5 research outputs found
Surface Tension Measurements on Iron and Iron-Oxygen Alloys by the Oscillating Drop Technique
Title: Surface Tension Measurements on Iron and Iron-Oxygen Alloys by the Oscillating Drop Technique, Author: Ram N. Murarka, Location: ThodeThe oscillating drop technique was used to measure the surface tension of pure liquid iron and its oxygen alloys in the range 0 to 600 ppm oxygen. An attempt has been made to investigate how these measurements can be used for future kinetics studies.ThesisMaster of Engineering (ME
Strategic Business Knowledge for Senior HR Executives: An HRPS Mini-MBA Workshop on Financial Linkages
The article highlights the topics discussed at the Strategic Business Knowledge for Senior HR Executives: A Mini-MBA for Increasing Your Business Acumen workshop conducted by the Human Resource Planning Society in Atlanta, Georgia. According to author Ram Charan, a linkage is a measurable relationship to core operating priorities that create shareholder value. Michael Lanning suggested that HR executives focus on the experiences that their companies want customers to have. According to Nancy Humphries, corporate strategy centers on positioning the best value proposition to investors. William Rosner links HR priorities to economic value added through a service profit chain and a human capital investment scorecard
Text-line extraction from handwritten document images using GAN
Text-line extraction (TLE) from unconstrained handwritten document images is still considered an open research problem. Literature survey reveals that use of various rule-based methods is commonplace in this regard. But these methods mostly fail when the document images have touching and/or multi-skewed text lines or overlapping words/characters and non-uniform inter-line space. To encounter this problem, in this paper, we have used a deep learning-based method. In doing so, we have, for the first time in the literature, applied Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs) where we have considered TLE as image-to-image translation task. We have used U-Net architecture for the Generator, and Patch GAN architecture for the discriminator with different combinations of loss functions namely GAN loss, L1 loss and L2 loss. Evaluation is done on two datasets: handwritten Chinese text dataset HIT-MW and ICDAR 2013 Handwritten Segmentation Contest dataset. After exhaustive experimentations, it has been observed that U-Net architecture with combination of the said three losses not only produces impressive results but also outperforms some state-of-the-art methods.Partially supported by the CMATER research laboratory of the Computer Science and Engineering Department, Jadavpur University, India, and the co-author Ram Sarkar is partially funded by DST grant (EMR/2016/007213).http://www.elsevier.com/locate/eswa2021-02-01hj2019Computer Scienc
Modes of association and differentiation in Mauritius : an account of identity in a situation of socio-cultural heterogeneity
This Thesis details the anthropological investigation of socio-cultural heterogeneity in Mauritius, a small island republic in the Indian Ocean. I introduce the island, its population, climate and other salient features in the Introduction, where I also reveal something of the author's intentions, interests and ideology.
Although Mauritius has been relatively infrequently written about by anthropologists or other social scientists, when Mauritian social diversity has been discussed it has been conducted on the presumption that difference is synonymous with division. Consequently, in Chapter 1, I develop a critique of this assumption, which has found its way into the texts and discourses of both sociologists and state bureaucrats. I collapse these two categories' products into one, by drawing upon Foucault's notion of 'governmentality', and critique widespread views of Multiculturalism as being founded on the alleged coevalness of difference and division. I also introduce my three main analytical tools: intersubjectivity, transcendence and creolization.
Chapter 2 portrays individuals' identity, agreeing that at times those Mauritians that I met did draw divisions between one another, but that this was far from predictable, nor universally practised. Chapter 3 continues this project, by focusing on specific forms of the expression of division, but again I highlight the unanticipated nature of division and difference. Chapter 4 further clouds the picture by noting that even where individuals might be thought to be unproblematically employing ethnic - or caste - based strategies in, for example, the workplace, the use of such tools was again unforseeable, and not always successful. Even where they were successful in securing advantage, there are wider costs not previously noted in the ethnographic record.
Chapter 5 is the culmination of my argument. Through a fine-grained portrayal of a number of ethnographic moments, I point up the unifying and shared practices which have hitherto been excerpted from ethnographic accounts of Mauritius (or other 'plural' societies). These unifying features are as relevant to my understanding of Mauritian society as divisions, I claim, and I reflect on the contrast between 'banal' unities and governmental notions of Multiculturalism.
The Conclusion draws together the threads of the Thesis and charts where it fits in terms of wider anthropological and political trends
Patient Compliance With Follow-Up After Open Reduction and Internal Fixation for Treating Malleolar Ankle Fractures: A Retrospective Review
Background: Compliance with follow-up after orthopaedic procedures is variable and does not always occur as recommended. Various factors such as medical, financial, cultural, and logistical reasons may contribute to this lack of compliance. The purpose of this study was to determine follow-up compliance of patients who had undergone open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF) for treating closed malleolar ankle fractures.
Methods: Medical records of patients who underwent ORIF for treating closed malleolar ankle fractures by the senior author (RAM) were reviewed to evaluate compliance with postoperative follow-up (n = 267). Inclusion criteria were patients with isolated, acute, closed fractures (n = 229). Patients were considered to have followed up appropriately if they returned to clinic after a removable cast boot was issued at 4 to 8 weeks postoperatively. A 2-tailed t test was performed to analyze age and visual analogue scale score at the time of obtaining the removable cast boot. Chi-square testing was performed to analyze the other variables studied.
Results: Of the 229 patients included, a total of 183 complied with follow-up whereas 46 did not. Younger age, male sex, and living greater than 160.9 km (100 mi) from the hospital were statistically significant variables associated with decreased compliance with follow-up.
Conclusions: In our patient population, 80% of patients followed up in clinic as scheduled. The remaining 20% did not adhere with scheduled followup either before or after obtaining a removable cast boot. Younger age, male sex, and living greater than 100 miles from the hospital were associated with decreased compliance. Consideration should be paid to these factors when treating patients with ankle fractures
