176 results on '"S. LAD"'
Search Results
2. Hyperlipidaemia: A Review of Literature
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S. Lad, Swapnil, primary, U. Kolhe, Swati, additional, A. Devade, Omkar, additional, N. Patil, Chetashri, additional, D. Nalawade, Rohit, additional, and P. Mansabdar, Asawari, additional
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- 2023
- Full Text
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3. Application of MnxFe1–xFe2O4 (x = 0–1) Nanoparticles in Magnetic Fluid Hyperthermia: Correlation with Cation Distribution and Magnetostructural Properties
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Satish S. Phalake, Manohar S. Lad, Ketaki V. Kadam, Syed A. M. Tofail, Nanasaheb D. Thorat, and Vishwajeet M. Khot
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General Chemical Engineering ,General Chemistry - Published
- 2022
4. Addition of Prucalopride to Standard Bowel Preparation Does Not Improve Colonic Mucosa Visualization—A Retrospective Observational Cohort Study
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Gaurav Kr Singh, Shamshersingh G. Chauhan, Saiprasad S. Lad, Pratik R. Sethiya, Mayur G. Gattani, Swapnil Walke, Mit Shah, Vikas R. Pandey, and Meghraj A. Ingle
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General Environmental Science - Abstract
Background Colonoscopy is currently gold standard for visualizing colonic mucosa. Presence of constipation is generally associated with poor bowel preparation. We compared effect on colonic cleansing when prucalopride was used as adjunct with polyethylene glycol (PEG) in patients of constipation. Methods A retrospective study was conducted at our center. One 70 patients with constipation were enrolled in two groups of who took only PEG and other of prucalopride plus PEG+ for bowel preparation. They underwent colonoscopy by a single-blinded experienced endoscopist. Bowel preparation quality was reported by Boston bowel preparation scale prior to washing or suctioning. The groups were analyzed for bowel preparation quality and side effects in either groups based on preformed questionnaire. Results Mean Boston Stool preparation Score (BSS) in PEG group (5.33 ± 1.43) was slightly higher than PEG+ (5.16 + 1.37) (p-value =0.44). The total number of patients with side effects was higher in PEG+ group than PEG group. (p Conclusion We conclude addition of prucalopride has no additional benefit when added with standard bowel preparation in patients of constipation. It may rather lead to noncompliance and inferior bowel preparation due to increased side effects.
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- 2022
5. Multipurpose Sieving Machine
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Aniket A. Chavan, Prathamesh D. Kadam, Sahil S. Lad, Manas M. Mankar, and Sajid Shaikh
- Abstract
A sieve is a device for separating wanted elements from unwanted material or for characterizing the particle size distribution of a sample, typically using a woven screen such as a mesh or net. This project focuses in design, fabrication of the mechanical part of machine and the system of the sieve machine. To achieve this project objective, this sieve machine body structure and mechanical system needs to concern some other criteria such as strength, safety and ergonomic design. Depending on their size the individual particles either pass through the sieve mesh or retained on the sieve surface. There are different machines that are being used for sand sieving processes. In our project the process will takes place automatically. Thus, the time consumed during the whole process is reduced. Keywords: Sieving Machine, Sand Sieving Machine, Sieving Machine Fabrication, Automatic Sieving
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- 2022
6. Solar Operated Electric Scarecrow
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R. Jadhav, Anjali, primary, M. Patil, Darshana, additional, S. Lad, Devpriya, additional, D. Magdum, Pranali, additional, and S. Patil, Mahadev, additional
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- 2023
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7. Malware Classification with Improved Convolutional Neural Network Model
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Amol C. Adamuthe and Sumit S. Lad
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Computer Networks and Communications ,Computer science ,business.industry ,Applied Mathematics ,computer.software_genre ,Convolutional neural network ,Computer Science Applications ,ComputingMethodologies_PATTERNRECOGNITION ,Malware ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,Safety Research ,computer ,Software ,Information Systems - Abstract
Malware is a threat to people in the cyber world. It steals personal information and harms computer systems. Various developers and information security specialists around the globe continuously work on strategies for detecting malware. From the last few years, machine learning has been investigated by many researchers for malware classification. The existing solutions require more computing resources and are not efficient for datasets with large numbers of samples. Using existing feature extractors for extracting features of images consumes more resources. This paper presents a Convolutional Neural Network model with pre-processing and augmentation techniques for the classification of malware gray-scale images. An investigation is conducted on the Malimg dataset, which contains 9339 gray-scale images. The dataset created from binaries of malware belongs to 25 different families. To create a precise approach and considering the success of deep learning techniques for the classification of raising the volume of newly created malware, we proposed CNN and Hybrid CNN+SVM model. The CNN is used as an automatic feature extractor that uses less resource and time as compared to the existing methods. Proposed CNN model shows (98.03%) accuracy which is better than other existing CNN models namely VGG16 (96.96%), ResNet50 (97.11%) InceptionV3 (97.22%), Xception (97.56%). The execution time of the proposed CNN model is significantly reduced than other existing CNN models. The proposed CNN model is hybridized with a support vector machine. Instead of using Softmax as activation function, SVM performs the task of classifying the malware based on features extracted by the CNN model. The proposed fine-tuned model of CNN produces a well-selected features vector of 256 Neurons with the FC layer, which is input to SVM. Linear SVC kernel transforms the binary SVM classifier into multi-class SVM, which classifies the malware samples using the one-against-one method and delivers the accuracy of 99.59%.
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- 2021
8. Application of Mn
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Satish S, Phalake, Manohar S, Lad, Ketaki V, Kadam, Syed A M, Tofail, Nanasaheb D, Thorat, and Vishwajeet M, Khot
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Optimization of manganese-substituted iron oxide nanoferrites having the composition Mn
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- 2022
9. Unusual Involvement of Basal Ganglia and Dentate Nucleus in Children with Acute Encephalopathy with COVID-19
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Shraddha Sunthwal, Ahmadi Salma, Ankita Malpani, Aarti Jindal, Sagar S. Lad, Nandan Yardi, Abhijeet Botre, and Sandeep Borse
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Adult ,Brain Diseases ,Cerebellar Nuclei ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,COVID-19 ,Humans ,Neuroimaging ,Child ,Basal Ganglia - Abstract
Children account for 1% to 5% of diagnosed COVID-19 infection with relatively mild presentation compared to adults. The frequency of neurological involvement in acute COVID-19 infection in children is unclear. COVID-19 is also considered to be a neurotropic virus, but so far, in the pediatric age group, very few cases with involvement of basal ganglia and no case of dentate nucleus involvement have been reported in the literature. The present paper reports two cases of acute encephalopathy with COVID-19, the first case with basal ganglia involvement and the second with dentate nucleus involvement. Both cases required aggressive management and had complete neurological recovery on follow-up. Hence, these cases are reported to make everyone aware of the neurological presentation with atypical neuroimaging finding of acute COVID-19 infection in the pediatric age group; timely management improves the outcome.
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- 2022
10. Metarhizium indicum, a new species of entomopathogenic fungus infecting leafhopper, Busoniomimus manjunathi from India
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C.M. Senthil Kumar, T.K. Jacob, S. Devasahayam, Kunhiraman C. Rajeshkumar, Sneha S. Lad, Sharon D'Silva, and C. Geethu
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Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Published
- 2023
11. Dropout- A Detailed Survey
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Sakshi S Lad
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Psychology ,Dropout (neural networks) ,Demography - Abstract
Deep Neural Networks are very complex and have large number of parameters. Shortlisting the parameters that influence the model prediction is not possible as each has equal significance. These neural nets have powerful learning skills can model training data well enough. However, in most of these conditions, the models are over-fitting. Combining predictions from large neural nets where neurons are co-dependent alters the performance of the model. Dropout addresses the problem of overfitting and slow convergence in deep neural nets. The core concept of dropout technique is to randomly drop units and their connections from the neural network during training phase. This prevents units from co-adapting and thus improving the performance. The central mechanism behind dropout is to take a large model that overfits easily and repeatedly sample and train smaller sub-models from it. This paper provides an introduction to dropout, the history behind its design and various dropout methods.
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- 2021
12. Phylogenetic placement and reassessment of Asperisporium pongamiae as Pedrocrousiella pongamiae gen. et comb. nov. (Mycosphaerellaceae)
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Johannes Z. Groenewald, Nikhil Ashtekar, Garima Anand, S Fatima, Kunhiraman C. Rajeshkumar, U Braun, and Sneha S. Lad
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Systematics ,food.ingredient ,Phylogenetic tree ,biology ,Mycosphaerellaceae ,Lineage (evolution) ,biology.organism_classification ,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous) ,Microbiology ,Type species ,food ,Pseudocercospora ,Asperisporium ,Botany ,Mycosphaerella ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The leaf spot disease of Pongamia pinnata caused by an asperisporium-like asexual morph, which is usually referred to as Asperisporium pongamiae, is quite common during monsoon seasons in India. Phylogenetic analyses, based on LSU and rpb2 sequence data, and blast searches using ITS sequence data, revealed that this ascomycete forms a lineage within Mycosphaerellaceae distant from all other generic lineages. Pedrocrousiella gen. nov., with P. pongamiae comb. nov., based on Fusicladium pongamiae (≡ A. pongamiae), as type species is introduced for this lineage. This species has been considered the asexual morph of Mycosphaerella pongamiae (≡ Stigmatea pongamiae). However, this connection is unproven and was just based on the occasional association of the two taxa in some collections. Several attempts to induce the formation of a sexual morph in culture failed, therefore the putative connection between these morphs could not be confirmed. Asperisporium pongamiae-pinnatae is reduced to synonymy with P. pongamiae. Asperisporium pongamiae-pinnatae was introduced because of the wrong assumption that F. pongamiae had been described on another host, Pongamia globosa. But Fusicladium pongamiae was actually described in India on Pongamia glabra, which is a synonym of P. pinnata, and hence on the same host as Asperisporium pongamiae-pinnatae . Pedrocrousiella pongamiae clusters in a clade containing Distocercospora, Clypeosphaerella , and "Pseudocercospora "nephrolepidicola, a species which is not congeneric with Pseudocercospora. Phylogenetically, Pedrocrousiella is distant from the Asperisporium s. str. clade (type species A. caricae), which is more closely related to Amycosphaerella, Pseudocercosporella, Distomycovellosiella and Nothopassalora.
