Institution
Aligarh Muslim University
Education•Aligarh, Uttar Pradesh, India•
About: Aligarh Muslim University is a education organization based out in Aligarh, Uttar Pradesh, India. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Adsorption. The organization has 8218 authors who have published 16416 publications receiving 289068 citations. The organization is also known as: AMU.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The ability of fruit peel of orange to remove Zn, Ni, Cu, Pb and Cr from aqueous solution by adsorption was studied and the extent of removal was found to be dependent on sorbent dose, initial concentration, pH and temperature.
465 citations
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TL;DR: The enhanced activities of antioxidative enzymes, ascorbate peroxidase (APX), catalase (CAT) and glutathione reductase (GR) and lower activity of superoxide dismutase (SOD) in Varuna alleviated Cd stress and protected the photosynthetic activity.
463 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors summarize strategies to synthesize pyrazole derivatives and demonstrate that this class of compounds can be targeted for the discovery of new drugs and can be readily prepared owing to recent advances in synthetic medicinal chemistry.
Abstract: Nitrogen-containing heterocyclic compounds and their derivatives have historically been invaluable as a source of therapeutic agents. Pyrazole, which has two nitrogen atoms and aromatic character, provides diverse functionality and stereochemical complexity in a five-membered ring structure. In the past decade, studies have reported a growing body of data on different pyrazole derivatives and their innumerable physiological and pharmacological activities. In part, such studies attempted to reveal the wide range of drug-like properties of pyrazole derivatives along with their structure–activity relationships in order to create opportunities to harness the full potentials of these compounds. Here, we summarize strategies to synthesize pyrazole derivatives and demonstrate that this class of compounds can be targeted for the discovery of new drugs and can be readily prepared owing to recent advances in synthetic medicinal chemistry.
460 citations
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TL;DR: It is argued that the relations between emotions, efficacy, and action differ for more extreme, nonnormative actions and proposed that contempt, which, unlike anger, entails psychological distancing and a lack of reconciliatory intentions, predicts non normative action.
Abstract: A recent model of collective action distinguishes 2 distinct pathways: an emotional pathway whereby anger in response to injustice motivates action and an efficacy pathway where the belief that issues can be solved collectively increases the likelihood that group members take action (van Zomeren, Spears, Fischer, & Leach, 2004). Research supporting this model has, however, focused entirely on relatively normative actions such as participating in demonstrations. We argue that the relations between emotions, efficacy, and action differ for more extreme, nonnormative actions and propose (a) that nonnormative actions are often driven by a sense of low efficacy and (b) that contempt, which, unlike anger, entails psychological distancing and a lack of reconciliatory intentions, predicts nonnormative action. These ideas were tested in 3 survey studies examining student protests against tuition fees in Germany (N = 332), Indian Muslims' action support in relation to ingroup disadvantage (N = 156), and British Muslims' responses to British foreign policy (N = 466). Results were generally supportive of predictions and indicated that (a) anger was strongly related to normative action but overall unrelated or less strongly related to nonnormative action, (b) contempt was either unrelated or negatively related to normative action but significantly positively predicted nonnormative action, and (c) efficacy was positively related to normative action and negatively related to nonnormative action. The implications of these findings for understanding and dealing with extreme intergroup phenomena such as terrorism are discussed.
451 citations
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TL;DR: The mode of action of organic amendments leading to plant disease control and stimulation of microorganisms is complex and dependent on the nature of the amendments.
449 citations
Authors
Showing all 8370 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Sandeep Kumar | 94 | 1563 | 38652 |
Detlef W. Bahnemann | 88 | 517 | 48826 |
Gaurav Sharma | 82 | 1244 | 31482 |
Sang Un Ahn | 82 | 391 | 22067 |
M. Irfan | 80 | 241 | 20154 |
M. Mohisin Khan | 77 | 266 | 17940 |
Nazeer Ahmad | 74 | 143 | 18305 |
Rajeev Kumar | 72 | 296 | 20848 |
Syed F. Ali | 71 | 446 | 18669 |
Ahmad Umar | 71 | 740 | 21014 |
Aamir Ahmad | 63 | 251 | 13404 |
Mohammad Athar | 63 | 329 | 14384 |
A. Ahmad Masoodi | 62 | 80 | 12771 |
Shahid Husain | 62 | 437 | 14444 |
Mohd Danish Azmi | 61 | 186 | 13130 |