V
Vikram Singh
Researcher at National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences
Publications - 18
Citations - 261
Vikram Singh is an academic researcher from National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Tillage & Crop. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 17 publications receiving 161 citations. Previous affiliations of Vikram Singh include Bangalore Medical College and Research Institute & University of Agriculture, Faisalabad.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Impact of conservation tillage in rice-based cropping systems on soil aggregation, carbon pools and nutrients.
Rajiv Nandan,Vikram Singh,S. S. Singh,Virender Kumar,Kali Krishna Hazra,C. P. Nath,S.P. Poonia,R. K. Malik,Ranjan Bhattacharyya,Andrew M. McDonald +9 more
TL;DR: The constructive changes in soil properties following conservation tillage and crop residue retention led to increased crop productivity over conventional CTTPR–CT and conservation Tillage andcrop residue retention could be recommended in tropical rice–based cropping systems for improving soil quality and production sustainability.
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Synthesis, biological evaluation, molecular docking and theoretical evaluation of ADMET properties of nepodin and chrysophanol derivatives as potential cyclooxygenase (COX-1, COX-2) inhibitors
TL;DR: Compounds 1f, 1g, 2e and 2h exhibited better anti-inflammatory activity than ibuprofen in carrageenan-induced rat paw edema assay and molecular docking and in silico prediction of ADMET properties of compounds were carried out respectively.
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Crop establishment with conservation tillage and crop residue retention in rice-based cropping systems of Eastern India: yield advantage and economic benefit
Rajiv Nandan,S. S. Singh,Virender Kumar,Vikram Singh,Kali Krishna Hazra,C. P. Nath,R. K. Malik,Shefali Poonia,Ch. Hemant Solanki +8 more
TL;DR: In this article, the impact of four tillage cum crop establishment practices [conventional puddled transplanted rice followed by conventional till maize/wheat (CTTPR-CT), non-puddled transplant transplanted transplanted Rice followed by zero-till maize and wheat (NPTPR-ZT) and two residue management [residue removal, residue retention (~33.0%)] and two rice-based rotations (rice-wheat, rice-maize) on crop performance, system productivity, and production economics were evaluated.
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HyPE study: hydroxychloroquine prophylaxis-related adverse events' analysis among healthcare workers during COVID-19 pandemic: a rising public health concern.
Bada Sharanappa Nagaraja,Kalhalli Narayanaswamy Ramesh,Debjyoti Dhar,Debjyoti Dhar,Mahammad Samim Mondal,Mahammad Samim Mondal,Treshita Dey,Subhrakamal Saha,Mumtaz Ali Khan,Shah Dhiren Rutul,Kishore Pratik,Jayaram Manjula,Thuppanattumadam Ananthasubramanian Sangeeth,Thuppanattumadam Ananthasubramanian Sangeeth,Vikram Singh,Vikram Singh +15 more
TL;DR: A higher incidence of adverse events was observed when results were compared with studies involving patients on long-term hydroxychloroquine therapy, and Monitoring prior and during prophylaxis was inadequate even among those with cardiovascular disease and risk-factors.
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Viable weed seed density and diversity in soil and crop productivity under conservation agriculture practices in rice-based cropping systems
Rajiv Nandan,Vikram Singh,Vikesh Kumar,Sati Shankar Singh,Kali Krishna Hazra,C. P. Nath,R. K. Malik,S.P. Poonia +7 more
TL;DR: Viable weed seed density and diversity in soil were assessed in an experiment that comprised two types of crop rotation, two crop residue management practices, and four tillage techniques with and without crop residue, using the seedling germination method.