1,738,807 research outputs found

    Episode 5: Dr. Arjun Srinivasan

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    Runtime 23:58Listen to Dr. Arjun Srinivasan discuss his work on improving antibiotic prescribing practices through surveillance of antibiotic use.Peterson, Marnie; Srinivasan, Arjun. (2016). Episode 5: Dr. Arjun Srinivasan. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/217978

    Precision Health and AI: improving health for everyone - Arjun Panesar (DDM Health)

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    This video is the twelfth talk from our two day Future Blood Testing: Challenges & Opportunities Event that took place on the 14/09/2022. Precision Health and AI: improving health for everyone - Arjun Panesar (DDM Health) Bio: Arjun Panesar is the founder of DDM Health, providers of clinically-validated digital health solutions to over 1.8 million people. Benefiting from almost two decades of experience in big data, AI and AI ethics, Arjun leads the development of evidence-based digital innovations that harness the power of machine learning to provide precision medicine to patients, health services, and governments. Arjun’s work has received international recognition featuring in the Forbes, New Scientist, BBC and The Times. Arjun is a best-selling author on the topics of healthcare and AI, authoring two editions of Machine Learning and AI in Healthcare, and contributing to Handbook of Global Health, a major reference work. Arjun is an advisor to the Information School, University of Sheffield, Fellow to the NHS Innovation Accelerator, visiting lecturer at University of Warwick Medical School, and was recognised by Imperial College as an Alumni Leader for his contribution and impact to society. Further details on this event can be found at: https://futurebloodtesting.org/event/13-14-09-2022/ This video is an output from the Future Blood Testing Network which is funded by EPSRC under Grant Number EP/W000652/1 YouTube Link: https://youtu.be/clPmdeLP5_

    Mosaic Atlas: Interview with Arjun Verma

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    This interview with Arjun Verma, an Indian-American sitar artist and composer based in the Bay Area, was conducted by Sukanya Chakrabarti as part of the Mosaic Atlas project. Arjun Verma combines traditional and contemporary approaches to Indian classical music. Deeply rooted in Hindustani classical music, yoga, and Vedanta, Verma views music as a holistic expression of life and a medium for conveying emotions beyond words. He aims to preserve the classical tradition\u27s essence while innovating within its framework, offering audiences profound and transformative experiences. As a steward of this living art form, Verma highlights challenges such as limited platforms and resources for sharing Indian classical music, which is often marginalized. He envisions a future where global artistic traditions are integrated into mainstream education, fostering greater accessibility and appreciation. As part of the Mosaic Atlas project, Mosaic Staff and Volunteers, SJSU students and faculty from the Anthropology and Film, Theater, and Dance Departments interviewed people who support and produce art throughout the Bay Area

    Arjun: A creative exploration of worldbuilding to discuss cultural dislocation and belonging

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    This article will discuss concepts of cultural dislocation and belonging through a practice-led worldbuilding design project called Arjun. Arjun is a creative exploration of storytelling through a designed publication that uses diagrams, notations, and photographic manipulations to explore a character’s experience in a foreign land. The publication presents a polyphonic story from the perspective of Arjun who is hired by the fictional corporation Federation (F.E.D.R) to explore a land where both familiar and unfamiliar takes place. Arjun searches for his sense of purpose and identity, in a self-dialogue with his own dislocation. Established within the tenants of Hinduism, this research project stimulates speculative meanings through worldbuilding design as means to discuss my cultural dislocation with my own Fijian Indian ancestry. Conceptually, the project is concerned with the philosophical principles of Hindu reincarnation, its relationships to the subconscious mind (Callander &amp; Cummings, 2021) and liminality (Turner, 1969; Ipomoea, 2015). The article will discuss how practice emerged both conceptually and visually through a synthesis between theory and making in its creation and conceptualisation. Reflective processes and self-search methodologies are utilised to access personal experiences and prominent levels of exploration with materials through the methods of notation, journaling, copywriting, image processing and prototyping.</jats:p

    Demokratie als Ziel und als Weg: Arjun Karki zum Hintergrund der gegenwärtigen politischen Konfliktlage in Nepal

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    Auszüge aus mehreren Gesprächen mit Dr. Arjun Karki, Geschäftsführer des größten nationalen Dachverbandes nepalesischer Nichtregierungsorganisationen NGO Federation Nepal in Bonn

    Financial Management of Globalization of Developing Countries

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    human development, economic growth, globalization, inequality, poverty

    Book review: the books that inspired Arjun Appadurai: “I expect Max Weber’s The protestant ethic and the spirit of capitalism to be my companion for many more years to come”

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    Arjun Appadurai is a prominent contemporary social-cultural anthropologist who has contributed significantly to the field of globalisation studies. Arjun shares how Max Weber’s work still takes his breath away, and he also recommends a path-breaking study of the relationship between language, history and socio-cultural change in Tamil South India

    ashok-arjun/MLRC-2021-Few-Shot-Learning-And-Self-Supervision: v1

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    Arjun Sharma - Jamnapur, Bihar India

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    Arjun Sharma is the Village President and Chairman of the farmer cooperative PACS (Primary Agricultural Cooperative Society) in the village of Jamnapur, India. Arjun describes in the video how the cooperative supports farmers through different activities such as saving schemes, low-interest rate loans to peasants who want to develop their farms and adapt to climate change. Members of PACS can also insure their crops, which the government urges the farmers to do every season. From the cooperative everybody earns and eats, Arjun Sharma explains
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