7,521 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
RESPECTFULF GAZE OF KUMAR SHAHANI CINEMA: This article is a tribute to Kumar Shahani a pioneer of India’s arthouse parallel cinemawho passed away in February 2024 at the age of 83.I am attached to express a tribute to this gifted and talented artist in Talking Films Online (TFO) an originally Indian group bringing together international Filmmakers, cinephiles, students and scholars on regular collective analytical exercises related to worldwidecinema. 1I will offer a personal view of one of Kumar Shahani’s first film “Maya Darpan” (1972).Kumar Shahani was aged of 32 years old, showing maturity and delicacy in the film“Maya Darpan” (1972) stressing the respectful ways Kumar Shahani was filming his mainactress, revealing his austerity, modesty and immense sense of tolerance as universalmerits and moral principles. In that perspective I evoke the existence of a “respectful gaze” in Kumar Shahani parallel cinema.
https://talkingfilmsonline.wordpress.com/2024/04/10/respectful-gaze-kumar-shahanis-cinema/This article is a tribute to Kumar Shahani a pioneer of India’s arthouse parallel cinema who passed away in February 2024 at the age of 83.I am attached to express a tribute to this gifted and talented artist in Talking Films Online (TFO) an originally Indian group bringing together international Filmmakers, cinephiles, students and scholars on regular collective analytical exercises related to worldwide cinema. I will offer a personal view of one of Kumar Shahani’s first film “Maya Darpan” (1972). Kumar Shahani was aged of 32 years old, showing maturity and delicacy in the film“Maya Darpan” (1972) stressing the respectful ways Kumar Shahani was filming his main actress, revealing his austerity, modesty and immense sense of tolerance as universal merits and moral principles. In that perspective I evoke the existence of a “respectful gaze” in Kumar Shahani parallel cinema
RESPECTFULF GAZE OF KUMAR SHAHANI CINEMA: This article is a tribute to Kumar Shahani a pioneer of India’s arthouse parallel cinemawho passed away in February 2024 at the age of 83.I am attached to express a tribute to this gifted and talented artist in Talking Films Online (TFO) an originally Indian group bringing together international Filmmakers, cinephiles, students and scholars on regular collective analytical exercises related to worldwidecinema. 1I will offer a personal view of one of Kumar Shahani’s first film “Maya Darpan” (1972).Kumar Shahani was aged of 32 years old, showing maturity and delicacy in the film“Maya Darpan” (1972) stressing the respectful ways Kumar Shahani was filming his mainactress, revealing his austerity, modesty and immense sense of tolerance as universalmerits and moral principles. In that perspective I evoke the existence of a “respectful gaze” in Kumar Shahani parallel cinema.
https://talkingfilmsonline.wordpress.com/2024/04/10/respectful-gaze-kumar-shahanis-cinema/This article is a tribute to Kumar Shahani a pioneer of India’s arthouse parallel cinema who passed away in February 2024 at the age of 83.I am attached to express a tribute to this gifted and talented artist in Talking Films Online (TFO) an originally Indian group bringing together international Filmmakers, cinephiles, students and scholars on regular collective analytical exercises related to worldwide cinema. I will offer a personal view of one of Kumar Shahani’s first film “Maya Darpan” (1972). Kumar Shahani was aged of 32 years old, showing maturity and delicacy in the film“Maya Darpan” (1972) stressing the respectful ways Kumar Shahani was filming his main actress, revealing his austerity, modesty and immense sense of tolerance as universal merits and moral principles. In that perspective I evoke the existence of a “respectful gaze” in Kumar Shahani parallel cinema