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- 2021
13. DP-Miner: Design Pattern Discovery Using Matrix.
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Jing Dong 0005, Dushyant S. Lad, and Yajing Zhao
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- 2007
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14. Service Oriented Evolutions and Analyses of Design Patterns.
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Jing Dong 0005, Sheng Yang 0002, Dushyant S. Lad, and Yongtao Sun
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- 2006
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15. Differential effects of deployment and nondeployment mild TBI on neuropsychological outcomes
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Jared A. Rowland, Anna S Ord, Sagar S. Lad, Sarah L. Martindale, Holly M. Miskey, and Katherine H. Taber
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Adult ,030506 rehabilitation ,Traumatic brain injury ,Trail Making Test ,Poison control ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Article ,Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic ,03 medical and health sciences ,medicine ,Humans ,Neuropsychological assessment ,Effects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performance ,Iraq War, 2003-2011 ,Brain Concussion ,Veterans ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Rehabilitation ,Neuropsychology ,Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale ,medicine.disease ,nervous system diseases ,Cognitive test ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,nervous system ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Objective: Mild traumatic brain injury (TBI) that occurs in a deployment environment is characteristically different from mild TBI that occurs outside of deployment. This study evaluated differential and interaction effects of deployment and nondeployment mild TBI on cognitive and behavioral health outcomes. Research Method: Combat veterans (N = 293) who passed performance-validity measures completed the Mid-Atlantic MIRECC Assessment of TBI (MMA-TBI), Clinician-Administered Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) Scale (CAPS-5), a neuropsychological assessment battery, and self-report questionnaires. A 2 × 2 × 2 analysis of variance (ANOVA) was conducted to evaluate the main and interaction effects across mild TBI groups and PTSD diagnosis. Results: Deployment TBI was associated with poorer outcomes on several cognitive tests: Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale, 4th edition (WAIS-IV); Working Memory Index (WMI; p = .018); Trail Making Test A (TMT-A; p < .001); and Trail Making Test B (TMT-B; p = .002). Deployment TBI and PTSD were also associated with increased PTSD, depressive, and neurobehavioral symptoms; pain interference; and poorer sleep quality. Nondeployment TBI had no effect on cognitive performance and was associated only with poorer sleep quality. PTSD had the strongest associations with symptom measures and deployment TBI with cognitive outcomes. There were no significant interaction effects after adjusting for multiple comparisons. Conclusions: Remote outcomes associated with mild deployment TBI are different from those associated with nondeployment mild TBI and are robust beyond PTSD. This suggests that the environment surrounding a TBI event influences cognitive and symptom sequelae. Veterans who experience mild TBI during deployment may report changes in cognition, but most will continue to function within the expected range. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2021
16. Seasonal impact on population dynamics of Phytophthora spp. and disease progression in Mandarin
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J. Adinarayana, R. M. Gade, Srinivasa Rao Peddinti, and R. S. Lad
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,education.field_of_study ,Moisture ,biology ,Gummosis ,Population ,food and beverages ,Plant Science ,biology.organism_classification ,01 natural sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,Horticulture ,030104 developmental biology ,Root rot ,Soil ecology ,Relative humidity ,Phytophthora ,education ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Water content ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
This may be the first attempt to correlate environmental parameters and soil ecology impacting disease situation in Nagpur mandarin due to Phytophthora. Fixed plot survey was undertaken at fortnightly intervals at six locations to analyse correlation between environmental factors and soil moisture with propagule density of Phytophthora as well as disease severity by using linear correlation. Rainfall, relative humidity and air temperature probes typically consist of three separate sensors packaged in a single instrument called as ‘SENSTUBE’ and that instrument was used for recording the data in field. Soil moisture was analysed in laboratory by using digital moisture meter. Fixed plot study indicated inoculum density of Phytophthora in the range of 5.2–29.6 cfu/g soil. Peak period of Phytophthora root rot in Nagpur mandarin was seen from June to September and mean disease intensity recorded in between 3.16 and 34.33%. Root rot in Nagpur mandarin gradually increased after heavy rainfall and progressed with faster rate when soil moisture with high humidity and low temperature and vice versa. Fortnightly study of gummosis disease intensity was in the range of 4.08–30.17%. Peak period of gummosis disease (August to November) was noted after one to two months of heavy rainfall having optimum temperature (below 30 °C) and high humidity. After heavy rainfall the pathogen population is drastically increased but oozing of gum was observed after monsoon. Phytophthora population and disease progression was directly proportional to environmental and soil parameters like rainfall, relative humidity, soil moisture, but inversely proportional to air temperature. This study will be helpful to the citrus growers to predict the timing of disease severity to take appropriate management practices in time.
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- 2021
17. Study the Profile of the SHGS Members Engaged in Agriculture and Allied Enterprises
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A. S. Lad and Ramadevi G. Nair R. P. Kadam
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Economic growth ,Agriculture ,business.industry ,business - Published
- 2021
18. A multicenter study of clinical and biochemical profiles, treatments, and short-term outcomes in children with multisystem inflammatory syndrome associated with SARS-CoV-2 infection from Western India
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Preetha Joshi, Amit Bhondve, Bhakti U Sarang, Pradeep Suryawanshi, Parmanand Andankar, Rachit Mehta, Sameer Sadawarte, Vinay Joshi, Mahesh Mohite, Ashish Ramchadra Dhongade, Madhu Otiv, Soonu Udani, Sagar S Lad, and Abhijit Bagade
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Mechanical ventilation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,pediatrics ,business.industry ,medicine.drug_class ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine.disease ,Procalcitonin ,RJ1-570 ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,sars-cov-2 ,Tocilizumab ,chemistry ,Intensive care ,Internal medicine ,Epidemiology ,Natriuretic peptide ,Medicine ,Observational study ,Kawasaki disease ,business ,multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children - Abstract
Background: Severe acute respiratory syndrome corona virus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection can lead to multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C). This study was conducted to study epidemiology, clinical profile, treatment strategies associated in children MIS-C in two cities in Western India. Subjects and Methods: This is a retrospective, observational study of children who fulfilled the criteria for MIS-C, admitted to eleven pediatric intensive care units (PICUs) in Western India during the first wave SARS-CoV-2 infection in India, between February 2020 and December 2020. Demographic and clinical data including laboratory parameters, treatment regimens, and outcomes were collected and analyzed. Results: Of the 234 children presenting with MIS-C, they were categorized into 3 clinical phenotypes: fever and hyperinflammation, Kawasaki disease (KD)-like, and shock with multisystem organ dysfunction syndrome (MODS). C-reactive protein, procalcitonin (PCT), D-dimer, and pro-B-type natriuretic peptide levels were elevated in all patients. Intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) was used in 128 (54.7%), corticosteroids in 214 (91.45%), tocilizumab in 1 (0.4%), and remdesivir in 4 (1.7%). 95 (40.5%) children required vasopressors and invasive mechanical ventilation was necessary in 26 (11.1%). Two hundred and twenty-nine patients were discharged home with median duration of PICU stay of 4 days and hospital stay of 7 days, and 5 (2.1%) patients died during treatment. Significant reduction in the duration of hospital stay was observed in those who received both steroid and IVIG (P < 0.05) and also in the shock ± MODS group (P < 0.05). Conclusions: Combination of steroid and IVIG for the treatment of MISC, especially with Shock and MODS reduce the duration of PICU stay than treated with steroid alone.
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- 2021
19. Bio-efficacy of insecticides against thrips infesting bitter gourd
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Sonali S Lad, GM Golvankar, KV Naik, and Karmarkar
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education.field_of_study ,Thrips ,biology ,Population ,Bitter gourd ,Spinosad ,biology.organism_classification ,Toxicology ,Cyhalothrin ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Azadirachtin ,chemistry ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Malathion ,education ,Bio efficacy ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The present investigation was carried out to study the bio-efficacy of insecticides against thrips infesting bitter gourd during rabi-summer season of 2017-18 at Centre of Excellence for Mango, College of Agriculture, Dapoli, Dist. Ratnagiri (M.S). There were six insecticides tested against thrips infesting bitter gourd. The results regarding overall mean of three sprays against thrips infesting bitter gourd revealed that the treatment chlorantraniliprole 18.5 SC @ 0.005 per cent was the best treatment which recorded minimum (2.41) population of thrips and was at par with malathion 50 EC @ 0.05 per cent (2.84) and spinosad 45 SC @ 0.014 per cent (3.05). The next effective treatment was emamectin benzoate 5 SG @ 0.002 (3.53) which was at par with treatments azadirachtin 1 EC @ 0.003 per cent (3.65) and lambda cyhalothrin 5 EC @ 0.0025 per cent (3.75). All the treatments were significantly superior over untreated control. The maximum (6.78) thrips population was observed in the untreated control.
