553 research outputs found
Matching with Partners and Projects
We study a model that is a hybrid of the classical roommate matching model object allocation model. We propose a model where agents are matched in pairs in order to undertake a project. Agents have preferences over both the partner and the project they are assigned to. These preferences over partners and projects are separable and dichotomous. Each agent partitions the set of partners into friends and outsiders, and the set of projects into good and bad ones. Friendship is mutual and transitive. In addition, preferences over projects among friends are correlated (homophily). We define a suitable notion of the weak core and propose an algorithm, the minimum demand priority algorithm (MDPA) that generates an assignment in the weak core. In general, the strong core does not exist but the MDPA assignment satisfies a limited version of the strong core property when only friends can be members of the blocking coalition. The MDPA is also strategy-proof. Finally we show that our assumptions on preferences are indispensable. We show that the weak core may fail to exist if any of the assumptions of homophily, separability anddichotomous preferences are relaxed
A power efficient crossbar arbitration in multi-NoC for multicast and broadcast traffic
Large scale chip multiprocessors employ a multi-NoC, consisting of multiple physical channels for inter-core communication. Placement of a custom arbitration logic can improve the critical path delay and relax the worst case timing closure of the network. In particular, it can effectively distribute and manage the traffic from the multi-threaded workloads among the multiple networks of the NoC. This paper gives the design and implementation of the arbitration logic at the router crossbars. The results are compared with baseline NoC and other multi-NoC architectures. The proposed energy efficient router saves up to 57% of the router power consumption.</p
First person – Shweta Yadav
ABSTRACT
First Person is a series of interviews with the first authors of a selection of papers published in Journal of Cell Science, helping early-career researchers promote themselves alongside their papers. Shweta Yadav is the first author on ‘RDGBα localization and function at membrane contact sites is regulated by FFAT–VAP interactions’, published in Journal of Cell Science. Shweta is a post-doctoral associate in the laboratory of Prof. Juan Botas at Baylor College of Medicine, Texas, USA, investigating neurodegenerative diseases.</jats:p
The hired farm labor market: some recent evidence from Oregon
T.M. Hammonds, R. Yadav, and C. Vathana.This archived document is maintained by the State Library of Oregon as part of the Oregon Documents Depository Program. It is for informational purposes and may not be suitable for legal purposes.Includes bibliographical references (pages 22-23).Mode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications Collection.Text in English
“Discovery of the Wave-Edge Rectangle (WER) and its Area Formula”
Title: The Wave-Edge Rectangle (WER): A Newly Identified Geometric Structure and Its Area Formula
Author: Yadvendra Singh Yadav
Date: 2 December 2025
Summary:
I discovered a new geometric shape called the Wave-Edge Rectangle (WER), formed by replacing all four straight sides of a rectangle with equal semicircular arcs. I derived a general area formula:
=2(4+(+)
Stable Sharing
We propose a simple model in which agents are matched in pairs in order to complete a task of unit size. The preferences of agents are single-peaked and continuous on the amount of time they devote to it. Our model combines features of two models: assignment games (Shapley and Shubik (1971)) and the division problem (Sprumont (1991)). We provide an algorithm (Select-Allocate-Match) that generates a stable and Pareto efficient allocation. We show that stable allocations may fail to exist if either the single-peakedness or the continuity assumption fail
Correction to: Studies on H2-Assisted Liquefied Petroleum Gas Reduction of NO over Ag/Al2O3 Catalyst
Correction to: Bulletin of Chemical Reaction Engineering & Catalysis (2018), 13 (2): 227-235 (doi:10.9767/bcrec.13.2.1307.227-235)
An error appeared in Corresponding Author in a paper entitled “Studies on H2-Assisted Liquefied Petroleum Gas Reduction of NO over Ag/Al2O3 Catalyst” published in Bulletin of Chemical Reaction Engineering & Catalysis. The Corresponding Author is corrected to be:
* Corresponding Authors.
Tel: +919415268192. Email: [email protected] (R. Prasad)
Tel: +917505072607. Email: [email protected] (D. Yadav)
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The original article can be found online at: https://doi.org/10.9767/bcrec.13.2.1307.227-235
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Copyright © 2020 by Authors, Published by BCREC Group. This is an open access article under the CC BY-SA License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0).
How to Cite: Singh, P., Yadav, D., Thakur, P., Pandey, J., Prasad, R. (2020). Correction to: Studies on H2-Assisted Liquefied Petroleum Gas Reduction of NO over Ag/Al2O3 Catalyst. Bulletin of Chemical Reaction Engineering & Catalysis, 15 (2): 603-603 (doi:10.9767/bcrec.15.2.7659.603-603)
Permalink/DOI: https://doi.org/10.9767/bcrec.15.2.7659.603-60
RETRACTED ARTICLE: Psychological predictors behind the intention to drink and drive among female drivers: Application of extended theory of planned behavior
We, the Editor and Publisher of Traffic Injury Prevention, have retracted the following article: Ankit Kumar Yadav. Psychological predictors behind the intention to drink and drive among female drivers: Application of extended theory of planned behavior. Traffic Injury Prevention. 2020. https://doi.org/10.1080/15389588.2019.1703961. The author has requested the retraction of his article due to an error in one of the collected psychological measures. During data extraction, the responses for ‘attitude’ and ‘intention’ measures were switched and may have influenced the findings from the developed regression model and its results. As a result, the Editor and Publisher have agreed to retract the article in full. We have investigated and have been informed in our decision-making by our policy on publishing ethics and integrity and the COPE guidelines on retractions. The retracted article will remain online to maintain the scholarly record, but it will be digitally watermarked on each page as “Retracted”.</p
Helical and linear morphotypes ofArthrospirasp. PCC 8005 display genomicdifferences and respond differently to 60Co gamma irradiation
Arthrospira are multicellular cyanobacteria that typically reside in alkaline lakes of (sub)tropical regions and are mass cultivated around the globe in a variety of outdoor facilities and photobioreactors for their high nutritional, pharmaceutical and clinical value. Arthrospira sp. strain PCC 8005 was selected by the European Space Agency as an oxygen producer and nutritional end-product in a bioregenerative life support system for long-haul missions. Being highly resistant to ionizing radiation, it is also an ideal candidate for other space applications such as in situ resource utilization and terraformation. During long-term strain maintenance involving continuous subculturing we noted an irreversible morphological change in PCC 8005 subcultures i.e. from only helical to only straight trichomes. These morphotypes displayed differences in growth rate, buoyancy and resistance to gamma radiation. We also found marked differences in antioxidant capacity, pigment content and trehalose concentration, while whole-genome comparison revealed a difference of 168 SNPs, 48 indels and four large insertions affecting, in total, 41 coding regions across both genomes. Although nine of these regions encoded proteins with a known function, no conclusive genotype-phenotype associations could be determined. Nonetheless, genomic changes within the gvpC gene (encoding a gas vesicle protein) and within the regulatory region of the psbD gene (encoding the D2 protein of PSII) provided some clues for the observed differences in buoyancy and growth.This work was in part financed through a PhD grant for Anu Yadav provided by SCK_CEN and supported by a collaborative agreement on scientific cooperation between the Research Foundation - Flanders and the Polish Academy of Sciences (2016-2018) (contract FWO-PAN 52162 NB, file VS.082.16N).Janssen, PJ (reprint author), Belgian Nucl Res Ctr SCK CEN, Microbiol Unit, Interdisciplinary Biosci, B-2400 Mol, Belgium.
[email protected]
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