1,130 research outputs found

    sj-docx-1-ehi-10.1177_11786302221146020 – Supplemental material for Human Health Risk Assessment due to Heavy Metals in Ground and Surface Water and Association of Diseases With Drinking Water Sources: A Study From Maharashtra, India

    No full text
    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-ehi-10.1177_11786302221146020 for Human Health Risk Assessment due to Heavy Metals in Ground and Surface Water and Association of Diseases With Drinking Water Sources: A Study From Maharashtra, India by Govind Mawari, Naresh Kumar, Sayan Sarkar, Arthur L Frank, Mradul Kumar Daga, Mongjam Meghachandra Singh, Tushar Kant Joshi and Ishwar Singh in Environmental Health Insights</p

    Finding top performers through email patterns analysis

    No full text
    In the information economy, individuals’ work performance is closely associated with their digital communication strategies. This study combines social network and semantic analysis to develop a method to identify top performers based on email communication. By reviewing existing literature, we identified the indicators that quantify email communication into measurable dimensions. To empirically examine the predictive power of the proposed indicators, we collected 2 million email archive of 578 executives in an international service company. Panel regression was employed to derive interpretable association between email indicators and top performance. The results suggest that top performers tend to assume central network positions and have high responsiveness to emails. In email contents, top performers use more positive and complex language, with low emotionality, but rich in influential words that are probably reused by co-workers. To better explore the predictive power of the email indicators, we employed AdaBoost machine learning models, which achieved 83.56% accuracy in identifying top performers. With cluster analysis, we further find three categories of top performers, ‘networkers’ with central network positions, ‘influencers’ with influential ideas and ‘positivists’ with positive sentiments. The findings suggest that top performers have distinctive email communication patterns, laying the foundation for grounding email communication competence in theory. The proposed email analysis method also provides a tool to evaluate the different types of individual communication styles

    India’s Long Road: The Search for Prosperity by Vijay Joshi

    No full text
    Vijay Joshi‟s India’s Long Road: The Search for Prosperity is an important addition to the list of books on the Indian economy–Jean Dréze and Amartya Sen‟s An Uncertain Glory: India and its Contradictions and Jagdish Bhagwati and Arvind Panagariya‟s Why Growth Matters: How Economic Growth in India Reduced Poverty and the Lessons for Other Developing Countries–written for the interested general reader as well as the specialist. In addition, those readers familiar with the literature assessing and evaluating India‟s economic reforms will remember Joshi as the co-author of India: Macroeconomics and Political Economy, 1964-1991(1994) and India's Economic Reforms, 1991-2001(1996) along with the late I. M. D. Little

    Tuning Transitions in Rotating Rayleigh-Bénard Turbulence

    No full text
    Rayleigh-Bénard convection is a canonical system for the investigation of buoyancy-driven natural convection phenomena which abound in nature and technology. Under the influence of rotation and depending on the system parameters, the flow exhibits different regimes with disparate heat transfer characteristics even in the turbulent state. The present study attempts to tune the transitions between these regimes and thus control the heat transfer in practical applications. In particular, we explore the effect of addition of neutrally-buoyant thermally-conducting particles to the fluid. Following an experimental approach, we study the flow structure and heat transfer as functions of particle concentration and system parameters

    Herbal drugs and fingerprints : evidence based herbal drugs / Devi Datt Joshi.