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- 2021
20. Scale to measure utility perception of mass media by the farm women
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A. S. Lad, R. P. Kadam, and P. R. Deshmukh
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Scale (ratio) ,business.industry ,Perception ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Measure (physics) ,Econometrics ,Environmental science ,General Medicine ,business ,media_common ,Mass media - Abstract
Due to non-availability of proper scale to measure utility perception of mass media by the farm women, it was thought necessary to construct a scale for this purpose. Keeping this in view an attempt has been made to develop a scale for measuring utility perception of mass media by the farm women. Normalized rank approach recommended by Guilford (1978) was used in this study for scale construction.
- Published
- 2020
21. Prevalence of Phytophthora spp. In Citrus Nurseries of Vidarbha Region
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Mina D Koche, R. M. Gade, and R. S. Lad
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Veterinary medicine ,biology ,Phytophthora ,biology.organism_classification - Published
- 2020
22. Status of Phytophthora diseases in Nagpur mandarin orchards of Vidarbha region
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R. S. Lad, S. P. Wagh, R. M. Gade, and RJ Chaudhari
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Horticulture ,biology ,Gummosis ,Collar rot ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Foot rot ,Damping off ,Fibrous root system ,Root rot ,Phytophthora ,biology.organism_classification - Abstract
In central India the major cause of citrus decline is supposed to be because of Phytophthora causing diseases in citrus. The pathogen attack citrus plants right from nursery causing damping off of seedlings, decay of fibrous roots, crown rot, collar rot, foot rot and gummosis in mature orchards. Nagpur mandarins face short life span and low productivity because of these three species of Phytophthora viz. P. parasitica, P. citrophthora and P. palmivora. An intensive rapid roving survey of selected mandarin orchards was conducted during the year 2016 and 2017 to access incidence and intensity of Phytophthora diseases (root rot and gummosis). Total 83 orchards were surveyed during peak period of diseases (August to November) by using modified disease rating scale (0-9). According to rapid roving survey of root rot in selected orchards, pooled data indicate similar disease progress with root rot incidence in the range of 10.42 to 62.50% and intensity from 1.62 up to 23.48%. In case of gummosis pooled data indicate similar trend of disease development with gummosis incidence in the range of 14.58 to 64.58% and intensity in between 2.08 to 19.91%.
- Published
- 2020
23. Examining embedded validity indicators in Conners continuous performance test-3 (CPT-3)
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Holly M. Miskey, Kristina A. Nagy, Sagar S. Lad, Beth Richter, Anna S Ord, and Robert D. Shura
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050103 clinical psychology ,05 social sciences ,Applied psychology ,Reproducibility of Results ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Test (assessment) ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Cognition ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,Reaction Time ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Prior research has identified a variety of embedded performance validity indicators on the Conners' Continuous Performance Test-II (CPT-II). The purpose of this study was to examine embedded validity indicators within the updated third edition of the Conners Continuous Performance Test (CPT-3).This study used a retrospective chart review from an ADHD evaluation clinic at a Mid-Atlantic VA hospital. Participants were 197 military veterans who completed a clinical assessment for ADHD. All participants were consecutive referrals to the ADHD clinic who completed the CPT-3 and the Test of Memory Malingering, Trial 1 (TOMM1).Logistic regression analyses indicated that the following five variables were able to significantly predict validity status on the TOMM1: detectability (d'), omissions (OMI), commissions (COM), hit reaction time (HRT) standard deviation (SD), and HRT inter-stimulus interval (ISI) change. Among these measures, HRT SD and HRT ISI change were identified as the scores with the highest AUC values. Optimal cutoffs for all significant predictors were identified. A number of composite EVIs were created using various combinations of CPT-3 scores. All composite EVIs significantly differentiated between pass and fail status on the TOMM1.Several CPT-3 variables have clinical utility as embedded validity indicators; however, due to low sensitivity, they should not be used in isolation. These scores may be used as indicators of invalid performance but should not be used to rule out invalid performance. Identified CPT-3 scores may be useful as one component in a multivariate, multi-point continuous approach to performance validity sampling.
- Published
- 2020
24. Temporal Processing: Neural Correlates and Clinical Relevance
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Katherine H. Taber, Sagar S. Lad, and Robin A. Hurley
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Brain Mapping ,Neural correlates of consciousness ,Computer science ,Functional Neuroimaging ,Brain ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Meta-Analysis as Topic ,Time Perception ,medicine ,Humans ,Clinical significance ,Neurology (clinical) ,Neuroscience ,Neuroanatomy - Published
- 2020
25. Fungal diversity notes 1151–1276: taxonomic and phylogenetic contributions on genera and species of fungal taxa
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Jing Yang, Jian-Kui Liu, M. Niranjan, Chuan-Gen Lin, Saranyaphat Boonmee, Kunthida Phutthacharoen, Walter P. Pfliegler, Alexandra Imre, Peter E. Mortimer, Naruemon Huanraluek, Timur S. Bulgakov, Renato Lúcio Mendes Alvarenga, Rajesh Jeewon, Sneha S. Lad, Napalai Chaiwan, Rashika S. Brahmanage, De-Ping Wei, Chayanard Phukhamsakda, Ana Carla da Silva Santos, Er-Fu Yang, Dhanushaka N. Wanasinghe, Begoña Aguirre-Hudson, Kevin D. Hyde, Pranami D. Abeywickrama, Qi Zhao, Anuruddha Karunarathna, Ausana Mapook, Garima Anand, Hong-Bo Jiang, D. Jayarama Bhat, Jianchu Xu, Shiv Mohan Singh, Sheng-Nan Zhang, Qing Tian, Digvijayini Bundhun, Yang Dong, Shiwali Rana, Sajeewa S. N. Maharachchikumbura, Ning-Guo Liu, Milan C. Samarakoon, Tuula Niskanen, Wei Dong, Ruvishika S. Jayawardena, Rekhani H. Perera, Ishara S. Manawasinghe, Yong-Zhong Lu, Vinodhini Thiyagaraja, Abdallah M. Elgorban, Saowaluck Tibpromma, Enikő Horváth, Shi-Ke Huang, Anusha H. Ekanayaka, Jun Sheng, Amanda Lucia Alves, Kare Liimatainen, Andy Overall, B. Devadatha, Kunhiraman C. Rajeshkumar, Kasun M. Thambugala, Ali H. Bahkali, V. Venkateswara Sarma, Indunil C. Senanayake, E. B. Gareth Jones, Sanjay K. Singh, Ming Zeng, Patricia Vieira Tiago, Dan-Feng Bao, Dhandevi Pem, Subodini N. Wijesinghe, Ishani D. Goonasekara, Danny Haelewaters, Mingkwan Doilom, Rungtiwa Phookamsak, Junfu Li, Tatiana Baptista Gibertoni, Danushka S. Tennakoon, and Saisamorn Lumyong
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Agaricomycetes ,MOLECULAR PHYLOGENY ,PHYLOGENY ,Leotiomycetes ,1ST REPORT ,SEQUENCE-DATA ,MORPHOLOGICAL CHARACTERIZATION ,030308 mycology & parasitology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Ascomycota ,Diaporthe ,Pezizomycetes ,Botany ,NATURAL CLASSIFICATION ,Xylariales ,96 new taxa ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Saccharomycetes ,Taxonomy ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Phaeosphaeriaceae ,Ecology ,biology ,Basidiomycota ,MULTIGENE ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Sordariomycetes ,Dothideomycetes ,biology.organism_classification ,Incertae sedis ,Cortinarius ,FRESH-WATER HABITATS ,SP-NOV ,GEN. NOV ,Lecanoromycetes ,SP.-NOV - Abstract
Fungal diversity notes is one of the important journal series of fungal taxonomy that provide detailed descriptions and illustrations of new fungal taxa, as well as providing new information of fungal taxa worldwide. This article is the 11th contribution to the fungal diversity notes series, in which 126 taxa distributed in two phyla, six classes, 24 orders and 55 families are described and illustrated. Taxa in this study were mainly collected from Italy by Erio Camporesi and also collected from China, India and Thailand, as well as in some other European, North American and South American countries. Taxa described in the present study include two new families, 12 new genera, 82 new species, five new combinations and 25 new records on new hosts and new geographical distributions as well as sexual-asexual reports. The two new families areEriomycetaceae(Dothideomycetes, familyincertae sedis) andFasciatisporaceae(Xylariales, Sordariomycetes). The twelve new genera compriseBhagirathimyces(Phaeosphaeriaceae),Camporesiomyces(Tubeufiaceae),Eriocamporesia(Cryphonectriaceae),Eriomyces(Eriomycetaceae),Neomonodictys(Pleurotheciaceae),Paraloratospora(Phaeosphaeriaceae),Paramonodictys(Parabambusicolaceae),Pseudoconlarium(Diaporthomycetidae, genusincertae sedis),Pseudomurilentithecium(Lentitheciaceae),Setoapiospora(Muyocopronaceae),Srinivasanomyces(Vibrisseaceae) andXenoanthostomella(Xylariales, generaincertae sedis). The 82 new species compriseAcremonium chiangraiense,Adustochaete nivea,Angustimassarina camporesii,Bhagirathimyces himalayensis,Brunneoclavispora camporesii,Camarosporidiella camporesii,Camporesiomyces mali,Camposporium appendiculatum,Camposporium multiseptatum,Camposporium septatum,Canalisporium aquaticium,Clonostachys eriocamporesiana,Clonostachys eriocamporesii,Colletotrichum hederiicola,Coniochaeta vineae,Conioscypha verrucosa,Cortinarius ainsworthii,Cortinarius aurae,Cortinarius britannicus,Cortinarius heatherae,Cortinarius scoticus,Cortinarius subsaniosus,Cytospora fusispora,Cytospora rosigena,Diaporthe camporesii,Diaporthe nigra,Diatrypella yunnanensis,Dictyosporium muriformis,Didymella camporesii,Diutina bernali,Diutina sipiczkii,Eriocamporesia aurantia,Eriomyces heveae,Ernakulamia tanakae,Falciformispora uttaraditensis,Fasciatispora cocoes,Foliophoma camporesii,Fuscostagonospora camporesii,Helvella subtinta,Kalmusia erioi,Keissleriella camporesiana,Keissleriella camporesii,Lanspora cylindrospora,Loratospora arezzoensis,Mariannaea atlantica,Melanographium phoenicis,Montagnula camporesii,Neodidymelliopsis camporesii,Neokalmusia kunmingensis,Neoleptosporella camporesiana,Neomonodictys muriformis,Neomyrmecridium guizhouense,Neosetophoma camporesii,Paraloratospora camporesii,Paramonodictys solitarius,Periconia palmicola,Plenodomus triseptatus,Pseudocamarosporium camporesii,Pseudocercospora maetaengensis,Pseudochaetosphaeronema kunmingense,Pseudoconlarium punctiforme,Pseudodactylaria camporesiana,Pseudomurilentithecium camporesii,Pseudotetraploa rajmachiensis,Pseudotruncatella camporesii,Rhexocercosporidium senecionis,Rhytidhysteron camporesii,Rhytidhysteron erioi,Septoriella camporesii,Setoapiospora thailandica,Srinivasanomyces kangrensis,Tetraploa dwibahubeeja,Tetraploa pseudoaristata,Tetraploa thrayabahubeeja,Torula camporesii,Tremateia camporesii,Tremateia lamiacearum,Uzbekistanica pruni,Verruconis mangrovei,Wilcoxina verruculosa,Xenoanthostomella chromolaenaeandXenodidymella camporesii. The five new combinations areCamporesiomyces patagoniensis,Camporesiomyces vaccinia,Camposporium lycopodiellae,Paraloratospora gahniaeandRhexocercosporidium microsporum. The 22 new records on host and geographical distribution compriseArthrinium marii,Ascochyta medicaginicola,Ascochyta pisi,Astrocystis bambusicola,Camposporium pellucidum,Dendryphiella phitsanulokensis,Diaporthe foeniculina,Didymella macrostoma,Diplodia mutila,Diplodia seriata,Heterosphaeria patella,Hysterobrevium constrictum,Neodidymelliopsis ranunculi,Neovaginatispora fuckelii,Nothophoma quercina,Occultibambusa bambusae,Phaeosphaeria chinensis,Pseudopestalotiopsis theae,Pyxine berteriana,Tetraploa sasicola,Torula gaodangensisandWojnowiciella dactylidis. In addition, the sexual morphs ofDissoconium eucalyptiandPhaeosphaeriopsis pseudoagavacearumare reported fromLaurus nobilisandYucca gloriosain Italy, respectively. The holomorph ofDiaporthe cynaroidisis also reported for the first time.
