12 results on '"Megha Anil"'
Search Results
2. Autonomous Wheelchair for Indoor Navigation
- Author
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Chandana, H R, primary, Deepak, M, additional, Padanad, Megha Anil, additional, and Satish, B A, additional
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- 2023
- Full Text
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3. Active travel and paratransit use in African cities: Mixed-method systematic review and meta-ethnography
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Lee Randall, Anna Brugulat-Panés, James Woodcock, Lisa Jayne Ware, Caitlin Pley, Safura Abdool Karim, Lisa Micklesfield, Gudani Mukoma, Lambed Tatah, Philip Mbulalina Dambisya, Sostina Spiwe Matina, Ian Hambleton, Gabriel Okello, Felix Assah, Megha Anil, Haowen Kwan, Alice Charity Awinja, Georgina Pujol-Busquets Guillén, Louise Foley, Woodcock, James [0000-0003-4769-5375], Tatah, Lambed [0000-0002-8967-6917], Foley, Louise [0000-0003-3028-7340], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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Public health ,Health Policy ,African cities ,Meta-ethnography ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Systematic review ,Transportation ,Paratransit ,Safety, Risk, Reliability and Quality ,Safety Research ,Pollution ,Active travel - Abstract
Active travel, as a key form of physical activity, can help offset noncommunicable diseases as rapidly urbanising countries undergo epidemiological transition. In Africa a human mobility transition is underway as cities sprawl and motorization rises and preserving active travel modes (walking, cycling and public transport) is important for public health. Across the continent, public transport is dominated by paratransit, privately owned informal modes serving the general public. We reviewed the literature on active travel and paratransit in African cities, published from January 2008 to January 2019. We included 19 quantitative, 14 mixed-method and 8 qualitative studies (n = 41), narratively synthesizing the quantitative data and meta-ethnographically analysing the qualitative data. Integrated findings showed that walking was high, cycling was low and paratransit was a critical mobility option for poor peripheral residents facing long livelihood-generation journeys. As an indigenous solution to dysfunctional mobility systems shaped by colonial and apartheid legacies it was an effective connector, penetrating areas unserved by formal public transport and helping break cycles of poverty. From a public health perspective, it preserved active travel by reducing mode-shifting to private vehicles. Yet many city authorities viewed it as rogue, out of keeping with the 'ideal modern city', adopting official anti-paratransit stances without necessarily considering the contribution of active travel to public health. The studies varied in quality and showed uneven geographic representation, with data from Central and Northern Africa especially sparse; notably, there was a high prevalence of non-local authors and out-of-country funding. Nevertheless, drawing together a rich cross-disciplinary set of studies spanning over a decade, the review expands the literature at the intersection of transport and health with its novel focus on paratransit as a key active travel mode in African cities. Further innovative research could improve paratransit's legibility for policymakers and practitioners, fostering its inclusion in integrated transport plans.
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- 2023
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- View/download PDF
4. Human brain glioblastoma cells do not induce but do respond to the bleomycin-induced bystander response from lung adenocarcinoma cells
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Basheerudeen, Safa Abdul Syed, Mani, Chinnadurai, Kulkarni, Megha Anil Kumar, Pillai, Karthika, Rajan, Anila, and Venkatachalam, Perumal
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- 2013
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5. Socioeconomic and gendered inequities in travel behaviour in Africa: Mixed-method systematic review and meta-ethnography
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M Camille, Sostina Spiwe Matina, Louise Foley, Ebele Mogo, Kufre Joseph Okop, Haowen Kwan, Eleanor Turner-Moss, Lisa K. Micklesfield, Marshall K. Tulloch-Reid, James Woodcock, Lee Randall, Anna Brugulat-Panes, Lambed Tatah, Safura Abdool Karim, Megha Anil, Felix K. Assah, Caitlin Pley, Ian Hambleton, Alice Charity Awinja, Lisa J. Ware, Nadia R. Bennett, Tanmay Anand, Georgina Pujol-Busquets, Gudani Mukoma, Ishtar Govia, Philip M. Dambisya, Foley, Louise [0000-0003-3028-7340], Woodcock, James [0000-0003-4769-5375], Tatah, Lambed [0000-0002-8967-6917], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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Health (social science) ,Qualitative property ,Article ,History and Philosophy of Science ,Humans ,Sociology ,Socioeconomic status ,Disadvantage ,Anthropology, Cultural ,Transportation planning ,Travel ,Equity (economics) ,Public economics ,business.industry ,Meta-ethnography ,Gender ,Equity ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Public transport ,Africa ,Systematic review ,Female ,business ,Paratransit ,Travel-Related Illness ,Qualitative research - Abstract
