582 research outputs found

    Newsletter, Volume 23, Number 02, March - April 1978

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    NIH Chimpanzee Grant National Large bowel cancer Project Renewed Manual for Staging of Cancer Published Reproductive Considerations for Young Cancer Patients, Louise C. Strong, MD Genetic Marker for Breast Cancer Ernst W. Bertner Memorial Award Cytogenetic Toxicity of Gentian Violet and Crystal Violet, William Au, PhD, Sen Pathak, PhD, Cheryl Collie, BS, T.C. Hus, PhD AHH Enzyme Activity Related to Lung Cancer MDAH Establishes Nutrition Classeshttps://openworks.mdanderson.org/newsletter/1088/thumbnail.jp

    Stoic beliefs and health: Development and preliminary validation of the Pathak-Wieten Stoicism Ideology Scale

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    © Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2017. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted. Introduction We developed and validated a new parsimonious scale to measure stoic beliefs. Key domains of stoicism are imperviousness to strong emotions, indifference to death, taciturnity and self-sufficiency. In the context of illness and disease, a personal ideology of stoicism may create an internal resistance to objective needs, which can lead to negative consequences. Stoicism has been linked to help-seeking delays, inadequate pain treatment, caregiver strain and suicide after economic stress. Methods During 2013-2014, 390 adults aged 18+ years completed a brief anonymous paper questionnaire containing the preliminary 24-item Pathak-Wieten Stoicism Ideology Scale (PW-SIS). Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) was used to test an a priori multidomain theoretical model. Content validity and response distributions were examined. Sociodemographic predictors of strong endorsement of stoicism were explored with logistic regression. Results The final PW-SIS contains four conceptual domains and 12 items. CFA showed very good model fit: root mean square error of approximation (RMSEA)=0.05 (95% CI 0.04 to 0.07), goodness-of-fit index=0.96 and Tucker-Lewis Index=0.93. Cronbach's alpha was 0.78 and ranged from 0.64 to 0.71 for the subscales. Content validity analysis showed a statistically significant trend, with respondents who reported trying to be a stoic 'all of the time' having the highest PW-SIS scores. Men were over two times as likely as women to fall into the top quartile of responses (OR=2.30, 95% CI 1.44 to 3.68, P<0.001). ORs showing stronger endorsement of stoicism by Hispanics, Blacks and biracial persons were not statistically significant. Discussion The PW-SIS is a valid and theoretically coherent scale which is brief and practical for integration into a wide range of health behaviour and outcomes research studies

    Response 1

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    Parmanu-Gunak

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    Parmanu-Gunak is a free Python based GUI application for reducing single and double spike isotope dilution data. Version 1.0 Please contact the author at [email protected] for any questions related to Parmanu-Gunak. If you use Parmanu-Gunak for your data reduction, then please cite the following paper: Pathak, D. (2023), Parmanu-Gunak: Data Reduction Software for Isotope Dilution Analysis. Geostand Geoanal Res. https://doi.org/10.1111/ggr.12476     </p

    Satellite-retrieved direct radiative forcing of aerosols over North-East India and adjoining areas: climatology and impact assessment

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    The article by J. Biswas et al. contained an update in affiliation of author Binita Pathak. The author would like to add another affiliation to her name. Her updated affiliations are the following

    Social entrepreneurship, governmentality &amp; the Left

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    This paper offers a critique of the location of social entrepreneurship in the imaginaries of an advanced liberal social economy . Social entrepreneurship is used in a broad sense to refer to innovative, sustainable solutions to social problems, and this paper is agnostic towards organisational structures or the use of earned income which might be understood to circumscribe the practice of social enterprise. This chapter therefore, rejects Reiss’ (1999,1) assertion that social entrepreneurship refers simply to the “application of sound business practices to the operation of non-profit organizations” and is closer to the social innovation school of thought advocated by Dees &amp; Anderson (2006). By doing so, the author asserts the need for nation states to take an active role through policy innovation and the co-ordination of the social economy

    Analysing spatial interdependence among the 2011 Thailand flood-affected small and medium enterprises for reduction of disaster recovery time period

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    The authors would like to acknowledge the continuous support and guidance of the colleagues and family members. The author would like to acknowledge the constant support and guidance from Anila Pathak, Nupur Chaturvedi, Meleana Chaturvedi and Aaryana Pathak. ORCID: 0000-0002-2750-8483 (Shubham Pathak).Natural disasters have been a significant hurdle in the economic growth of middle-income developing countries. Thailand has also been suffering from recurring flood disasters and was most which are severely affected during the 2011 floods. This paper aims to identify the various factors that impact the speed of disaster recovery among the Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) severely affected by the floods in Pathumthani province in central Thailand, and how it is related to its speed decision of neighbours SMEs. The methodology adopts a spatial econometric model, to analysis and understand each of the chosen factors' impact. The findings include the impact of disaster resilience, mitigation and planning at the SME level as well as the government level. The absence of accurate perception of actual risk, flood insurance and disaster management planning before the 2011 floods had contributed to the severity of the impacts during the 2011 floods

