25,413 research outputs found
Bibliographics for the 983 eprints in the live archives of E-LIS : trends and status report up to 7th July 2004, based on author-self-archiving metadata
The priority for ideas and philosophy related to "Network Theory" have been traced back and documented by Braun(2004),and credit goes to Karinthy(1929).The IT has empowered to realise it, as the most practical phenomena and it is no more a humour. The OAI (Open Archives Initiatives)and ACIS (Academic Contributor Information System)are progressive in the direction ,which may lead to realise the "Collective Genius" at global level. Focus of present study is on Author-Self-Archiving (A-S-A)Metadata of the 983 Eprints in the Live Archives of the E-LIS (EPrints of Library and Information Science),which were approved till 7th July 2004.The A-S-A Metadata was used for librametric analysis. Self-explanatory bibliographics are illustrated.The highlights include: Conference papers (34%); highest approval, June 2004 (28%); published archives (76%);not refereed (52%); not in public domain (60%); highest self-archiving-author (De Robbio, Antonella).The Nos. of EPrints having single JITA domain specifications were: Theoretical and general aspects of libraries and information(27); Information use and sociology of information(80);Users,literacy and reading(13);Libraries as physical collections(30);Publishing and legal issues(57);Management(13);Industry, profession and education(36);Information sources, supports, channels(113) ; Information treatment for information services, Information functions and techniques (101); Technical services libraries, archives and museums(25); Housing technologies(1); Information technology and library technology(92); and Inter-domainery (395) i.e. having specifications of two or more than two JITA classes
On the record: Baby boomers face a changing retirement landscape: a conversation with Anil Kumar
Many baby boom era workers, those born between 1946 and 1962, count on various retirement benefits accumulated during their working years to ensure adequate resources as they grow older. A man turning 65 today can expect to live to age 83; a woman to age 85, according to Social Security Administration data. One in 10 will live past age 95. Dallas Fed economist Anil Kumar discusses the retirement outlook for baby boomers and growth of 401(k)-type retirement accounts.401(k) plans ; Retirement ; Retirement income ; Pensions ; Social security
Alternanthera indica (Amaranthaceae), a new species from Kerala (India)
Arya, Sindhu, Iamonico, Duilio, Pino, Ivonne Sánchez-Del, Kumar, Venugopalan Nair Saradamma Anil (2021): Alternanthera indica (Amaranthaceae), a new species from Kerala (India). Phytotaxa 482 (2): 191-196, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.482.2.7, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.482.2.
Indian Science & Technology Research: A scientometric Mapping Based on Science Citation Index
This paper attempts to analyse quantitatively the growth and development of Science and Technology research in India in terms of publication output as reflected in Science Citation Index (SCI) (1990-2004). Total of 182111 papers were published by the Indian scientists and engineers to various domains: Chemical Sciences (62856) (34.52%), Physical Sciences (53844) (29.57%), Medical Sciences (30143) (16.55%), Biological Sciences (18239) (10.02%), Multidisciplinary Sciences (8616) (4.73%), Agricultural Sciences (5461) (3.00%) and Geological Sciences (2952) (1.62%). The study also focused on the visualization of Indian contribution to various micro-domains: Chemistry-Multidisciplinary (10800), Organic Chemistry (10362), Materials Science-Multidisciplinary (8107), Multidisciplinary Sciences (7771), Physics-multidisciplinary (7112), Condensed Matter Physics (6938), Physical Chemistry (5931), and Biochemistry & Molecular Biology (5307). A total of 168 micro-domains were identified in which the scientific research in India is concentrated. A steady growth of publications was observed. The average number of publications per year were 12140.73. The highest number of publications (15414) were published in 2003. Single authored papers were 18224 (10%) and Multi-authored papers were 163887 (90%). Authorship and collaboration trend was towards multi-authored papers. Five hundred fifty nine papers had more than 100 authors each. There were 371 papers with 255 authors each and 51 papers with 225 authors each. Intensive international collaboration was found during the period and bilateral collaboration accounted for 13.67 percent of the total 31186 collaborative papers followed by