Travel has individual, societal and planetary health implications. We explored socioeconomic and gendered differences in travel behaviour in Africa, to develop an understanding of travel-related inequity. We conducted a mixed-methods systematic review (PROSPERO CRD42019124802). In 2019, we searched MEDLINE, TRID, SCOPUS, Web of Science, LILACS, SciELO, Global Health, Africa Index Medicus, CINAHL and MediCarib for studies examining travel behaviour by socioeconomic status and gender in Africa. We appraised study quality using Critical Appraisal Skills Programme checklists. We synthesised qualitative data using meta-ethnography, followed by a narrative synthesis of quantitative data, and integrated qualitative and quantitative strands using pattern matching principles. We retrieved 103 studies (20 qualitative, 24 mixed-methods, 59 quantitative). From the meta-ethnography, we observed that travel is: intertwined with social mobility; necessary to access resources; associated with cost and safety barriers; typified by long distances and slow modes; and dictated by gendered social expectations. We also observed that: motorised transport is needed in cities; walking is an unsafe, ‘captive’ mode; and urban and transport planning are uncoordinated. From these observations, we derived hypothesised patterns that were tested using the quantitative data, and found support for these overall. In lower socioeconomic individuals, travel inequity entailed reliance on walking and paratransit (informal public transport), being unable to afford travel, travelling less overall, and travelling long distances in hazardous conditions. In women and girls, travel inequity entailed reliance on walking and lack of access to private vehicles, risk of personal violence, societally-imposed travel constraints, and household duties shaping travel. Limitations included lack of analytical rigour in qualitative studies and a preponderance of cross-sectional quantitative studies (offering a static view of an evolving process). Overall, we found that travel inequity in Africa perpetuates socioeconomic and gendered disadvantage. Proposed solutions focus on improving the safety, efficiency and affordability of public transport and walking., Highlights • Utilised meta-ethnography and pattern-matching principles. • Revealed travel patterns differed by socioeconomic status and gender. • Travel inequity compounded disadvantage. • Females and poor people more likely to rely on walking. • Cost, safety and cultural factors were barriers to travel.
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- 2021
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6. Medical students consulting from home: A qualitative evaluation of a tool for maintaining student exposure to patients during lockdown
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Richard Darnton, Mark Jenkins, Jonathan Ferdinand, Megha Anil, Tony Lopez, Darnton, Richard [0000-0003-4218-8745], Lopez, Tony [0000-0002-3376-5371], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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Male ,2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,medicine ,Students, Medical ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Attitude of Health Personnel ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,education ,clinical ,Education ,Education, Distance ,Pandemic ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,Medicine ,Humans ,Interpersonal Relations ,Clinical skills ,Medical education ,undergraduate ,business.industry ,Remote Consultation ,COVID-19 ,General Medicine ,Professional-Patient Relations ,Female ,communication skills ,Clinical Competence ,Communication skills ,business ,Education, Medical, Undergraduate - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Lockdowns during the COVID-19 pandemic had a disruptive effect on medical education when they prevented medical students accessing real patients. To address this, we piloted 35 medical students at home consulting remotely with patients. METHOD: We evaluated the intervention using qualitative analysis of post-experience interviews with a sample of 13 students and 10 clinical supervisors. RESULTS: The experience was perceived by all those interviewed to be both acceptable and educationally valuable. Data analysis revealed different models of implementation according to type of patients involved (acute, recently treated or expert patients) and type of communication platform used (AccuRx, Microsoft Teams or telephone). Practical and educational challenges were identified in relation to the following elements of the experience: patients consulting with students remotely, students being remotely supervised and students undertaking patient contact from home. Strategies for addressing these challenges were directly suggested by interviewees and also inferred from our analysis of the data. CONCLUSIONS: Remotely supervised medical students at home undertaking remote consultations with patients can be acceptable and educationally valuable. The intervention was piloted in a UK graduate entry medical course and so it would be useful to replicate this study in other medical student populations.
