149 research outputs found

    Pakistan: Breaking out of stagflation into sustained growth

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    This paper proposes that the underlying cause of the macroeconomic problems facing Pakistan today are a series of supply shocks which have constrained output growth. It is argued that while the current debate has solely focused on government expenditures and revenues, it is critical to also address the acute energy shortages which is constraining supply. The paper goes on to present four recommendations for breaking out of the present stagflation: (i) prudent macroeconomic management, (ii) reviving the role of the government in development while restoring fiscal balance, (iii) loosening monetary policy in order to spur the private sector, and (iv) improving social safety nets.Economic Growth, Supply Shock, Pakistan

    Why Pakistan must break-into the knowledge economy

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    The author emphasizes in this paper that this was the moment in Pakistan’s economic trajectory for it to learn to leap frog technologically from a labor intensive economy, by passing the intermediate stages of resource based and scale based activities, to a knowledge based economy. A knowledge based economy is one that bases its growth not on increasing capital or land or labor inputs, but on knowledge. The transition required is considerable, the author points out.Knowledge Economy, Economics of Education, Technical Efficiency, Pakistan

    The Legacy of the 'misfit' Poet: Repositioning Majid Amjad in the Modern Urdu

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    The author calls into question why the Urdu poet Majīd Amjad is not ranked with the likes of Rāshid, Mīrāji and Faiz. She argues that Amjad’s poetry did not correspond with the current trends of Western literature that were reflected in the other three poets and that literary canons represent a closed topography, a stage filled with “stars”, a club in the form of a list whose members are chosen by lesser mortals, influenced by political correctness, ideology, public opinion, the economics of publishing and the public profile of the “star”

    Replication of Daily and Monthly Freeway Demand Variations for Travel Time Reliability Procedures

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    The sixth edition of theHighway Capacity Manual(HCM) incorporates a travel time reliability assessment procedure for freeways and urban streets. Several demand adjustment factors, referred to by demand multipliers, are used to capture traffic demand variation across different days and months. These factors are currently produced by referencing the average daily traffic volume of each day-month combination to a base daily volume. However, practitioners usually perform traffic analyses during specific times of the day, for example, peak periods, off-peak periods, or even peak hours, demand multipliers may therefore replicate demand variation more accurately if they are based on traffic volumes concurred in time intervals narrower than a day. This paper investigates six criteria or periods to derive demand multipliers: full-day, pre AM-peak, AM peak-period, midday, PM peak-period, and post PM-peak. The study explores how these periods affect the scale of demand multipliers and the travel time reliability assessment. It was found that the main statistics of demand multipliers, that is, the mean, range, and standard deviation, greatly differ across the different multiplying periods. If analyzing peak periods on oversaturated corridors, the adoption of daily-volume multipliers was found to significantly overestimate the mean travel time index and planning time index during both the AM and PM peak periods, the accuracy of the travel time reliability estimation was considerably influenced. The study concludes with major findings and recommendations for possible enhancements to the HCM travel time reliability procedure.Dehman, A (corresponding author), Hasselt Univ, Transportat Res Inst IMOB, Diepenbeek, Belgium. [email protected]

    Rashid Amjad (ed.) The Pakistani Diaspora: Corridors of Opportunity and Uncertainty. Lahore, Pakistan: Lahore School of Economics. 2017. 337 pages.

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    The book “The Pakistani Diaspora, Corridors of Opportunity and Uncertainty”, which is edited by Rashid Amjad, is a collection of 17 academic essays on Pakistani migrants and Pakistani diaspora in different countries. This book presents diverse viewpoints in the study of diaspora. This book does not just analyse the size of the diaspora in a chronological manner, but it also provides important understanding of the cost and benefits associated with migration and assimilation of the migrants’ families in new environments. In the first paper, the author tries to capture the salient features and dynamics of Pakistan’s “age of migration” across home and host countries. By 2017, the estimated diaspora was at 9.1 million – almost 5 per cent of Pakistan’s population. The labour class started to migrate to the UK in 1950s while highly skilled professionals started moving to the US and Canada in 1960s. The unskilled and semiskilled workers began to move to the Middle East in 1970s and due to easing off their visa policies in 1990s, migrants began moving to Europe, Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia and Australia from Pakistan. According to the author “A large number of people face losses in the struggle to migrate to foreign countries. A majority of illegal migrants are imprisoned in different countries while trying to reach Europe while dozens are killed on their way to Greece.