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- 2020
26. 'ULTRASONIC STUDY AND THERMODYNAMIC PROPERTIES OF A BINARY MIXTURE OF METHANOL + ANILINE AND 1-PROPANOL + ANILINE '
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J. S. Lad
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Binary mixture, Curve, Methanol, Ultrasonic velocity - Abstract
Ultrasonic waves are sound waves, which have frequency more than audible limit. The value of ultrasonic velocity (?) with composition (c) in a binary mixture of Methanol + Aniline and 1-Propanol + Aniline shows that ultrasonic velocity (?) increases progressively as composition of Methanol increases in the mixture. Adiabatic compressibility (?a) of Methanol + Aniline show decrease wave like with increases of Methanol in the mixture and this nature is exactly in reciprocate nature of velocity composition curve. This curve is wave like changing in nature showing a molecular interaction between the Methanol and Aniline mixture is weak interaction. This interaction between the molecules may be due to the functional groups of Methanol and Aniline binary mixture.  
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- 2022
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27. Suggestions of the farm women to increase the utility of mass media
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A. S. Lad, P. R. Deshmukh, and R. P. Kadam
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business.industry ,General Medicine ,Business ,Marketing ,Mass media - Abstract
The present investigation was conducted in Parbhani, Hingoli and Nanded districts in Marathwada region of Maharashtra State. A structured interview schedule was used to collect data from 150 respondents who were viewing agricultural programmes on TV, as well as listening agricultural programmes on radio and also reading agricultural articles in the newspaper. The qualitative data were quantified using suitable statistical tools. The suggestions given by the farm women to increase the utility of mass media was studied by frequency and percentage method. Regarding suggestions to improve farm telecast majority of the respondents suggested to change the telecasting time (56.66 %) and to use local language (52.66%). Regarding suggestions to improve farm broadcast, respondents suggested to use simple language (59.33%) and provide useful information timely (50.67%). Regarding suggestions to improve utility of newspaper, respondents suggested that information should be given in easy language (60.00%), case studies of experienced farm women should be published in the newspaper (54.66%), information should be practicable (52.66%), letters must be bold enough (51.33%) and statistics of the nation, state and region should be avoided (46.00%).
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- 2020
28. Tubeufia sahyadriensis (Tubeufiaceae), a new dictyosporous anamorph from the Western Ghats, India
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Shahnoor Fatima, Kunhiraman C. Rajeshkumar, Nalin N. Wijayawardene, Saranyaphat Boonmee, Kevin D. Hyde, Hugo Madrid, and Sneha S. Lad
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Intergenic region ,biology ,Phylogenetic tree ,Genus ,Phylogenetics ,Botany ,Bambusa bambos ,Taxonomy (biology) ,Plant Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Tubeufiaceae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Conidium - Abstract
An unusual anamorphic dictyosporous species, Tubeufia sahyadriensis, was collected on decaying Bambusa bambos litter in the Tamhini Ghats in the northern Western Ghats of Maharashtra, India. This new species can be easily differentiated from allied Tubeufia species by its dark brownish to umber, maize corncob-like dictyoseptate conidia with reduced, simple cylindrical conidiogenous cells. Phylogenetic analyses using ITS, LSU and TEF1α sequence data delineated the new species within the genus Tubeufia under family Tubeufiaceae.
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- 2019
29. Fungal Planet description sheets: 1182–1283
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Akila Berraf-Tebbal, Johannes Z. Groenewald, Neriman Yilmaz, J. Vauras, J. Vila, P. Nodet, S. Balashov, S. Di Piazza, Teun Boekhout, J. D. Reyes, D. Kurose, Jose G. Maciá-Vicente, Thomas S. Marney, A. E. Mahamedi, Milan Špetík, Suzanne Rooney-Latham, J. Jennifer Luangsa-ard, Francisco Arenas, G. Le Floch, Yu Pei Tan, T. T. T. Nguyen, W. Noisripoom, Ivan V. Zmitrovich, Ellen Larsson, Teresa Iturriaga, Jorinde Nuytinck, A. Rodríguez, C. L. Blomquist, A. Yu. Biketova, Z. G. Abad, Gabriel Moreno, M.Th. Smith, S. Lad, Abdul Nasir Khalid, G. Delgado, Halina Galera, A. Naseer, N. Ashtekar, Asunción Morte, Thomas Læssøe, James H. Cunnington, A. Polhorský, Mikael Jeppson, I. Bera, Cobus M. Visagie, A. Mateos, Lorenzo Lombard, Michael J. Wingfield, V. Ostrý, D. A. Cowan, A. V. Alexandrova, J. Pecenka, A. Ghosh, T. H. G. Pham, M. V. D. Vegte, Á Bañares, Armin Mešić, John Dearnaley, M. A. Tomashevskaya, Łukasz Istel, D. Szabóová, Ivona Kautmanová, A. Desantiago, Annemieke Verbeken, Jos Houbraken, Bálint Dima, J. A. Abad, J. S. Vitelli, L. W. S. De Freitas, Claudia K. Gunsch, N. Davoodian, Ulrike Damm, H. B. Lee, D.E. Gouliamova, Alena Kubátová, Treena I. Burgess, Andrew N. Miller, D. G. Holdom, E. F. Malysheva, J. B. Jordal, David Gramaje, Angus J. Carnegie, Aleš Eichmeier, Alfonso Navarro-Ródenas, A. Giraldo, F. Fuljer, T. V. Steinrucken, K. Reschke, S. Bishop-Hurley, G. Anand, A. M. Glushakova, Levente Kiss, J. E. Ntandu, M. Lynch, Kunjithapatham Dhileepan, Suchada Mongkolsamrit, E. J. Van Der Linde, V. I. Kapitonov, Machiel E. Noordeloos, L. B. Kalinina, A. Pošta, G. Corriol, Reza Mostowfizadeh-Ghalamfarsa, Roger G. Shivas, T. M. Bulyonkova, Ernest Lacey, A. Sharma, Tor Erik Brandrud, Marta Wrzosek, Julia Pawłowska, Zdenko Tkalčec, Marcelo Sandoval-Denis, E. A. Zvyagina, J. F. Cobo-Diaz, Aleksey V. Kachalkin, T. A. Pankratov, Raja Thangavel, M. O. Da Cruz, S. V. Volobuev, I. Kusan, Jolanda Roux, Kunhiraman C. Rajeshkumar, O.V. Morozova, A. Weill, Viktor Papp, Marizeth Groenewald, Roumen Dimitrov, Željko Jurjević, G. M. Jansen, S. Fatima, Munazza Kiran, M. Romero, Michał Gorczak, D. Boertmann, Pedro W. Crous, Tatyana Yu. Svetasheva, Vit Hubka, Neven Matočec, A. Gutiérrez, D. B. Raudabaugh, A. B. Ismailov, Riccardo Baroncelli, Pablo Alvarado, V. F. Malysheva, Á Kovács, G. Maggs-Kölling, Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (Brasil), Fundação de Amparo à Ciência e Tecnologia do Estado de Pernambuco, Russian Foundation for Basic Research, Russian Academy of Sciences, Swedish Taxonomy Initiative, German Research Foundation, LOEWE Center for Insect Biotechnology & Bioresources, Russian Government, Lomonosov Moscow State University, Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation, University of Warsaw, European Commission, Hemvati Nandan Bahuguna Garhwal University, Russian Science Foundation, Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation (Australia), Department of Agriculture and Water Resources (Australia), Croatian Science Foundation, Department of Science and Technology (India), International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology, Bulgarian National Science Fund, Universidad de Alcalá, Charles University (Czech Republic), Ministry of Agriculture of the Czech Republic, Ministry of Innovation and Technology (Hungary), National Research, Development and Innovation Office (Hungary), Norwegian Biodiversity Information Centre, University of Oslo, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Fundación Séneca, Ministry of Health of the Czech Republic, Evolutionary and Population Biology (IBED, FNWI), Laboratoire Universitaire de Biodiversité et Ecologie Microbienne (LUBEM), Université de Brest (UBO), Westerdijk Fungal Biodiversity Institute - Evolutionary Phytopathology, Westerdijk Fungal Biodiversity Institute, Westerdijk Fungal Biodiversity Institute - Yeast Research, Westerdijk Fungal Biodiversity Institute - Collection, Westerdijk Fungal Biodiversity Institute - Food and Indoor Mycology, Crous P.W., Cowan D.A., Maggs-Kolling G., Yilmaz N., Thangavel R., Wingfield M.J., Noordeloos M.E., Dima B., Brandrud T.E., Jansen G.M., Morozova O.V., Vila J., Shivas R.G., Tan Y.P., Bishop-Hurley S., Lacey E., Marney T.S., Larsson E., Le Floch G., Lombard L., Nodet P., Hubka V., Alvarado P., Berraf-Tebbal A., Reyes J.D., Delgado G., Eichmeier A., Jordal J.B., Kachalkin A.V., Kubatova A., Macia-Vicente J.G., Malysheva E.F., Papp V., Rajeshkumar K.C., Sharma A., Spetik M., Szaboova D., Tomashevskaya M.A., Abad J.A., Abad Z.G., Alexandrova A.V., Anand G., Arenas F., Ashtekar N., Balashov S., Banares A., Baroncelli R., Bera I., Yu. Biketova A., Blomquist C.L., Boekhout T., Boertmann D., Bulyonkova T.M., Burgess T.I., Carnegie A.J., Cobo-Diaz J.F., Corriol G., Cunnington J.H., Da Cruz M.O., Damm U., Davoodian N., Desantiago A., Dearnaley J., De Freitas L.W.S., Dhileepan K., Dimitrov R., Di Piazza S., Fatima S., Fuljer F., Galera H., Ghosh A., Giraldo A., Glushakova A.M., Gorczak M., Gouliamova D.E., Gramaje D., Groenewald M., Gunsch C.K., Gutierrez A., Holdom D., Houbraken J., Ismailov A.B., Istel L., Iturriaga T., Jeppson M., Jurjevic Z., Kalinina L.B., Kapitonov V.I., Kautmanova I., Khalid A.N., Kiran M., Kiss L., Kovacs A., Kurose D., Kusan I., Lad S., Laessoe T., Lee H.B., Luangsa-Ard J.J., Lynch M., Mahamedi A.E., Malysheva V.F., Mateos A., Matocec N., Mesic A., Miller A.N., Mongkolsamrit S., Moreno G., Morte A., Mostowfizadeh-Ghalamfarsa R., Naseer A., Navarro-Rodenas A., Nguyen T.T.T., Noisripoom W., Ntandu J.E., Nuytinck J., Ostry V., Pankratov T.A., Pawlowska J., Pecenka J., Pham T.H.G., Polhorsky A., Posta A., Raudabaugh D.B., Reschke K., Rodriguez A., Romero M., Rooney-Latham S., Roux J., Sandoval-Denis M., Smith M.Th., Steinrucken T.V., Svetasheva T.Y., Tkalcec Z., Van Der Linde E.J., Vegte M.V.D., Vauras J., Verbeken A., Visagie C.M., Vitelli J.S., Volobuev S.V., Weill A., Wrzosek M., Zmitrovich I.V., Zvyagina E.A., and Groenewald J.Z.