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- 2020
7. The Clinical Features and Progression of Late-Onset Versus Younger-Onset in an Adult Cohort of Huntington's Disease Patients
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Roger A. Barker, Sarah L Mason, Megha Anil, Mason, Sarah [0000-0001-6715-4109], Barker, Roger [0000-0001-8843-7730], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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0301 basic medicine ,Adult ,Male ,Research Report ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Late onset ,Disease ,Hypokinesia ,Severity of Illness Index ,Speech Disorders ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Ocular Motility Disorders ,disease progression ,age of onset ,Huntington's disease ,Cognitive change ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Gait Disorders, Neurologic ,Aged ,Dystonia ,business.industry ,Chorea ,medicine.disease ,030104 developmental biology ,Functional Status ,Huntington Disease ,Phenotype ,neurodegenerative disorders ,Cohort ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Age of onset ,medicine.symptom ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Brain Stem ,Huntington’s disease - Abstract
Background: Huntington’s disease (HD) is an autosomal dominant neurodegenerative disorder that typically manifests between the ages of 30 and 50 years. However, the disease can present at any age, and phenotypic differences between younger and later-onset patients have received limited attention. Objective: To compare clinical features of late- (>70 years of age) and younger-onset (
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- 2020
8. Analysis of Harmonic Contamination in Electrical Grid due to Electric Vehicle Charging
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Megha, Anil, primary, Mahendran, N, additional, and Elizabeth, Rajan, additional
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- 2020
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9. Perception of Rhythmic Speech Is Modulated by Focal Bilateral Transcranial Alternating Current Stimulation
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Isobella Allard, Matthew H. Davis, Benedikt Zoefel, Megha Anil, Davis, Matt [0000-0003-2239-0778], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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Adult ,Cerebral Cortex ,Male ,0303 health sciences ,Time Factors ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Speech processing ,Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation ,Placebos ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Rhythm ,Perception ,Speech Perception ,Humans ,Female ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Psychomotor Performance ,030304 developmental biology ,Transcranial alternating current stimulation ,media_common - Abstract
Several recent studies have used transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS) to demonstrate a causal role of neural oscillatory activity in speech processing. In particular, it has been shown that the ability to understand speech in a multi-speaker scenario or background noise depends on the timing of speech presentation relative to simultaneously applied tACS. However, it is possible that tACS did not change actual speech perception but rather auditory stream segregation. In this study, we tested whether the phase relation between tACS and the rhythm of degraded words, presented in silence, modulates word report accuracy. We found strong evidence for a tACS-induced modulation of speech perception, but only if the stimulation was applied bilaterally using ring electrodes (not for unilateral left hemisphere stimulation with square electrodes). These results were only obtained when data were analyzed using a statistical approach that was identified as optimal in a previous simulation study. The effect was driven by a phasic disruption of word report scores. Our results suggest a causal role of neural entrainment for speech perception and emphasize the importance of optimizing stimulation protocols and statistical approaches for brain stimulation research.
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- 2019
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10. Perception of rhythmic speech is modulated by focal bilateral tACS
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Megha Anil, Benedikt Zoefel, Matthew H. Davis, Allard I, Centre de recherche cerveau et cognition (CERCO), Institut des sciences du cerveau de Toulouse. (ISCT), Université Toulouse - Jean Jaurès (UT2J)-Université Toulouse III - Paul Sabatier (UT3), Université Fédérale Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées-Université Fédérale Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées-CHU Toulouse [Toulouse]-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université Toulouse - Jean Jaurès (UT2J)-Université Toulouse III - Paul Sabatier (UT3), and Université Fédérale Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées-Université Fédérale Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées-CHU Toulouse [Toulouse]-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Speech perception ,Time Factors ,Computer science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Audiology ,Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation ,Article ,Background noise ,Placebos ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Rhythm ,Perception ,medicine ,Humans ,030304 developmental biology ,media_common ,Cerebral Cortex ,0303 health sciences ,[SCCO.NEUR]Cognitive science/Neuroscience ,Speech processing ,Silence ,Brain stimulation ,Speech Perception ,Female ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Psychomotor Performance - Abstract
Several recent studies have used transcranial alternating stimulation (tACS) to demonstrate a causal role of neural oscillatory activity in speech processing. In particular, it has been shown that the ability to understand speech in a multi-speaker scenario or background noise depends on the timing of speech presentation relative to simultaneously applied tACS. However, it is possible that tACS did not change actual speech perception but rather auditory stream segregation. In this study, we tested whether the phase relation between tACS and the rhythm of degraded words, presented in silence, modulates word report accuracy. We found strong evidence for a tACS-induced modulation of speech perception, but only if the stimulation was applied bilaterally using ring electrodes (not for unilateral left hemisphere stimulation with square electrodes). These results were only obtained when data was analyzed using a statistical approach that was identified as optimal in a previous simulation study. The effect was driven by a phasic disruption of word report scores. Our results suggest a causal role of neural entrainment for speech perception and emphasize the importance of optimizing stimulation protocols and statistical approaches for brain stimulation research.