    Parution : Al-ʿAllāmah al-Ḥillī (éd), "Foundations of Jurisprudence: An Introduction to Imāmī Shīʿī Legal Theory", Brill, 2016.

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    Parution : al-ʿAllāmah al-Ḥillī (éd.), Foundations of Jurisprudence - An Introduction to Imāmī Shīʿī Legal Theory, 2016. by al-ʿAllāmah al-Ḥillī. Introduction, Translation and Arabic Edition by Sayyid Amjad H. Shah Naqavi Foundations of Jurisprudence: An Introduction to Imāmī Shīʿī Legal Theory is a critical edition of Mabādiʾ al-wuṣūl ilā ʿilm al-uṣūl by al-ʿAllāmah al-Ḥillī, based upon six manuscripts, four of which date from the lifetime of the author. Sayyid Amjad H. Shah N..

    Toward a New Paradigm for Author Name Disambiguation

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    Author Name Disambiguation (AND) has emerged as a significant challenge in the bibliometric context with the growing volume of scientific literature. When citations written by different authors have the same names (polysemy or homonym names), and when an author has different names, there is ambiguity (synonyms or name variants). It is difficult to associate a citation with the correct author. Polysemy and synonyms cause merging and splitting anomalies in the citations. These anomalies affect the quantification of an author’s productivity (bibliometric analysis) and the reliability and quality of the information retrieved. Many techniques for AND have been proposed in the literature; most of them do not go beyond string matching or text matching. Most of the existing work do not consider the context or semantics of the terms used in the citations. In this study, the AND problem is resolved semantically using the deep learning technique on the PubMed dataset. The experimental results show that the proposed method achieves overall (11.72 %, 12.5 %, and 12.1 %) higher precision, recall, and f-measure than the pairwise class classification

    Data for "In situ readout of DNA barcodes and single base edits facilitated by in vitro transcription "

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    This dataset provides the raw and analyzed data as well as the code to recreate results reported in the paper "In situ readout of DNA barcodes and single base edits facilitated by in vitro transcription". The dataset is organized based on the figures and figure panels of the paper, with the codes provided as Matlab and R scripts. Please contact the corresponding author for any questions or comments regarding the data, the code, the methods, or the reagents used here.Related Publication: In situ readout of DNA barcodes and single base edits facilitated by in vitro transcription Askary, Amjad Caltech Nature Biotechnology https://doi.org/10.1038/s41587-019-0299-4 en

    Indexing of authors according to their domain of expertise

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    Measuring the impact and productivity of an author is an important, yet a challenging task. Most of the existing methods for ranking or indexing of authors are based on simple parameters such as publication counts, citation counts and their combinations. These methods are topic independent, hence ignoring the intra-field differences. This study introduces a specific method for indexing of researchers to measure their productivity in a given field of interest, believing that an author can be interested in more than one fields and can have different level of expertise in all these fields. This paper proposes Domain Specific Index (DSI), a novel method for indexing of authors with respect to their fields of interest. Latent Dirichlet Allocation (LDA) is applied to capture the latent topics within text corpora. DSI calculates the standing of an author in all topics of his or her interest by considering topic based citations instead of using overall citations like traditional methods. The citations received by a multi-authored paper are divided among all its co-authors on the basis of their topic probability in that particular field. Results show that instead of giving credit of received citations equally to all co-authors of a paper, if a weight is given with respect to their level of interest in that field, more specific authors in that field will be ranked as top authors

    Survey of internet usage among pediatric dentists in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia

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    Corresponding Author: Dr. Amjad Wyne, PDS Department, College of Dentistry, King Saud University, P.O. Box 60169 Riyadh 11545, KSA e-mail: [email protected] objective of this survey was to field information related to the use of the Internet by pediatric dentists in Saudi Arabia. A six-item anonymous survey was handed out to all the thirty-two participants of the Saudi Pediatric Dentistry Club Meeting in Riyadh in January 2001. The survey had a 100 percent response rate with most of the respondents being males (66%), and those who had completed their pediatric dentistry training in the 1990's (56.3%). Almost all (93.8%) of the respondents used the Internet. Two-thirds (65.6%) of the respondents used the Internet at least twice or thrice in a week. About nine out of ten (87.5%) respondents did not use e-mail to communicate with patients and their parents. Two-thirds (68.8%) of the respondents used the Internet for professional continuing education or for reading journals. The American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry's web site was the most popular amongst the respondents. In conclusion, this survey demonstrated that pediatric dentists in Saudi Arabia were Internet-savvy and have leveraged this new medium for professional continuing education
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