196,534 research outputs found
L’immagine dell’oceano tra epica e Kavya: leggendo il VI libro del Ramayana (G.)
This paper mainly focuses on the typology of sea images spotted out in the Yuddhakanda of Ramayana. It aims to outline some sea imagery features in Indian pre-kāvya literature by the way of comparison with analogous images quoted from the Mahabharata and from some Kavya works. The war context is prevailing in the selected epic book. Therefore the ocean is quite regularly a second term of comparison for single warriors or for armies
sj-docx-1-han-10.1177_15589447211064365 – Supplemental material for Prescription Opioids and Patient-Reported Outcomes and Satisfaction After Carpal Tunnel Release Surgery
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-han-10.1177_15589447211064365 for Prescription Opioids and Patient-Reported Outcomes and Satisfaction After Carpal Tunnel Release Surgery by Pragna N. Shetty, Kavya K. Sanghavi, Mihriye Mete and Aviram M. Giladi in HAND</p
sj-docx-2-han-10.1177_15589447211064365 – Supplemental material for Prescription Opioids and Patient-Reported Outcomes and Satisfaction After Carpal Tunnel Release Surgery
Supplemental material, sj-docx-2-han-10.1177_15589447211064365 for Prescription Opioids and Patient-Reported Outcomes and Satisfaction After Carpal Tunnel Release Surgery by Pragna N. Shetty, Kavya K. Sanghavi, Mihriye Mete and Aviram M. Giladi in HAND</p
Buddhaghosa
This entriy is about Buddhaghosa or Buddhaghosacarya, a poet of unknown date known for being the author of the Padyacudamani (The Crest-Jewel of Verses), a Sanskrit mahakavya (great kavya) or sargabandha (canto composition) poem
sj-docx-1-han-10.1177_15589447221077367 – Supplemental material for Billing and Utilization Trends for Hand Surgery Indicate Worsening Barriers to Accessing Care
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-han-10.1177_15589447221077367 for Billing and Utilization Trends for Hand Surgery Indicate Worsening Barriers to Accessing Care by Jung Ho Gong, Chao Long, Adam E. M. Eltorai, Kavya K. Sanghavi and Aviram M. Giladi in HAND</p
sj-docx-2-han-10.1177_15589447221077367 – Supplemental material for Billing and Utilization Trends for Hand Surgery Indicate Worsening Barriers to Accessing Care
Supplemental material, sj-docx-2-han-10.1177_15589447221077367 for Billing and Utilization Trends for Hand Surgery Indicate Worsening Barriers to Accessing Care by Jung Ho Gong, Chao Long, Adam E. M. Eltorai, Kavya K. Sanghavi and Aviram M. Giladi in HAND</p
Speculative execution framework to make Linux services fault tolerant
Thesis: M. Eng., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2013.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (pages 47-48).Cabala is a speculative execution framework that enables server programs in Linux to be fault tolerant. The errors it targets are run-time errors that are due to program bugs, and which cause program exit; in particular, it provides resilience to errors triggered by requests. The Cabala framework is implemented as a user-space library, and enforces per-request checkpoint/rollback semantics to provide fault-tolerance. It provides facilities for checkpointing the state of the server program just before request processing starts, executing the processing in an isolated environment, detecting tolerated run-time errors before they cause program exit, and committing or discarding the modifications made during processing. Cabala addresses the fault tolerance needs of server programs in the context of supported errors. It enables the services provided by a server program to be highly available and ensures that a program which is correct and satisfies Cabala's requirements remains correct despite tolerated errors; it also ensures that the system's state remains consistent. In addition, Cabala is easy to use; the only changes required to the server program's source code are the inclusion of the Cabala library and the addition of three library function calls. Cabala was evaluated with two Linux server programs, the Apache2 web server and the DHCP4 DHCP server; it detected the tolerated errors and correctly recovered the server programs in both cases.by Kavya Joshi.M. Eng
sj-docx-1-han-10.1177_15589447221141482 – Supplemental material for Pain Control and Satisfaction With Peripheral Nerve Blocks for Upper Extremity Surgery
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-han-10.1177_15589447221141482 for Pain Control and Satisfaction With Peripheral Nerve Blocks for Upper Extremity Surgery by Caroline M. Wu, Cyril S. Gary, Kristin E. Karim, Kavya K. Sanghavi, Michael S. Murphy, J. Todd Hobelmann and Aviram M. Giladi in HAND</p
Intracellular Delivery of Exogenous Macromolecules into Human Mesenchymal Stem Cells by Double Deformation of the Plasma Membrane
Physical techniques for intracellular delivery of exogeneous materials offer an attractive strategy to enhance the therapeutic efficiency of stem cells. However, these methods are currently limited by poor delivery efficiency as well as cytotoxic effects. Here, a high throughput microfluidic device is designed for efficient (approximate to 85%) cytosolic delivery of exogenous macromolecules with minimal cell death (less than 10%). The designed microfluidic device enables the generation of transient pores as the cells pass through the micron-sized constrictions (6-10 mu m) leading to the passive diffusion of extracellular cargos into the cell cytosol. Specifically, the microfluidic system is designed to induce a double deformation on the cell membrane at the squeezing zones to maximize intracellular delivery. Additionally, the flow rate, ionic concentration, and the molecular weight of the cargo are optimized for maximum efficiency. The optimized device enables cytosolic diffusion of small (3 kDa) and large molecules (70 kDa) without inducing any apoptotic effect. Overall, this double cell deformation platform offers new opportunities to rapidly and efficiently deliver extracellular cargo into stem cells without affecting their viability and functionality
Dr. Duane M. Jackson, Morehouse College, July 2011
This video is a conversation with Dr. Duane M. Jackson. Dr. Jackson talks about his paper, "Recall and the Serial Position Effect: The Role of Primacy and Recency on Accounting Students' Performance." Jackie Daniel, AUC Woodruff Library, is the interviewer
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