.This Thesis was approved for publication on 2019-04-24 at 12:45.DSpace SAF Submission Ingestion Package generated from Vireo submission #13873 on 2019-08-22 at 15:08:02Made available in DSpace on 2019-08-23T20:36:09Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2 MEHTA-THESIS-2019.pdf: 84393765 bytes, checksum: 74f0edf247057995595372eb8076e513 (MD5) LICENSE.txt: 4206 bytes, checksum: 30fb64a86cfc352d6579ccb023b2a936 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2019-04-24Embargo set by: Seth Robbins for item 112203 Lift date: 2021-08-23T20:36:18Z Reason: Author requested U of Illinois access only (OA after 2yrs) in Vireo ETD systemU of I Only Restriction Lifted for Item 112203 on 2021-08-24T09:15:24Z

    Optimal Bioeconomic Management Strategies for Prevention and Control of Invasive Alien Species

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    Paper removed by author. Please see the current version, available online January 8, 2007: Mehta, S.V. et al. Optimal detection and control strategies for invasive species management. Ecological Economics (2007), doi:10.1016/j.ecolecon.2006.10.024Environmental Economics and Policy,

    Supplemental Material - The Financial Impact of Palliative Care and Aggressive Cancer Care on End-of-Life Health Care Costs

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    Supplemental Material for The Financial Impact of Palliative Care and Aggressive Cancer Care on End-of-Life Health Care Costs by Mellar P Davis, Erin A. Vanenkevort, Alexander Elder, Amanda Young, Irina D. Correa Ordonez, Mark J Wojtowicz, Halle Ellison, Carlos Fernandez, Zankhana Mehta, Bertrand Behm, Glen Digwood, and Rajiv Panikkar in American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine®</p
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