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0106 biological sciences ,Zoology and botany: 480 [VDP] ,01 natural sciences ,BLACK FUNGI ,030308 mycology & parasitology ,MULTIPLE SEQUENCE ALIGNMENT ,[SDV.MP.MYC]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitology/Mycology ,2. Zero hunger ,0303 health sciences ,Rhizosphere ,LSU ,biology ,Ecology ,SPECIES-DIVERSITY ,Ziziphus ,Plant litter ,Syzygium ,visual_art ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Bark ,GENERA ,INHABITING ,Systematic ,ITS nrDNA barcodes ,Evolution ,Entoloma ,Umbellularia ,SYSTEMATICS ,03 medical and health sciences ,Behavior and Systematics ,New taxa ,Systematics ,Botany ,ITS nrDNA barcode ,LEATHERLEAF FERN ,Zoologiske og botaniske fag: 480 [VDP] ,Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,COLLETOTRICHUM-ACUTATUM ,Biology and Life Sciences ,IQ-TREE ,INHABITING BLACK FUNGI ,15. Life on land ,BAYESIAN PHYLOGENETIC INFERENCE ,biology.organism_classification ,Leucadendron ,new taxa ,systematics ,GEN. NOV ,SP. NOV ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
Novel species of fungi described in this study include those from various countries as follows: Algeria, Phaeoacremonium adelophialidum from Vitis vinifera. Antarctica, Comoclathris antarctica from soil. Australia, Coniochaeta salicifolia as endophyte from healthy leaves of Geijera salicifolia, Eremothecium peggii in fruit of Citrus australis, Microdochium ratticaudae from stem of Sporobolus natalensis, Neocelosporium corymbiae on stems of Corymbia variegata, Phytophthora kelmanii from rhizosphere soil of Ptilotus pyramidatus, Pseudosydowia backhousiae on living leaves of Backhousia citriodora, Pseudosydowia indoor oopillyensis, Pseudosydowia louisecottisiae and Pseudosydowia queenslandica on living leaves of Eucalyptus sp. Brazil, Absidia montepascoalis from soil. Chile, Ilyonectria zarorii from soil under Maytenus boaria. Costa Rica, Colletotrichum filicis from an unidentified fern. Croatia, Mollisia endogranulata on deteriorated hardwood. Czech Republic, Arcopilus navicularis from tea bag with fruit tea, Neosetophoma buxi as endophyte from Buxus sempervirens, Xerochrysium bohemicum on surface of biscuits with chocolate glaze and filled with jam. France, Entoloma cyaneobasale on basic to calcareous soil, Fusarium aconidiale from Triticum aestivum, Fusarium juglandicola from buds of Juglans regia. Germany, Tetraploa endophytica as endophyte from Microthlaspi perfoliatum roots. India, Castanediella ambae on leaves of Mangifera indica, Lactifluus kanadii on soil under Castanopsis sp., Penicillium uttarakhandense from soil. Italy, Penicillium ferraniaense from compost. Namibia, Bezerromyces gobabebensis on leaves of unidentified succulent, Cladosporium stipagrostidicola on leaves of Stipagrostis sp., Cymostachys euphorbiae on leaves of Euphorbia sp., Deniquelata hypolithi from hypolith under a rock, Hysterobrevium walvisbayicola on leaves of unidentified tree, Knufia hypolithi and Knufia walvisbayicola from hypolith under a rock, Lapidomyces stipagrostidicola on leaves of Stipagrostis sp., Nothophaeotheca mirabibensis (incl. Nothophaeotheca gen. nov.) on persistent inflorescence remains of Blepharis obmitrata, Paramyrothecium salvadorae on twigs of Salvadora persica, Preussia procaviicola on dung of Procavia sp., Sordaria equicola on zebra dung, Volutella salvadorae on stems of Salvadora persica. Netherlands, Entoloma ammophilum on sandy soil, Entoloma pseudocruentatum on nutrient poor(acid)soil, Entoloma pudens on plant debris, amongst grasses. [...], Leslie W.S. de Freitas and colleagues express their gratitude to Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq) for scholarships provided to Leslie Freitas and for the research grant provided to André Luiz Santiago; their contribution was financed by the projects ‘Diversity of Mucoromycotina in the different ecosystems of the Atlantic Rainforest of Pernambuco’ (FACEPE–First Projects Program PPP/ FACEPE/CNPq–APQ–0842-2.12/14) and ‘Biology of conservation of fungi s.l. in areas of Atlantic Forest of Northeast Brazil’ (CNPq/ICMBio 421241/ 2017-9) H.B. Lee was supported by the Graduate Program for the Undiscovered Taxa of Korea (NIBR202130202). The study of O.V. Morozova, E.F. Malysheva, V.F. Malysheva, I.V. Zmitrovich, and L.B. Kalinina was carried out within the framework of a research project of the Komarov Botanical Institute RAS (АААА-А19-119020890079-6) using equipment of its Core Facility Centre ‘Cell and Molecular Technologies in Plant Science’. The work of O. V. Morozova, L.B. Kalinina, T. Yu. Svetasheva, and E.A. Zvyagina was financially supported by Russian Foundation for Basic Research project no. 20-04-00349. E.A. Zvyagina and T.Yu. Svetasheva are grateful to A.V. Alexandrova, A.E. Kovalenko, A.S. Baykalova for the loan of specimens, T.Y. James, E.F. Malysheva and V.F. Malysheva for sequencing. J.D. Reyes acknowledges B. Dima for comparing the holotype sequence of Cortinarius bonachei with the sequences in his database. A. Mateos and J.D. Reyes acknowledge L. Quijada for reviewing the phylogeny and S. de la Peña- Lastra and P. Alvarado for their support and help. Vladimir I. Kapitonov and colleagues are grateful to Brigitta Kiss for help with their molecular studies. This study was conducted under research projects of the Tobolsk Complex Scientific Station of the Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences (N АААА-А19-119011190112-5). E. Larsson acknowledges the Swedish Taxonomy Initiative, SLU Artdatabanken, Uppsala (dha.2019.4.3-13). The study of D.B. Raudabaugh and colleagues was supported by the Schmidt Science Fellows, in partnership with the Rhodes Trust. Gregorio Delgado is grateful to Michael Manning and Kamash Pillai (Eurofins EMLab P&K) for provision of laboratory facilities. Jose G. Maciá-Vicente acknowledges support from the German Research Foundation under grant MA7171/1-1, and from the Landes-Offensive zur Entwicklung Wissenschaftlich-ökonomischer Exzellenz (LOEWE) of the state of Hesse within the framework of the Cluster for Integrative Fungal Research (IPF). Thanks are also due to the authorities of the Cabañeros National Park and Los Alcornocales Natural Park for granting the collection permit and for support during field work. The study of Alina V. Alexandrova was carried out as part of the Scientific Project of the State Order of the Government of Russian Federation to Lomonosov Moscow State University No. 121032300081-7. Michał Gorczak was financially supported by the Ministry of Science and Higher Education through the Faculty of Biology, University of Warsaw intramural grant DSM 0117600- 13. M. Gorczak acknowledges M. Klemens for sharing a photo of the Białowieża Forest logging site and M. Senderowicz for help with preparing the illustration. Ivona Kautmanová and D. Szabóová were funded by the Operational Program of Research and Development and co-financed with the European Fund for Regional Development (EFRD). ITMS 26230120004: ‘Building of research and development infrastructure for investigation of genetic biodiversity of organisms and joining IBOL initiative’. Ishika Bera, Aniket Ghosh, Jorinde Nuytinck and Annemieke Verbeken are grateful to the Director, Botanical Survey of India (Kolkata), Head of the Department of Botany & Microbiology & USIC Dept. HNB Garhwal University, Srinagar, Garhwal for providing research facilities. Ishika Bera and Aniket Ghosh acknowledge the staff of the forest department of Arunachal Pradesh for facilitating the macrofungal surveys to the restricted areas. Sergey Volobuev was supported by the Russian Science Foundation (RSF project N 19-77- 00085). Aleksey V. Kachalkin and colleagues were supported by the Russian Science Foundation (grant No. 19-74-10002). The study of Anna M. Glushakova was carried out as part of the Scientific Project of the State Order of the Government of Russian Federation to Lomonosov Moscow State University No. 121040800174-6. Tracey V. Steinrucken and colleagues were supported by AgriFutures Australia (Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation), through funding from the Australian Government Department of Agriculture, Water and the Environment, as part of its