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- 2019
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11. Direct and Bystander Effect on Cervix Cancer Cells (SiHa) Exposed to High Dose-Rate Gamma Radiation Sourced from Ir 192 Used in Brachytherapy
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Sidonia Vallas Xavier, Safa Abdul Syed Basheerudeen, Murugan Appaswamy, Perumal Venkatachalam, Megha Anil Kumar Kulkarni, and Thayalan Kuppusamy
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Gonad ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Brachytherapy ,Cancer ,medicine.disease ,Radiation therapy ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cell killing ,Cancer cell ,Bystander effect ,Cancer research ,Medicine ,business ,Cervix - Abstract
Introduction: Brachytherapy is a preferred choice of radiotherapy in the treatment of sensitive tissues cancer like intestine and gonad. The treatment is expensive because of the frequent replacement of radionuclide sources. A better understanding of cell killing and the cellular responses at different dose rates, might aid in tumor cell killing with fewer doses thereby enhancing a better prognosis.
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- 2015
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12. Human brain glioblastoma cells do not induce but do respond to the bleomycin-induced bystander response from lung adenocarcinoma cells
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Megha Anil Kumar Kulkarni, Karthika Pillai, Chinnadurai Mani, Safa Abdul Syed Basheerudeen, Anila Rajan, and Perumal Venkatachalam
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Male ,Cell type ,Lung Neoplasms ,DNA damage ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Biology ,Adenocarcinoma ,medicine.disease_cause ,Genomic Instability ,Flow cytometry ,Histones ,Bleomycin ,Cell Line, Tumor ,Genetics ,medicine ,Bystander effect ,Humans ,Cytotoxicity ,Antibiotics, Antineoplastic ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Brain Neoplasms ,Bystander Effect ,Cell cycle ,Coculture Techniques ,Neoplasm Proteins ,Cell Cycle Kinetics ,Immunology ,Cancer research ,Female ,Glioblastoma ,Genotoxicity ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
To determine whether the bleomycin (BLM)-induced bystander response occurs in human brain glioblastoma (BMG-1) cells, the BMG-1 cells were exposed to two different concentrations of BLM. The co-culture methodology was adopted to study the in vitro bystander effects. DNA damage was measured using the micronucleus (MN) and γ-H2AX assays. Cytotoxicity was measured using the trypan blue assay. Cell cycle kinetics was analyzed using flow cytometry. The overall results did not show any significant increase in either genotoxicity or cytotoxicity or a delay in the cell cycle kinetics in BMG-1 bystander cells co-cultured with BLM-exposed cells, suggesting that BLM did not induce a bystander response in the BMG-1 cells. Furthermore, the MN results of the BLM-exposed BMG-1 cells co-cultured with unexposed bystander human lung adenocarcinoma (A549 and NCI-H460) cells and vice versa suggested that the BMG-1 cells do not secrete bystander signals but do respond to those signals. Analyzing the underlying mechanism and pathways involved in preventing the cells from secreting bystander signals will provide new insights that can be applied to inhibit these mechanisms in other cell types, thereby preventing and controlling the bystander response and genomic instability and increasing the therapeutic gain in chemotherapy.
- Published
- 2012
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