trilateral collaboration with 2.27 percent. India had collaboration with 167 countries. The highest number of papers collaborated were 11869 with USA followed by 4640 papers with Germany, 3202 papers with England and 2988 papers with Japan. A comparative publication productivity between India and Peoples-R-China has been carried out. India was ahead of Peoples-R-China till 1996. Peoples-R-China out paced India in 1997. The highly productive Indian Institutes were: Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore with 10247 publications, Bhabha Atomic Research Centre, Mumbai with 6782 publications, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Mumbai with 5132 publications and Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi with 4487 publications. The most preferred journals by the scientists were: Current Science (6848), Indian Journal Chemistry-B (3566), Indian Journal Chemistry-A (3272) and Pramana (1904)
Anil Kumar-Singh (Farmer), Jamnapur, Bihar India
Anil Kumar-Sing is an Indian farmer with a family to provide for. He talks about the consequences of the decreasing water level and how the lack of an electrical infrastructure does not allow them to use water pumps and to irrigate the fields. The changing weather is really becoming a problem
How smallholder farmers adapt to climate change: Stories from India - Anil Kumar-Singh
Anil Kumar-Singh is an Indian farmer (Jamnapur, Bihar India) with a family to provide for. He talks about the consequences of the decreasing water level and how the lack of an electrical infrastructure does not allow them to use water pumps and to irrigate the fields. The changing weather is really becoming a problem
Mapping of literature on Bose – Einstein condensation
This paper attempts to highlight quantitatively the growth and development of research work in this field on Bose-Einstein Condensation (BEC) in terms of publication output as per Science Citation Index (1982-2005). During 1982–2005 a total of 5258 papers were published by the scientists in this field. The average number of publications published per year were 219. The highest number of papers 814 were published in 2004. There were 77 countries involved in the research in this field. USA is the top producing country with 1632 publications (31%) followed by Germany with 620 publications (11.79%). Authorship and collaboration trend was towards multiauthored papers. Intensive collaboration was found during 1996-2005. One paper “Astrophysical Journal 543 (1), (2000), L39-L42” had 56 collaborators. There were 1635 international collaborative papers. Bilateral collaboration accounted for 24 percent of total collaborative papers. National Institute of Standards & Technology (USA) topped the list with 179 publications followed by University of Colorado (USA) with 160 publications. The most prolific authors were: W. Ketterle (USA) with 93 publications, K. Burnett (England) and M. Lewenstein (England) with 68 publications each and S. Stringari with 57 publications. The most preferred journals by the scientists were : Physical Review- A with 1504 papers, Physical Review Letters with 824 papers, Journal of Physics-B with 205 papers, Physical Review- B with 178 papers, Physics Letters-A with157 papers, Physical Review –E with 122 papers and Journal of Low Temperature Physics with 102 papers. The high frequency keywords were : Bose-Einstein Condensation (2012), Gases (1928), Atoms (860), and Dynamics (493)
INSPEC database analysis for Knowledge Management records
The study deals with the Knowledge Management papers covered in the INSPEC, an international database on Information Science, Physical Sciences, Engineering and Computer Sciences. The papers have been analysed in terms of their content and other scientometric parameters
FIGURE 4 in First molecular and morphometric data for the genus Allmania (Amaranthaceae), with the description of a new species from India
FIGURE 4. Box plots showing the variability of the diagnostic characters between Allmania sp. and A. nodiflora: A) length of tepals (mm), B) width of gynoecium (mm), C) diameter of seeds (mm), D) length of bracts (mm), E) length of peduncle (mm), F) number of flowers per synflorescence.Published as part of Sindhu, Arya, Iamonico, Duilio, Suresh, Veerankutty & Kumar, Venugopalan Nair Saradhamma Anil, 2022, First molecular and morphometric data for the genus Allmania (Amaranthaceae), with the description of a new species from India, pp. 221-237 in Phytotaxa 559 (3) on page 226, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.559.3.1, http://zenodo.org/record/702167
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