Rural Research and Development for Profit program (PRJ-010527). Neven Matočec and colleagues thank the Croatian Science Foundation for their financial support under the project grant HRZZ-IP-2018-01-1736 (ForFungiDNA). Ana Pošta thanks the Croatian Science Foundation for their support under the grant HRZZ-2018-09-7081. The research of Milan Spetik and co-authors was supported by Internal Grant of Mendel University in Brno No. IGAZF/ 2021-SI1003. K.C. Rajeshkumar thanks SERB, the Department of Science and Technology, Government of India for providing financial support under the project CRG/2020/000668 and the Director, Agharkar Research Institute for providing research facilities. Nikhil Ashtekar thanks CSIR-HRDG, INDIA, for financial support under the SRF fellowship (09/670(0090)/2020-EMRI), and acknowledges the support of the DIC Microscopy Facility, established by Dr Karthick Balasubramanian, B&P (Plants) Group, ARI, Pune. The research of Alla Eddine Mahamedi and co-authors was supported by project No. CZ.02.1.01/0.0/0.0/16_017/0002334, Czech Republic. Tereza Tejklová is thanked for providing useful literature. A. Polhorský and colleagues were supported by the Operational Program of Research and Development and co-financed with the European fund for Regional Development (EFRD), ITMS 26230120004: Building of research and development infrastructure for investigation of genetic biodiversity of organisms and joining IBOL initiative. Yu Pei Tan and colleagues thank R. Chen for her technical support. Ernest Lacey thanks the Cooperative Research Centres Projects scheme (CRCPFIVE000119) for its support. Suchada Mongkolsamrit and colleagues were financially supported by the Platform Technology Management Section, National Center for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (BIOTEC), Project Grant No. P19-50231. Dilnora Gouliamova and colleagues were supported by a grant from the Bulgarian Science Fund (KP-06-H31/19). The research of Timofey A. Pankratov was supported by the Russian Foundation for Basic Research (grant No. 19-04-00297a). Gabriel Moreno and colleagues wish to express their gratitude to L. Monje and A. Pueblas of the Department of Drawing and Scientific Photography at the University of Alcalá for their help in the digital preparation of the photographs, and to J. Rejos, curator of the AH herbarium, for his assistance with the specimens examined in the present study. Vit Hubka was supported by the Charles University Research Centre program No. 204069. Alena Kubátová was supported by The National Programme on Conservation and Utilization of Microbial Genetic Resources Important for Agriculture (Ministry of Agriculture of the Czech Republic). The Kits van Waveren Foundation (Rijksherbariumfonds Dr E. Kits van Waveren, Leiden, Netherlands) contributed substantially to the costs of sequencing and travelling expenses for M. Noordeloos. The work of B. Dima was supported by the ÚNKP-20-4 New National Excellence Program of the Ministry for Innovation and Technology from the source of the National Research, Development and Innovation Fund, and by the ELTE Thematic Excellence Programme 2020 supported by the National Research, Development and Innovation Office of Hungary (TKP2020-IKA-05). The Norwegian Entoloma studies received funding from the Norwegian Biodiversity Information Centre (NBIC), and the material was partly sequenced through NorBOL. Gunnhild Marthinsen and Katriina Bendiksen (Natural History Museum, University of Oslo, Norway) are acknowledged for performing the main parts of the Entoloma barcoding work. Asunción Morte is grateful to AEI/FEDER, UE (CGL2016-78946-R) and Fundación Séneca - Agencia de Ciencia y Tecnología de la Región de Murcia (20866/PI/18) for financial support. Vladimír Ostrý was supported by the Ministry of Health, Czech Republic - conceptual development of research organization (National Institute of Public Health – NIPH, IN 75010330). Konstanze Bensch (Westerdijk Fungal Biodiversity Institute, Utrecht) is thanked for correcting the spelling of various Latin epithets.
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- 2021
30. Phylogenetic placement and reassessment of
- Author
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K C, Rajeshkumar, U, Braun, J Z, Groenewald, S S, Lad, N, Ashtekar, S, Fatima, and G, Anand
- Subjects
new taxon ,Ascomycota ,multigene-phylogeny ,India ,Articles ,Mycosphaerellales - Abstract
The leaf spot disease of Pongamia pinnata caused by an asperisporium-like asexual morph, which is usually referred to as Asperisporium pongamiae, is quite common during monsoon seasons in India. Phylogenetic analyses, based on LSU and rpb2 sequence data, and blast searches using ITS sequence data, revealed that this ascomycete forms a lineage within Mycosphaerellaceae distant from all other generic lineages. Pedrocrousiella gen. nov., with P. pongamiae comb. nov., based on Fusicladium pongamiae (≡ A. pongamiae), as type species is introduced for this lineage. This species has been considered the asexual morph of Mycosphaerella pongamiae (≡ Stigmatea pongamiae). However, this connection is unproven and was just based on the occasional association of the two taxa in some collections. Several attempts to induce the formation of a sexual morph in culture failed, therefore the putative connection between these morphs could not be confirmed. Asperisporium pongamiae-pinnatae is reduced to synonymy with P. pongamiae. Asperisporium pongamiae-pinnatae was introduced because of the wrong assumption that F. pongamiae had been described on another host, Pongamia globosa. But Fusicladium pongamiae was actually described in India on Pongamia glabra, which is a synonym of P. pinnata, and hence on the same host as Asperisporium pongamiae-pinnatae. Pedrocrousiella pongamiae clusters in a clade containing Distocercospora, Clypeosphaerella, and “Pseudocercospora” nephrolepidicola, a species which is not congeneric with Pseudocercospora. Phylogenetically, Pedrocrousiella is distant from the Asperisporium s. str. clade (type species A. caricae), which is more closely related to Amycosphaerella, Pseudocercosporella, Distomycovellosiella and Nothopassalora. Citation: Rajeshkumar KC, Braun U, Groenewald JZ, Lad SS, Ashtekar N, Fatima S, Anand G (2021). Phylogenetic placement and reassessment of Asperisporium pongamiae as Pedrocrousiella pongamiae gen. et comb. nov. (Mycosphaerellaceae). Fungal Systematics and Evolution 7: 165–176. doi: 10.3114/fuse.2021.07.08
- Published
- 2020
31. Assessing completion reports for compliance with institutional ethics committee-approved protocols: An observational study
- Author
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Sharmila V Jalgaonkar, Manasi S Lad, Shweta Surve, Snehalata V Gajbhiye, and Sarita G Dabba
- Subjects
Protocol (science) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Blinding ,Approved Protocol ,business.industry ,Retrospective cohort study ,Protocol Deviation ,General Medicine ,Checklist ,Research Personnel ,Patient safety ,Observational Studies as Topic ,Research Design ,Family medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Observational study ,Prospective Studies ,business ,Ethics Committees, Research ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Background Protocol non-compliance in clinical research studies is common and can affect both patient safety and data integrity. There are no published studies which actively looked for non-compliance. The present study was carried out, against this background, with the objective of assessing the proportion of protocol non-compliance and evaluating those aspects of protocol where there was non-compliance. Methods The study completion reports that were submitted to the institutional ethics committee for the period January 2017 to December 2017 were compared with the approved protocol. A checklist for recording protocol non-compliance was developed, which was validated by five experts and consisted of a 12-point checklist with responses such as yes, no, not applicable, and insufficient information. Results Out of 193 studies, prospective observational studies were n = 120 (62.17 %), retrospective studies were n = 39 (20.21%), interventional studies n = 28 (14.51 %), and observational studies with both prospective and retrospective study design were n = 6 (3.11%). The study objective was modified in n=18 (9.32%) studies. Only n = 14 (7.24%) satisfied the selection criteria. Six studies (3.10%) did not collect the data as mentioned in the protocol. Fifty-eight studies (30.05%) did not achieve the calculated sample size, whereas n = 78 (40.41%) did not complete the study as per the stipulated study duration. Contrary to 180 protocol deviations found in this study, only 14 protocol deviations were reported by the principal investigator. Aspects like blinding and randomisation, which are relevant to interventional studies (n = 28), showed 100 % compliance. Conclusion The research protocol is not adhered to in all aspects. Adequate training to investigators will help prevent non-compliance and enable us to conduct studies with higher ethical and scientific integrity.