    No full text
    Includes bibliographical references and index.xvi, 252 pages :Evidence based herbal drugs are on hi-acceptance day by day due to health friendly nature compared to synthetic drugs. The active ingredients in herbal drugs are different chemical classes, e.g. alkaloids, coumarins, flavonoids, glycosides, phenols, steroids, terpenes etc., are identified at molecular level using current analytical practices, which are unique characteristic, as finger, so known as fingerprints. The fingerprints are used for assessment of quality consistency and stability by visible observation and comparison of the standardized fingerprint pattern, have scientific potential to decipher the claims made on these drugs for authenticity and reliability of chemical constituents, with total traceability, which starts from the proper identification, season and area of collection, storage, their processing, stability during processing, and rationalizing the combinational in case of polyherbal drugs. These quality oriented documents have ample scientific logics so well accepted globally by regulatory authorities and industries, to determine intentional/ unintentional contamination, adulteration, pollutants, stability, quality, etc. parameters. Based on geo-climatic factors, a same plant species has different pharmacological properties due to different ingredients; such regional and morphological variations are identified by fingerprints, at the time of collection of the medicinal herb. The chromatographic (TLC, HPTLC, HPLC, GC,) and spectral (UV-Vis., FTIR, MNR, MS, LC-MS, GC-MS etc.) techniques have world-wide strong scientific approval as validated methods to generate the fingerprints of different chemical classes of active ingredients of herbal drugs. Presently there is a need for a book having all the fingerprinting techniques for herbal drugs at a place with theory, case studies and art to discover patentable forms. The present book is a mile stone in the subject, to be utilized by Scientists, Medical Doctors, Technicians, Industrialists, Researchers, and Students both in PG and UG level

    Random walk over a hypersphere

    No full text
    In a recent paper the author had shown that a special case of S. M. Joshi transform (so named after the author's reverent father) of distributions (Sba f)(x)=〈f(y),  lFl(a0;b0;ixy)  lFl(a;b;−2ixy)〉 is a characteristic function of a spherical distribution. Using the methods developed in that paper; the problem of distribution of the distance CD, where C and D are points niformly distributed in a hypersphere, has been discussed in the present paper. The form of characteristic function has also been obtained by the method of projected distribution. A generalization of Hammersley's result has also been developed. The main purpose of the paper is to show that although the use of characteristic functions, using the method of Bochner, is available in problems of random walk yet distributional S. M. Joshi transform can be used as a natural tool has been proved for the first time in the paper

    Oregon Health Authority - Highway 36 public health assessment

    No full text
    prepared by the Environmental Health Assessment Program, Oregon Health Authority, Public Health Division ; authors: Sujata Joshi, MSPH, Epidemiologist, David Farrer, Ph.D., Toxicologist, Jae P. Douglas, MSW, Ph.D., Principal Investigator, Administrator, Center for Prevention and Health Promotion, Karen Bishop, MPH, Public Health Educator, Matthew Dubrow, D.O, Preventive Medicine Resident.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 59-62).Mode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications Collection.Text in English

    Strained SOI FINFET SRAM design

    No full text
    Impact of strained silicon effects in double-gated FinFET structures on static random access memory (SRAM) cell functionality is presented. Three FinFET silicon-on-insulator (SOI) SRAM cell embodiments representing unstrained, strained, and NFET-only-strained devices are compared against a planar PDSOI SRAM cell design. The metrics encompass both static and dynamic behavior of the cell and are analyzed through 2-D process hardware-calibrated device models (Lg = 25 nm). The key findings of this letter are: 1) PFET devices with tensile strain are found to degrade the FinFET cell Read Noise Margin and cell ability to write a strong 1; 2) by restricting the tensile strain to the NFET devices FinFET SRAM cell Read stability and access times improve by 10percent-20percent relative to their unstrained FinFET and NFET-only strained PDSOI counterparts. © 1980-2012 IEEE.[Anonymous], 2006, TAUR TSUPREM 4 VERS; BASKER VS, 2010, P S VLSI TECHN, P19; Buturla E., 1989, P NASECODE 6, P291; Joshi R, 2006, PROC EUR S-STATE DEV, P315; Joshi R., 2005, U. S. Patent, Patent No. [6 921 982, 6921982]; Maitra K, 2011, IEEE ELECTR DEVICE L, V32, P713, DOI 10.1109-LED.2011.2126556; Matsukawa T, 2009, 2009 SYMPOSIUM ON VLSI TECHNOLOGY, DIGEST OF TECHNICAL PAPERS, P118, DOI 10.1109-IWSDA.2009.5346407; SEEVINCK E, 1987, IEEE J SOLID-ST CIRC, V22, P748, DOI 10.1109-JSSC.1987.1052809; Shin K.-S., 2006, THESIS U CALIFORNIA; Thean A.V.-Y., 2005, IEDM, P509, DOI 10.1109-IEDM.2005.160939312

    Dentadra flavicosta Dubatolov & Volynkin & Singh & Joshi & Černý 2021, comb. nov.

