Institution
University of Hyderabad
Education•Hyderabad, India•
About: University of Hyderabad is a education organization based out in Hyderabad, India. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Thin film & Crystal structure. The organization has 6446 authors who have published 13005 publications receiving 237641 citations. The organization is also known as: Hyderabad Central University & HCU.
Topics: Thin film, Crystal structure, Dielectric, Population, Hydrogen bond
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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01 Jan 2017TL;DR: In this article, the authors have used ARDL cointegration approach to analyze the relationship between income inequality (EHII, from UTIP-UNIDO) and its various determinants from 1964 to 2007.
Abstract: The trajectory of output growth, more precisely economic growth and its interaction with other phenomena of an economy follows a complex path. Among many phenomena the one that has caught the world attention at large scale especially since the work of Piketty and Saez is the “Rising Inequality in Incomes”. Though for some countries like India there was a reduction in the poverty level, there seems no positive bearing on economic growth in improving income distribution for past two decades. In this paper, we have used ARDL cointegration approach to analyze the relationship between income inequality (EHII, from UTIP-UNIDO) and its various determinants from 1964 to 2007. Besides using data on Estimated Household Income Inequality (EHII), we have used income share of top 1% as an alternative measure of inequality. Our results reveal no relevance of Kuznets Hypothesis, instead, the relationship is U-shaped in nature, implying that with the initial rise in GDP per capita inequality decreases, later on as GDP increases, inequality tends to increase. Among the control variables, CPI (price level) is found to be positively and Government expenditure negatively related to inequality, while trade openness showed no significant relationship.
2 citations
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19 Jul 2018TL;DR: The worlds of Central Asia and the Indian Ocean have been seen as discrete, seemingly unconnected except by way of the vertical silk roads descending through feeder routes into port cities situated along the Indian ocean and its many seas, gulfs, and bays.
Abstract: The worlds of Central Asia and the Indian Ocean have been seen as discrete, seemingly unconnected except by way of the vertical silk roads descending through feeder routes into port cities situated along the Indian Ocean and its many seas, gulfs, and bays. Before Central Asia lost historical centrality and was regarded increasingly as a blank space on the map, it was a dynamic region. The Indian Ocean world with its spice, cotton, and silk routes was more known, having entered European geographical knowledge— and fantasy—from antiquity. The two worlds—terrestrial and oceanic—have been seen as diametrically opposed, with historiography privileging the latter. This essay links the two worlds by evoking people, places, and mobility through the legend of Prester John, a mysterious Christian monarch and putative ally against Muslims.
2 citations
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TL;DR: Genome sequence of Acinetobacter baumannii DS002 revealed the existence of seven contigs with features of indigenous plasmids, which appeared to have been generated due to the unique recombination events leading to a large-scale recombination and sequence inversions.
Abstract: Genome sequence of Acinetobacter baumannii DS002 revealed the existence of seven contigs with features of indigenous plasmids. Of the seven contigs, three of them have shown size and sequence identity. They appeared to have been generated due to the unique recombination events leading to a large-scale recombination and sequence inversions. The rest of the indigenous plasmids have shown significant size variations and contained the genetic repertoire required for the detoxification of formaldehyde and biosynthesis of exopolysaccharides. Genetic modules encoding novel toxin–antitoxin systems were found in most of the plasmids to ensure their survival in the host. In some instances, the toxin and antitoxin coding sequences were found on two different plasmids promoting the cosegregation of these two plasmids into the daughter cells.
2 citations
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2 citations
Authors
Showing all 6548 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Rajesh Kumar | 149 | 4439 | 140830 |
Bhawna Gomber | 125 | 1088 | 72998 |
Roald Hoffmann | 116 | 870 | 59470 |
Robert W. Boyd | 98 | 1161 | 37321 |
Gautam R. Desiraju | 88 | 458 | 45301 |
Shyam Sundar | 86 | 614 | 30289 |
Rukhsana Sultana | 76 | 162 | 14110 |
Rahul Banerjee | 73 | 203 | 21478 |
Judith A. K. Howard | 71 | 1318 | 44362 |
Girish S. Agarwal | 69 | 718 | 20780 |
Francis D'Souza | 66 | 477 | 16662 |
Praveen K. Thallapally | 64 | 190 | 12110 |
Kotha Subbaramaiah | 64 | 148 | 16020 |
Ashwini Nangia | 63 | 299 | 13057 |
E. C. G. Sudarshan | 59 | 379 | 21539 |