A Unified Shell model for Buoyancy-Driven Turbulence
We construct a unified shell model for stably stratified and convective turbulence. Shell model simulation of stably stratified flow in turbulent regime exhibit Bolgiano-Obukhbov (BO) scaling in which the kinetic energy spectrum varies as . However, simulation of convective turbulence shows Kolmogorov's spectrum. These results are consistent with the direct numerical simulations of Kumar {\em et al.} [Phys. Rev. E {\bf 90}, 023016 (2014)]. We also observe a dual scaling ( and ) for a limited range of parameters in stably stratified flow
REPRODUCTIVE AGENCY, MEDICINE AND THE STATE: CULTURAL TRANSFORMATIONS IN CHILDBEARING
List of figures and tables -- Preface and acknowledgements -- Introduction: reproductive agency, medicine, and the state / Maya Unnithan Kumar -- Ch. 1. Attitudes to genetic diagnosis and to the use of medical technologies in pregnancy: some British Pakistani perspectives / Alison Shaw -- Ch. 2. Localising a brave new world: new reproductive technologies and the politics of fertility in contemporary Sri Lanka / Bob Simpson -- Ch. 3. Conception technologies, local healers and negotiations around childbearing in Rajasthan / Maya Unnithan-Kumar -- Ch. 4. Programmes of gamete donation: strategies in (private) clinics of assisted conception / Monica M.B. Bonaccorso -- Ch. 5. Women, doctors, and pain / William Stones -- Ch. 6. Labour, privatisation, and class: middle-class women s experience of changing hospital births in Calcutta / Henrike Donner -- Ch. 7. In search of closure for quinacrine: science and politics in contexts of uncertainty and inequality / Asha George -- Ch. 8. 'She has a tender body': postpartum morbidity and care during Bananthana in rural south India / Ash Kilaru, Zoe Matthews, Jayashree Ramakrishna, Shanti Mahendra and Saraswathy Ganapathy -- Ch. 9. 'And never the twain shall meet': reproductive health policies in the Islamic Republic of Iran / Soraya Tremayne -- Ch. 10. Women in fertility studies and In Situ Thulsi Patel -- Ch. 11. Heteronomous women? Hidden assumptions in the demography of women / Sumi Madhok -- Notes on contributors -- Inde
Story of the Story-Teller: A Conversation with Ramendra Kumar
Ramendra Kumar (Ramen) is an award-winning writer, storyteller and inspirational speaker with 42 books to his name. Ramen’s writings have been published by many of the leading publishers in the county and translated into 30 languages. They have found a place in several textbooks and anthologies. He has written across all genres ranging from picture books to adult fiction, satire, poetry, travelogues, biographies and on issues related to parenting and relationships. He has been invited to literary festivals held in Denmark, Greece, Sharjah, Sri Lanka as well Indian events including the prestigious Jaipur Litfest to conduct storytelling sessions and creative writing workshops. He has also been empanelled by Pearson India Education Services as well as several schools to conduct workshops. He was nominated as a Jury Member for the Best Children’s Author Category of The Times of India’s ‘Women AutHer’ Awards 2020. Many of his stories have been showcased by popular audio streaming, apps both within and outside the country, such as Spotify, Gaatha, Talking Stories Radio – London et al.
An Engineer & an MBA, Ramen was serving as the General Manager (Corporate Communications), SAIL, Rourkela Steel Plant, when he took Voluntary Retirement to pursue his passion, in August 2020. To know more about the writer, you can visit his website www.ramendra.in & his page on Wikipedia. Dr. Sagar Kumar Sharma interviews the author and unfolds the pages of his life.
 
Elaeocarpus gadgilii A. M. Maya, V. Suresh & K. M. P. Kumar 2021, sp. nov.