    No full text
    &lt;i&gt;Dentadra flavicosta&lt;/i&gt; (Moore, 1878), comb. nov. &lt;p&gt;(Figs 1, 2, 19, 20, 33)&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt; &lt;i&gt;Prabhasa flavicosta&lt;/i&gt; Moore, 1878, &lt;i&gt;Proceedings of the Scientific Meetings of the Zoological Society of London&lt;/i&gt; &lt;b&gt;1878&lt;/b&gt;: 26, pl. 2, fig. 17 (Type locality: [NE India, Meghalaya, Khasi Hills, Cherrapunji] &ldquo; Cherra Punji &rdquo;).&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt; &lt;b&gt;Type material examined&lt;/b&gt;. &lt;b&gt;Syntype&lt;/b&gt; (Fig. 2): &female;, &ldquo;Cherra | &female; | Atkinson | 26&rdquo; / &ldquo; &lt;i&gt;Prabhasa flavicosta&lt;/i&gt; type Moore&rdquo; / &ldquo;Moore Coll. 94-106&rdquo; / red ring &ldquo;Type&rdquo; label / QR-code label with unique number &ldquo; NHMUK010401748 &rdquo; (NHMUK).&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt; &lt;b&gt;Additional material examined&lt;/b&gt;. 1 &male;, 1 &female;, Khasia Hills, Assam Nissary, gen. slide No.: BMNH Arct. 4889 (male), unique numbers: NHMUK 010914124 (male) and 010914127 (female) (NHMUK); 1 &female;, Assam, Cherrapunji, X.1916, Native Collector, Brit. Mus. 1926-142, &lt;i&gt;Ilema flavicosta&lt;/i&gt; Mo., unique number: NHMUK 010914125, gen. slide No.: BMNH Arct. 4890 (NHMUK); 1 &male;, Khasis, Nat. Coll., Joicey Bequest, Brit. Mus. 1934-120, unique number: NHMUK 010914126, gen. slide No.: NHMUK010313950 (prepared by Volynkin) (NHMUK).&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt; &lt;b&gt;Remark&lt;/b&gt;. Holloway (2001) reported the species for Borneo based on a single female specimen from Pulo Laut. Unfortunately, the second author of the present paper did not locate this specimen in the NHMUK collection. However, despite the external similarity of adults, the female genitalia illustrated by Holloway (2001: fig. 92) display remarkable differences from those of the true &lt;i&gt;D. flavicosta&lt;/i&gt; from Khasi Hills and obviously belong to another, unknown species.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt; &lt;b&gt;Distribution&lt;/b&gt;. The species is known only from Northeastern India (Meghalaya) (Moore 1878). Reporting of this species from Thailand (&lt;b&gt;&Ccaron;ern&yacute; &amp; Pinratana&lt;/b&gt; 2009) is due to wrong identification.&lt;/p&gt;Published as part of &lt;i&gt;Dubatolov, Vladimir V., Volynkin, Anton V., Singh, Navneet, Joshi, Rahul &amp; Černý, Karel, 2021, On the taxonomy of the Prabhasa / Zadadra generic complex with descriptions of two new genera and two new species (Lepidoptera, Erebidae, Arctiinae, Lithosiini), pp. 519-534 in Zootaxa 4966 (5)&lt;/i&gt; on page 522, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4966.5.2, &lt;a href="http://zenodo.org/record/4745231"&gt;http://zenodo.org/record/4745231&lt;/a&gt
    corecore