702 research outputs found
Arun Shourie and his Christian critic
Critique by Fr. Augustine Kanjamala on Arun Shourie's Missionaries in India and response to it by the author
R16. Formulation and Evaluation of Doxorubicin HCl Nanoliposomes by Ethanol Injection Method
Corresponding author (Pharmaceutics and Drug delivery): Arun Kumar Kotha, [email protected]://egrove.olemiss.edu/pharm_annual_posters/1015/thumbnail.jp
DESIGN ON SCHEDULING THE WORKFLOW IN DISTRIBUTED SYSTEMS USING RANDOM DRIFT PARTICLE SWARM OPTIMIZATION ALGORITHM
P. Ramya1and K.S. Arun
FLOOD DAMAGEASSESSMENT USING REMOTE SENSINGANDGIS:THE PAST AND PRESENT
Arun R andK. Premalath
STUDIES ON DRYING CHARACTERISTICS OF PUMPKIN CUBES
Deepak yadav1, S.K. Jain 2, P.S Champawat 3, Arun kuma
CS Alumnus Starts Global Blog for Students, Young Inventors
Arun Buduri using Web to connect creative minds to one another, sponsor
Computer Science Alumnus Presents Hadoop Workshop
Arun Buduri taught students, faculty and staff to use MapReduce softwar
Understanding the value-chain of counterfeit products: A multimethod investigation
The student, - Sreekumar Arun, accepted the attached license on 2021-04-13 at 23:09.The student, - Sreekumar Arun, submitted this Dissertation for approval on 2021-04-13 at 23:23.This Dissertation was approved for publication on 2021-04-15 at 11:53.DSpace SAF Submission Ingestion Package generated from Vireo submission #16317 on 2021-09-16 at 17:03:02Made available in DSpace on 2021-09-17T02:34:25Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2
SREEKUMARARUN-DISSERTATION-2021.pdf: 1165555 bytes, checksum: 5224c2afec936d334243407f8cdc4a58 (MD5)
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Previous issue date: 2021-04-15Embargo set by: Seth Robbins for item 118507
Lift date: 2023-09-17T02:34:57Z
Reason: Author requested U of Illinois access only (OA after 2yrs) in Vireo ETD systemAuthor requested U of Illinois access only (OA after 2yrs) in Vireo ETD systemU of I OnlyThe context of this dissertation is the market for counterfeit products, which accounts for more than one trillion US dollars of trade globally every year. Entrepreneurs who manufacture and market these products are clandestine and operate in the black market. Drawing from this context, this dissertation seeks to advance knowledge on how entrepreneurs strategically use ambiguity in marketing communications, and in relationships with other firms. The first essay examines how and why equivocation is used as a persuasive strategy by sellers of counterfeit products. This essay develops a framework that can help qualitatively and quantitatively identify equivocation rhetoric in firm-generated text. The second essay examines how relationships between firms are managed when one of the firms employs ambiguity as a protection strategy. Specifically, the essay sheds light on how manufacturers and retailers of counterfeit products succeed in maintaining ambiguity, and in managing relationship tension arising from ambiguity. Put together, the essays present an investigation of how counterfeit manufacturers and retailers conduct their marketing functions despite being clandestine and illegal.Submission published under a 24 month embargo labeled 'U of I Access', the embargo will last until 2023-05-0
Author Correction: A shared neural basis underlying psychiatric comorbidity
Correction to: Nature Medicine. Published online 24 April 2023. In the version of this article initially published, the STRATIFY data also included cohort data from the ESTRA consortium, though this was not acknowledged in the author list and the section in Methods on the Stratify dataset. The Methods are now updated, and the author list is amended to combine the STRATIFY and ESTRA consortium names and to include the following authors: Marina Bobou, M. John Broulidakis, Betteke Maria van Noort, Zuo Zhang, Lauren Robinson, Nilakshi Vaidya, Jeanne Winterer, Yuning Zhang, Sinead King, Hervé Lemaître, Ulrike Schmidt, Julia Sinclair, Argyris Stringaris and Sylvane Desrivières. The STRATIFY and ESTRA consortia are now combined to list Marina Bobou, M. John Broulidakis, Betteke Maria van Noort, Zuo Zhang, Lauren Robinson, Nilakshi Vaidya, Jeanne Winterer, Yuning Zhang, Sinead King, Gareth J. Barker, Arun L. W. Bokde, Hervé Lemaître, Frauke Nees, Dimitri Papadopoulos Orfanos, Ulrike Schmidt, Julia Sinclair, Argyris Stringaris, Henrik Walter, Robert Whelan, Sylvane Desrivières and Gunter Schumann as members, and the IMAGEN consortium is updated to also include Sylvane Desrivières. Affiliations, author contributions and acknowledgements have been updated to reflect the new authorship, and all changes have been made in the HTML and PDF versions of the article
Seismic Velocities of the Whitestone Anorthosite and its Mylonitized Equivalents in the Parry Sound Shear Zone
Title: Seismic Velocities of the Whitestone Anorthosite and its Mylonitized Equivalents in the Parry Sound Shear Zone, Author: Arun Sen, Location: ThodeCompressional wave velocities of the Whitestone anorthosite and its mylonitic equivalent in the Parry Sound shear zone have been measured in the field and to two kilobars in a laboratory confining pressure vessel. Mylonitiztion of the anorthosite has resulted in a preferred orientation of constituent minerals and retrograde mineral assemblages. A seimic anisotropy is consequently developed in the mylonite such that the P-wave velocitites are lower for propagation directions perpendicular to mylonite than for its anorthosite protolith. In the field, rock weathering and surface fractures control velocity variations. At low confining pressure (shallow depth) the P-wave velocity anisotropy is controlled by fracturing which is in turn related to the mylonitic fabric. At approximately one kilobar pressure (depths close to five kilometres) where fractures and porosity are insignificant, the P-wave anisotropy is due solely to the aggregate mineral velocities and their solution and their orientations. The undeformed Whitestone anorthosite has an average P-wave velocity of 7.02 km/s measured in three perpendicular directions at 2 kilobars confining pressure. The mylonite has the following P-wave velocities at 2 kilobars confining pressure: 6.83 km/s parallel to both foliation and lineation, 6.70 km/s parallel to foliation and perpendicular to lineation, and 6.57 km/s perpendicular to foliation.ThesisBachelor of Science (BSc
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