    On Hankel Transformable Spaces and a Cauchy Problem

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    The classical Hankel transform of a conventional function ϕ on (0, ∞) defined formally bywas extended by Zemanian [21-23] to certain generalized functions of one dimension. Koh [9, 10] extended the work of [21] to n-dimensions, and that of [22] to arbitrary real values of μ. Motivated from the work of Gelfand and Shilov [6], Lee [11] introduced spaces of type Hμ and studied their Hankel transforms. The results of Lee [11] and Zemanian [21] are special cases of recent results obtained by the author and Pandey [14]. The aforesaid extensions are accomplished by using the so-called adjoint method of extending integral transforms to generalized functions. Dube and Pandey [2], Pathak and Pandey [15, 16] applied a more direct method, the so-called kernel method, for extending the Hankel and other related transforms. </jats:p

    India-Taiwan economic relations: Charting a new path

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    Globalisation and the associated flow of capital, services, goods and technologies have led to greater economic integration across the world. The People’s Republic of China (PRC) which is known as the global manufacturing platform of the world has leveraged these flows to its advantage, to build itself as an important pillar of the international system. China’s economic “miracle” has been a subject of several scholarly debates. However, what has not received as much attention as the “miracle” is the role of Taiwan in enabling China to emerge as a manufacturing platform for the world. After the reforms and opening up of 1978, and after Deng Xiaoping’s southern tour in particular which led to more special economic zones (SEZs) becoming functional in the coastal regions of China, a massive influx of foreign investment in labour-intensive factories and industries, particularly from Taiwan, Hong Kong and the overseas Chinese communities, was witnessed. This influx brought with it large scale employment opportunities, in addition to bringing in new technologies and managerial know-how. The increase in Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) also resulted in a substantial increase in joint ventures with foreigners and wholly owned enterprises. China’s southern region has performed better than the others, particularly in terms of manufacturing output precisely because of its location adjoining Taiwan and Hong Kong, which enabled it with large volumes of FDI inflows. Over the decades, the Taiwanese economy has become deeply integrated with that of China’s. In fact, China is Taiwan’s largest trade partner, absorbing about 30 per cent of Taiwan’s exports by value. (Quartz, 16 December 2016) However, as economic growth slows in China with the onset and progression of the new normal, it becomes imperative for Taiwan to look for alternatives. India, which has announced its “Make in India” campaign, could become a lucrative destination for investment from Taiwan. Bilateral trade between the two sides has grown nearly fivefold from USD 1.19 billion in 2001 to more than USD 5 billion in 2016. By the end of 2016, around 90 Taiwanese companies had set up operations in India, and the total amount invested stood at USD 1.4 billion in the field of information and communication technology, medical devices, automobile components, machinery, steel, electronics, construction, engineering, financial services, etc. (Taipei Economic and Cultural Center in India, 2016) Despite the progress made, there is a lot of economic scope that still remains in furthering ties between India and Taiwan. This paper seeks to analyse the economic initiatives that have been undertaken so far in order to understand where economic ties between India and Taiwan are headed. The paper also looks at the feasibility of a free trade agreement between the two sides. Beyond trade in goods and services, the paper will also look at the issue of Taiwanese investment in India. The complementarities between the Act East Policy and the New Southbound policy also form an important section of this paper. The sources of data for this work are Bureau of Foreign Trade (Taiwan), Export Import Bank (India) and the National Bureau of Statistics (People’s Republic of China), besides secondary sources

    Robust decentralized authentication for public keys and geographic location:

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    Authentication has traditionally been done either in a decentralized manner with human assistance or automatically through a centralized security infrastructure. In the security infrastructure approach, a central trusted authority takes on the responsibility of authenticating participants within its domain of control. While the security infrastructure approach works well in traditional organizations, it does not address the needs of open membership systems. We propose automatic decentralized authentication mechanisms for peer-to-peer systems, email systems, and ad-hoc networks. Our byzantine fault tolerant public-key authentication protocol (BPKA) provides decentralized authentication to peer-to-peer systems with honest majority. Authentication is done over an insecure asynchronous network without using trusted third parties or human input. We also authenticate public keys in the email environment through our social-group key authentication protocol (SGKA). The protocol provides end-to-end authentication at the email client without using infrastructure or centralized authorities. Finally, location authentication in ad-hoc networks is proposed through our geographical secure path routing protocol (GSPR). The protocol authenticates geographic locations of anonymous nodes in order to provide location authentication and anonymity simultaneously.Ph.D.Includes bibliographical references (p. 121o-128)by Vivek Patha
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