- Published
- 2020
32. Pain interference and quality of life in combat veterans: Examining the roles of posttraumatic stress disorder, traumatic brain injury, and sleep quality
- Author
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Anna S Ord, Jared A. Rowland, Sagar S. Lad, Katherine H. Taber, Sarah L. Martindale, and Robert D. Shura
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Sleep Wake Disorders ,Traumatic brain injury ,Psychological intervention ,Pain Interference ,Pain ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,PsycINFO ,Article ,Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic ,Young Adult ,Quality of life (healthcare) ,Brain Injuries, Traumatic ,medicine ,Humans ,Aged ,Veterans ,Sleep quality ,business.industry ,Rehabilitation ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Posttraumatic stress ,Functional interference ,Quality of Life ,Female ,business ,Sleep ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
OBJECTIVE The goal of this study was to examine the associations among posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), traumatic brain injury (TBI), sleep quality, pain interference, and quality of life in combat veterans. METHOD Veterans (N = 289, 86.51% male) completed the Mid-Atlantic MIRECC Assessment of Traumatic Brain Injury, the Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale for DSM-5, and measures of sleep quality, pain interference, and quality of life. RESULTS Hierarchical linear regressions evaluated associations between PTSD severity, deployment TBI severity, sleep quality, and the outcomes of pain interference and quality of life after adjusting for demographic variables and the number of nondeployment TBIs. PTSD severity, B = 0.15, SE B = 0.04, deployment TBI severity, B = 3.98, SE B = 1.01, and sleep quality, B = 0.74, SE B = 0.13, were significantly associated with pain interference, p < .001. PTSD severity, B = -0.57, SE B = 0.07, and pain interference, B = -0.45, SE B = 0.11, were significantly, independently associated with quality of life,p < .001. However, pain interference, B = -0.24, SE B = 0.11, was no longer significantly associated with quality of life when sleep quality, B = -1.56, SE B = 0.25, was included in the model. There was no significant association between deployment TBI severity and quality of life. Interactions among the studied variables were not significant for either of the outcome variables. CONCLUSIONS PTSD symptom severity, deployment TBI history, and sleep quality may be important to consider in treatment planning for veterans experiencing pain-related functional interference. For veterans with numerous conditions comorbid with pain, treatment plans may include interventions targeting sleep and PTSD to maximize quality of life improvements. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2020
33. Role of Phytochemicals in Plant Diseases Caused by Pythium
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Mahendra Rai, R. M. Gade, Ranjit S. Lad, and Amol V. Shitole
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biology ,Botany ,Pythium ,biology.organism_classification - Published
- 2020
34. POSA120 Healthcare Resource Utilization in Patients with Painful Diabetic Neuropathy Treated with 10-Khz Spinal Cord Stimulation: Results from a Randomized Controlled Trial
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R Taylor, S Lad, E Petersen, T Stauss, J White, B Healey, M Baker-Wagner, N Sacks, S Patil, D Caraway, and E Brooks
- Subjects
Health Policy ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health - Published
- 2022
35. Epidemiological relations to population dynamics of Phytophthora spp. in Mandarin
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S. P. Wagh, R. M. Gade, J. Adinarayana, K. B. V. N. Phanindra, and R. S. Lad
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,education.field_of_study ,Rain gauge ,Gummosis ,Population ,food and beverages ,Humidity ,Plant Science ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,01 natural sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,Horticulture ,030104 developmental biology ,Propagule ,Root rot ,Relative humidity ,Phytophthora ,education ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
Fixed plot survey was undertaken to plot correlation between environmental factors with population of Phytophthora spp. in soil and the disease intensity during June 2015 to May 2016. Agro-meteorological data was recorded by using wireless sensors (for air temperature 107 Temperature probe, for relative humidity HC2S3 and for rainfall measurement Texas Electronic rain gauge) in selected plots. All four orchards were found infected with Phytophthora in the range of 3.2–43.6 cfu/g of soil. There was consistent increase in pathogen population in all plots with increase in rainfall, relative humidity with decrease in temperature and vice versa. At high rainfall condition intensity of root rot was increased to 35.81 per cent in the month of August and gummosis (41.01%) was also increased in the month of October with average propagules of 25.84 cfu/g of soil. Increase in temperature decreased intensity of gummosis (26.29%) and root rot (20.09%) in the month of May, with the average propagules, i.e., 4.56 cfu/g of soil. Present findings suggest that, humidity and rainfall were significantly correlates with population dynamics of Phytophthora spp. and disease intensity, while temperature was found inversely proportional.
- Published
- 2018
36. Improvement in Flavor of Gulabjamun Prepared from Camel Milk Khoa
- Author
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Bhavbhuti Mehta, Sachin S. Lad, K.D. Aparnathi, and Suneeta Pinto
- Subjects
Camel milk ,Food science ,Flavor ,Mathematics - Published
- 2017
37. Structural Changes in Milk Production of Uttarakhand, India
- Author
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Prashant Sharma, Ajay Kweera, Mohan Chand, Sachin S. Lad, Deep Bisht, and R.M. Tiwari
- Subjects
Toxicology ,Biology ,Milk production - Published
- 2017
38. Goat Milk in Human Nutrition and Health – A Review
- Author
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Suresh Velpula, Bhavbhuti Mehta, Sachin S. Lad, and K.D. Aparnathi
- Subjects
0404 agricultural biotechnology ,Human nutrition ,Environmental health ,0402 animal and dairy science ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Biology ,040401 food science ,040201 dairy & animal science - Published
- 2017
39. Melamine: A Monster in the Milk
- Author
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Sachin S. Lad K.D. Aparnathi
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Art ,Food science ,Melamine ,Monster ,media_common - Published
- 2017
40. Neurological Manifestations in Pediatric Inflammatory Multisystem Syndrome Temporally Associated with SARS-CoV-2 (PIMS-TS)
- Author
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Mohd Shahbaz Saifi, Sagar S Lad, Pradeep Suryawanshi, Jalil Mujawar, Shehla Kazi, Prasad Balte, Amol Bhor, L M Jadhav, Prateek Kataria, Preeti Lad, Ravindra Khetre, and Santosh Pandurang Kait
- Subjects
2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,business.industry ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,Inflammation ,medicine.disease ,Systemic inflammatory response syndrome ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Immunology ,medicine ,Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Scientific Letter - Published
- 2020
41. SUN-174 EFFICACY AND SAFETY OF INTRAVENOUS LABETALOL FOR HYPERTENSIVE CRISIS IN CHILDREN
- Author
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M. Patil, Arun Bansal, A. Baranwal, S.K. Angurana, Jayashree Muralidharan, S. Lad, and Karthi Nallasamy
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Nephrology ,business.industry ,Emergency medicine ,medicine ,Labetalol ,business ,Hypertensive crisis ,medicine.drug - Published
- 2020
42. Fresh Per Rectal Bleeding in Pediatric Inflammatory Multisystem Syndrome Temporally Associated with SARS-CoV-2 (PIMS-TS)
- Author
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Sagar S Lad, Prateek Kataria, Chandana Bobba, Jalil Mujawar, Abhinav Neela, Preeti Lad, Santosh Pandurang Kait, Vishwadeep Kesarwani, Pradeep Suryawanshi, Prasad Balte, Ravindra Khetre, and Pranav Jadhav
- Subjects
2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,SARS-CoV-2 ,business.industry ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,COVID-19 ,Immunoglobulins, Intravenous ,medicine.disease ,Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome ,Systemic inflammatory response syndrome ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Immunology ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,business ,Scientific Letter - Published
- 2021
43. Left atrial thrombus: Rare and unusual presentation of Mycoplasma pneumoniae infection: A case Report
- Author
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Sagar S Lad, Preeti Lad, Santosh Pandurang Kait, Pradeep Suryawanshi, and Jalil Mujawar
- Subjects
Mycoplasma pneumoniae ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,antiphospholipid antibodies ,medicine.disease_cause ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 ,respiratory tract diseases ,left atrium ,immune system diseases ,medicine ,mycoplasma pneumoniae pneumonia ,Presentation (obstetrics) ,Left atrial thrombus ,business ,thrombosis - Abstract
Mycoplasma pneumoniae is a common organism responsible for pediatric community-acquired pneumonia. Extrapulmonary complications including thrombosis, although rare, are known to be associated with severe M. pneumoniae pneumonia. We report the case of left atrial thrombus extending into right inferior pulmonary vein in a child with severe M. pneumoniae probably due to transient Antiphospholipid Antibodies (aPL). Pneumonia and thrombus were completely resolved after the treatment with antimicrobial and anticoagulant therapy in 3 months. aPL are more common in M. pneumoniae infections; hence, routine screening will be helpful to quantify the incidence of aPL as well as to plan future risk assessment and management strategies.