Elaeocarpus gadgilii A.M.Maya, V.Suresh & K.M.P.Kumar sp. nov. (Figs. 1, 2) Diagnosis:—the new taxon differs from E. serratus and E. variabilis by the coriaceous leaves with conspicuous venation on adaxial surface, the outer tooth of anthers with very long shining setae, and the wider fruits. Description:—Trees, generally ≥ 12 m (up to 20 m high), with cylindrical trunk; stem grayish-green, with scattered adpressed, white hairs throughout. Branchlets slender, terete, felted, lenticellate. Leaves 1-foliate, alternately arranged and slightly crowded towards the branchlet apices; petiolate, petiole slender, terete, 13–30 × 1.2–2.4 mm, greenish to reddish, sparsely pubescent, with a pair of pegs at the apex. Lamina elliptic to broadly elliptic, 5–10 × 3.3–5.2 cm, thick, coriaceous; base cuneate, obtuse; apex acute or obtuse, shortly acuminate or emarginate; margin revolute, remotely crenate-serrulate; leaf teeth 3–17 mm long; main veins in 3–5 pairs, mid-vein and main veins conspicuous on adaxial side, more prominent on abaxial side, densely adpressed to semi spreading light brown hairs over mid vein and main veins on abaxial side, main vein forks at 8–19mm from mid vein. Domatia at the angle between the mid-vein and the main veins, covered with sparse adpressed brown hairs. Inflorescence axillary or lateral racemes, 8–28 flowered. Peduncles are slender, sub-terete, 35–82 × 1.2–2.1 mm, overtopping or condensed on twig tip, moderately to densely covered by adpressed brown hairs. Flower buds ovoid, with apex acute. Flowers pedicellate, pedicel slender, terete, 3.5–7 × 0.7–1.5 mm, pinkish to reddish-brown, densely covered in light brown hairs; bracts caducous, 2–2.2 mm long, lanceolate, brownish, floccose tomentose on outer surface. Sepals 5, free, 4–8.3 mm long, reddish-brown, lanceolate, with acute apex, base truncate, persistent after petals fall. Outer surface of sepals verrucose, densely covered by short, adpressed brown hairs, Inner surface of sepals margin and midvein are densely covered with adpressed white hairs with light brown tinge at its base. Petals 5, free, obovate, 6–9 × 1.2–4 mm, with 25–37 divisions, each divisions 2.2–4.7mm long with round apex, white colored with pinkish strips at the base of outer surface, both outer and inner surface with sparse white adpressed hairs in lower half and margin with few hairs. Disk lobes 1.0–1.05 × 2–3.5 mm, ovate, with rounded or truncate base, surrounding the ovary and partially covering its base, yellow to pink, densely covered with long, adpressed white hairs; hairs ½ times longer than disk remnants. Stamens 25–38; filaments straight, sometimes slightly curved to sigmoid (sigmoid ones more often in the outer ring of stamens), 0.05–1.70 × 0.04–0.17 mm; anthers 0.65–3.24 × 0.2–0.4 mm, basifixed, moderately hairy during anthesis, with the outer tooth longer than the inner, both with rounded apex, outer tooth apex having 3–6 long setae; setae 0.15–1.88 mm long, up to ½– ¾ times longer than anthers. Ovary 1.2–3 mm long and 0.9–1 mm in diameter, greenish, felted with long, adpressed white hairs, ½ times longer than ovary; locules three, each locule with 2 inversely comma-shaped ovules, fertile locule one, with only one functional ovule developing into 1 functional seed; style 1.6–4.4 × 0.14–0.4 mm. Fruits ellipsoid, 30–50 × 15–25 mm, with apex round and shortly acuminate, base acute to round, surface smooth or slightly knobby, greenish to reddish, with white small spots or patches, sparsely pubescent; mesocarp creamy white, suffused with reddish towards the inner side; endocarp 0.3–0.4 cm, surface with ovoid stone like hard projections and sparse, short, light brown, adpressed hairs. Seeds elliptic, round in cross section. Type:— INDIA. Kerala: Palakkad District, Nelliyampathy, Mattumala, 10°31’41.34”N, 76°31’41.34’’E, 21 September 2018, A. M. Maya GVCP-SV0025 (Holotype: MH; Isotypes: CALI, CMPR, KFRI). Paratypes: — INDIA. Kerala: Palakkad District, Mannarkad, Varadimala, 22 October 2011, K. A. Anilkumar 4133 (CMPR!), Ibidem, 21 September 2019, A. M. Maya GVCP-SV183 (MH), Siruvani, s.d., 900 m, D. B. Deb 28393 (MH!), Kearalamedu, 20 November 2019, A M. Maya GVCP-SV266 (MH), Attumudi, 20 September 2012, K. A. Anilkumar 4489 (CMPR!), Nelliyampathy, 26August 2014, K. M. Prabhukumar 07800 (CMPR!), Karasurimala, 19 October 2019, A. M. Maya GVCP-SV232 (MH), Mattumala, 19 October 2019, A. M. Maya GVCP-SV256 (MH). Ernakulam District, Mappilappara, 800 m, 26 September 2015, K. M. Prabhukumar 08548 (CMPR!). Wayanad District, Chandanamthode, 18 November 1982, N. Sasidharan 2608 (KFRI!). Thiruvananthapuram District, Agasthyamala Biosphere Reserve, Athirumala, 23 October 2003, 800m, P. S. Udayan, Satheesh George, K. V. Thushar, N. K. Janarthanam 2013 (CMPR!). Kanyakumari District, Muthukayal, 1329 m, 9 November 2019, K. A. Sujana & R. G. Vadhyan 147098 (MH). Phenology:— Flowering in September–November; fruiting in November–January. Etymology:— The species is named in honor of Sri. Madhav Dhananjaya Gadgil, an Indian ecologist and head of the Western Ghats Ecology Expert Panel (WGEEP), in recognition of his immense efforts towards conservation of Western Ghats. Distribution:— Southern Western Ghats, Kerala and Tamil Nadu, India, apparently endemic to Southern Western Ghats, India. Habitat:— Evergreen forests, at 800–1500 m a.s.l.Published as part of Manoharan, Maya Ammathil, Prabhukumar, Konickal Mambetta, Arjunan, Sujana K., Jose, Sojan & Veerankutty, Suresh, 2021, Elaeocarpus gadgilii (Elaeocarpaceae), a new species from Western Ghats (India), pp. 87-93 in Phytotaxa 489 (1) on pages 88-91, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.489.1.7, http://zenodo.org/record/575667
DMAP mediated one-pot domino thienannulation: a versatile, regioselective and green mechanochemical route to naphtho[2,3-b]thiophenes
Solvent-free mechanochemical route to naphtho[2,3-b]thiophenes via [3 + 2] oxidative heteroannulation of alpha-enolicdithioesters and beta-oxothioamides with 1,4-naphthoquinone has been achieved at room temperature
NOTICE!!! This person (known as Ashwin Kumar) plagiarized the text titled: "Using phenomenological research methods in qualitative health research"
EDITORIAL NOTICE:
1. This publication has been removed due to detected plagiarism by the editorial.
2. If you have cited, you MUST UPDATE your reference with the following original article:
Wojnar, Danuta, and Kristen Swanson. “Phenomenology An Exploration”. Journal of holistic nursing : official journal of the American Holistic Nurses’ Association 25 (01 October 2007): 172-80; discussion 181. https://doi.org/10.1177/0898010106295172.
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3. Submitter's Profile Record (the thief, the plagiariser):
Name: Ashwin KumarURL: http://www.freewebs.com/ak2146Affiliation: University of Western Sydney, Australia.Country: AustraliaBio Statement:Dr. Ashwin Kumar,PO Box 571,Toongabbie,Sydney,Australia, NSW, 2146.Homepage: http://www.freewebs.com/ak2146Email: [email protected]
[email protected]: 0432-622-147Skype Internet Phone ID: ak2146
Dr. Ashwin Kumar (BA, MA (Distinction), PhD) is an academic researcher whose research interests and areas of expertise include: Complementary and alternative medicine (CAM), ageing and social gerontology, sociology, social anthropology, sociology of care, public health, health promotion, Indigenous health, migrant and refugee health, disability and chronic illness. Ashwin is the author of 8 books and numerous academic journal articles in the field of public health, health sociology and anthropology of health and illness. His books: The Lived Experience of Caring; The Lived Experience of Ageing; The Lived Experience of Using Complementary and Alternative Medicine; Doing Sociology; The Basics of Sociology; Plain English Writing; Research and Writing Skills and Writing Effective Essays are available at:
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=ntt_athr_dp_sr_1?_encoding=UTF8&sort=relevancerank&search-alias=books&field-author=PhD.%20Ashwin%20Kumar
My homepage: http://www.freewebs.com/ak2146
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