4,744 research outputs found
Phase I study evaluating oral panobinostat concurrently with radiotherapy or chemoradiotherapy in inoperable stage IIIA/B non-small cell lung cancer patients
Poster AbstractH. Takhar, N. Singhal, R. Gowda, M. Penniment, M. P. Brow
Inflammatory myopathy and cancer: rare association of seminoma testes and polymyositis
N. Singhal, P. Hissaria, R. Joshi, S. Nayaga
PRISM: Phase 2 trial with panitumumab monotherapy as second-line treatment in patients with recurrent or metastatic squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck
Published online 17 December 2015Abstract not availableDanny Rischin, David R. Spigel, Douglas Adkins, Richard Wein, Susanne Arnold, Nimit Singhal, Oliver Lee, Swami Murugappa
sj-docx-1-jct-10.1177_23800844221074354 – Supplemental material for Effect of Overweight and Obesity on Periodontal Treatment Intensity
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-jct-10.1177_23800844221074354 for Effect of Overweight and Obesity on Periodontal Treatment Intensity by E. Kaye, R. McDonough, A. Singhal, R.I. Garcia and M. Jurasic in JDR Clinical & Translational Research</p
and Vigyan Singhal. Robust latch mapping for combinational equivalence checking
Abstract Existing literature on combinational equivalence checking concentrates on comparing combinational blocks and assumes that a latch mapping (register mapping) has already been constructed. We describe an algorithm for automatically constructing a latch mapping. It is based on the functionality of the circuits being compared rather than on heuristics. As a result, if two circuits are combinationally equivalent, then our algorithm is guaranteed to find a latch mapping. Our empirical results show that the method is practical on large circuits
Understanding the importance of side information in graph matching problem
Graph matching algorithms rely on the availability of seed vertex pairs as side information to deanonymize users across networks. Although such algorithms work well in practice, there are other types of side information available which are potentially useful to an attacker. In this thesis, we consider the problem of matching two correlated graphs when an attacker has access to side information either in the form of community labels or an imperfect initial matching. First, we propose a naive graph matching algorithm by introducing the community degree vectors which harness the information from community labels in an e cient manner. Next, we analyze the basic percolation algorithm for graphs with community structure. Finally, we propose a novel percolation algorithm with two thresholds which uses an imperfect matching as input to match correlated graphs. We also analyze these algorithms and provide theoretical guarantees for matching graphs generated using the Stochastic Block Model.
We evaluate the proposed algorithms on synthetic as well as real world datasets using various experiments. The experimental results demonstrate the importance of communities as side information especially when the number of seeds is small and the networks are weakly correlated. These results motivate the study of other types of potential side information available to the attacker. Such studies could assist in devising mechanisms to counter the effects of side information in network deanonymization.Submission published under a 24 month embargo labeled 'U of I Access', the embargo will last until 2018-12-01The student, Kushagra Singhal, accepted the attached license on 2016-11-22 at 11:10.The student, Kushagra Singhal, submitted this Thesis for approval on 2016-11-22 at 11:16.This Thesis was approved for publication on 2016-11-22 at 12:00.DSpace SAF Submission Ingestion Package generated from Vireo submission #10224 on 2017-02-28 at 14:36:15Made available in DSpace on 2017-03-01T16:36:46Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2
SINGHAL-THESIS-2016.pdf: 390320 bytes, checksum: 96d12f05add1e7756426924faa9c6f2d (MD5)
LICENSE.txt: 4213 bytes, checksum: b67b10643e59abee994c756430c3217e (MD5)
Previous issue date: 2016-11-22Embargo set by: Seth Robbins for item 98583
Lift date: 2019-03-01T16:37:19Z
Reason: Author requested U of Illinois access only (OA after 2yrs) in Vireo ETD systemU of I Only Restriction Lifted for Item 98583 on 2019-03-02T10:15:33Z
Retraction: Singhal R, Rai B. sTNF-R Levels: Apical Periodontitis Linked to Coronary Heart Disease. Open Access Maced J Med Sci. 2017; 5(1):68-1 and Rai B, Kaur J, Jain R. Salivary and serum 8-hydroxydeoxyguanosine level in simulated microgravity. Maced J
Editor-in-Chief has retracted the articles "sTNF-R Levels: Apical Periodontitis Linked to Coronary Heart Disease." published by Singhal R & Rai B and "Salivary and serum 8-hydroxydeoxyguanosine level in simulated microgravity." published by Rai B, Kaur J, Jain R. An internal investigation has raised sufficient evidence of the inconsistent results and high similarity index. As such, we retract these two articles from the literature and by guidelines and best editorial practices from the Committee on Publication Ethics. We apologise to our audience about this unfortunate situation
From CRM to social CRM: A bibliometric review and research agenda for consumer research
Contemporary perspectives on customer relationship management and the parent concept of customer management gathered momentum in the mid-1980 s and early 1990s. The advent of digital technologies, especially social media, have prompted a further evolution of the concept. As a result, today's CRM systems must consider new measures, such as customer engagement and advocacy. Consequently, organisations’ social CRM activities and investments have consistently increased in part underpinned by the increased usage of these technologies by consumers. Through a systematic literature review and bibliometric analysis, we identify three main themes in which research in this area has focused on: (1) CRM and impact on performance, (2) social media capabilities and CRM, and (3) CRM processes and strategic use. We also identify future research avenues in the field derived from our analysis of the literature, emphasising the implications for consumer research
Effect of repaglinide and gliclazide on postprandial control of endogenous glucose production
The effect of repaglinide and gliclazide on postmeal suppression of endogenous glucose production (EGP) has been studied using a variable-rate tracer methodology. Groups of age-, sex-, and weight-matched type 2 diabetic subjects randomized to gliclazide or repaglinide were studied after ingesting a standard mixed meal (550 kcal; 67% carbohydrate, 19% fat, 14% protein). Plasma glucose profiles were similar in each group and markedly different from that of a nondiabetic control group. Endogenous glucose production was similar basally (3.01 +/- 0.30 vs 3.06 +/- 0.19 mg/kg per minute, gliclazide and repaglinide, respectively). After glucose ingestion, EGP declined rapidly in both the groups until 30 minutes and the greatest suppression was reached earlier in the repaglinide group [0.88 mg/kg per minute at 120 minutes vs 0.77 mg/kg per minute at 210 minutes in gliclazide group (P .02) but not significantly different in the repaglinide group (153 +/- 25 mg/kg per min 2 ; P = .17). Repaglinide has minimal physiological advantage over gliclazide, but both therapies for type 2 diabetes fall far short of correcting the endocrine and metabolic abnormalities
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