- Published
- 2021
44. Rediscovery of Penicillium paradoxum (Ascomycete: Aspergillaceae) from Maharashtra, India
- Author
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Santosh V. Swami, Sanjay K. Singh, Sayali D. Marathe, Kunhiraman C. Rajeshkumar, Sneha S. Lad, and Deepak K. Mayura
- Subjects
Aspergillus ,lcsh:QH1-199.5 ,Teleomorph state ,Aspergillaceae ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Biology ,lcsh:General. Including nature conservation, geographical distribution ,biology.organism_classification ,Western Ghats ,Phylogenetics ,lcsh:QH540-549.5 ,Botany ,Aspergillus paradoxus ,Hemicarpenteles paradoxus ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Taxonomy (biology) ,Anamorphic ascomycete ,lcsh:Ecology ,Penicillium paradoxum ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Phylogeny ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,Taxonomy - Abstract
Penicillium paradoxum has an enigmatic Aspergillus-like anamorphic state; earlier named as Aspergillus paradoxus with a teleomorph state Hemicarpenteles paradoxus. The present paper describes the rediscovery of this species from India after five decades and includes a phylogenetic study of this strain. This is the first record of this strain from peninsular India including the Western Ghats.
- Published
- 2016
45. A macroscopic soil-water transport model to simulate root water uptake in the presence of water and disease stress
- Author
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Ranjith S Lad, Jiří Šimůnek, Srinivasa Rao Peddinti, J. Adinarayana, R. M. Gade, and B.V.N.P. Kambhammettu
- Subjects
Rhizosphere ,geography ,Hydrus ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,0207 environmental engineering ,food and beverages ,Soil science ,02 engineering and technology ,Root system ,01 natural sciences ,Sink (geography) ,Soil water ,Water uptake ,Environmental science ,Richards equation ,020701 environmental engineering ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Water Science and Technology ,Transpiration - Abstract
Macroscopic modeling approaches based on the solution of the Richards equation with root water uptake (RWU) as a sink term can help in understanding soil-water-plant interactions within the rhizosphere. However, these models currently cannot capture the differences in RWU attributed to variations in plant health. Errors in simulating RWU from unhealthy plants are significant when disease-causing fungus inhibits water uptake rather than other usually considered plant stresses. We developed RWU reduction functions to simulate plant transpiration under combined water and disease stress conditions using linear and non-linear response models. The developed functions were implemented in the numerical model HYDRUS (2D/3D) to simulate water uptake from a root system in a radially symmetrical flow domain. Field experiments were conducted in the Vidarbha region of central India for one crop cycle on four citrus trees with varying disease intensities (healthy to severely diseased). The proposed model was rigorously tested by comparing its results with measured soil water contents and plant transpiration fluxes under various water and disease limiting conditions. Error in simulating RWU fluxes from unhealthy trees by ignoring the disease stress factor was found to be significant (15% for slightly diseased to 26% for the severely diseased tree). Parameters of the spatial root distribution and the disease stress response functions were optimized for each scenario using a genetic algorithm approach. Our results indicate that calibration targets to validate uptake reduction functions should be chosen cautiously based on the dominant stress experienced by the plant root system.
- Published
- 2020
46. Productivity Improvement In Industry Using 5S Technique And Plant Layout
- Author
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Smita Ganjare, Deepak R. Gupta, Anurag S. Chand, Bhaskar K. Yadav, and Bipin S. Lad
- Subjects
5S, Waste Time, Efficiency, Quality, Plant Layout, Material Flow & Production - Abstract
This paper consists of literature survey on the implementation of 5S in manufacturing industry. It involves the study and change in the workshop floor of a manufacturing industry before implementation of 5S. This paper helps in minimizing the waste time and increases the area of work place, which is not inspected properly. An inspection process has been executed based on 5S methods and the result obtained confirms to changes like increasing efficiency in production and quality and improves safety. This paper aims to improve the plant layout to eliminate obstructions in material, tool, and product flow and thus achieve maximum productivity. The present plant layout and the operation process of each section have been inspected. The problem of material flow of each section was identified. The result showed that the proper placement of each section should be done to make the good material flow. The enhancement in layout of plant can decrease the distance of material flow, which increases production., {"references":["1.\tInternational Journal of Innovative Research in Science, Engineering and Technology (An ISO 3297: 2007 Certified Organization) Vol. 3, Issue 4, April 2014 Efficiency Improvement of a Plant Layout 2.\tIJAET/Vol. IV/ Issue II/April-June, 2013/28-30 Research Paper 5S as a tool and strategy for improvising the work place Harsha Lingareddy, G.Sahitya Reddy, K.Jagadeshwar Address for Correspondence Mechanical Engineering Department, K L University, Guntur, Andhra Pradesh, India 3.\t5S Implementation in Wan Cheng Industry Manufacturing Factory in Taiwan by HungLin, Chi 4.\tLayout Planning: A case study on Engineering-To-Order Company , Mirosław MATUSEK Silesian University of Technology, Zabrze, Poland, EU, 5.\t5S Strategy for Productivity Improvement: A Case Study R. A. Pasale, Prof. J. S. Bagi, Volume: 2 | Issue: 3 | March 2013 6.\tA literature review on efficient plant layout design, Volume 7, Issue 2, May-August 2016, pp.43–51, Article ID: IJIERD_07_02_005"]}
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Adoption of recommended package of practices by green gram growers
- Author
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G. S. Pawar, R. P. Kadam, A. S. Lad, and S. M. Umate
- Subjects
Agricultural science ,Crop production ,Agroforestry ,Knowledge level ,General Medicine ,Business ,Innovation adoption ,Gram - Published
- 2014
48. Surgical Techniques for the Management of the ‘Hostile Mitral Annulus’
- Author
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Philip Davis, Vidyadhar S. Lad, Andrew Newcomb, and Chua Yeow Leng
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Mitral Valve Annuloplasty ,Heart Valve Diseases ,Mitral valve ,Mitral valve annuloplasty ,medicine ,Humans ,Endocarditis ,cardiovascular diseases ,Mitral annulus ,Fibrous body ,Heart Valve Prosthesis Implantation ,business.industry ,fungi ,food and beverages ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Cardiac surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cardiothoracic surgery ,Heart Valve Prosthesis ,Infective endocarditis ,cardiovascular system ,Mitral Valve ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
The mitral annulus can be rendered hostile by several uncommon clinical situations such as infective endocarditis, calcification, or previous valve surgery. These can all lead to difficulties seating a prosthesis or annuloplasty ring. The posterior mitral annulus or anteriorly the intervalvar fibrous body can be affected. These situations continue to pose a formidable technical challenge to the cardiac surgeon in the operating room. We review the evidence around solutions for these problems with the intent of giving surgeons an overview of techniques to address these issues.
- Published
- 2014
49. 0923 Insomnia and Suicide Attempts following Discharge from Residential Treatment
- Author
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Katrina J Speed, Sagar S Lad, Wilfred R. Pigeon, Patrick G. Walsh, Lisham Ashrafioun, and Todd M. Bishop
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Suicide attempt ,business.industry ,Medical record ,medicine.disease ,Comorbidity ,Schizophrenia ,Physiology (medical) ,Insomnia ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Bipolar disorder ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Psychiatry ,Cause of death ,Psychopathology - Published
- 2019
50. Impact of fractional filter in PI control loop applied to induction motor speed drive
- Author
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S. Hassainia, S. Ladaci, S. Kechida, and K. Khelil
- Subjects
fractional filter ,first order filter ,index performance ,induction machine ,pi controller ,Electrical engineering. Electronics. Nuclear engineering ,TK1-9971 - Abstract
Introduction. One of the main problems of electrical machine control systems is to obtain a satisfactory performance in the rejection of load disturbances, as well as in the set-point tracking tasks. Generally, the development of control algorithms does not take into account the presence of noise. Appropriate filtering is, therefore, essential to reduce the impact of noise on the output of the controller, in addition to the machine output. Recently, there has been a great tendency toward using fractional calculus to solve engineering problems. The filtering is one of the fields in which fractional calculus has received great attention. The importance of filters in signal processing and other engineering areas is unquestionable Novelty. The proposed work is intended to be a contribution in the recent works conducted on the influence of the fractional filtering on the control robustness of induction machines control. Purpose. The main contribution of this research is the application of fractional filtering to the standard PI control loop for an induction motor speed drive. Methods. In order to assess its impact and benefit, different structures for introducing the filters are investigated, A first order filter is considered in different positions, whether before or after the controller or even in both positions at the same time, with a noise source. A review of the index performance evolution (the Integral Square Error, Integral Absolute Error and Integral Time Absolute Error) has allowed a configuration design of the filter. Results. Intensive simulations were performed with a control setup using integer and fractional order filters, which permitted to conclude that the fractional filters give better performance indices compared to the integer one and thus improve the dynamic characteristics of the system.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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