Institution
University of Peradeniya
Education•Kandy, Sri Lanka•
About: University of Peradeniya is a education organization based out in Kandy, Sri Lanka. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 5970 authors who have published 7388 publications receiving 197002 citations.
Topics: Population, Poison control, Adsorption, Electrolyte, Agriculture
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors considered the impact of climate warming on rice development times in Sri Lanka, and the major emphasis was on the uncertainty of the predictions, and in particular on the estimation of mean squared error of prediction.
56 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used statistical slope detection metrics, such as simple linear regression, to detect and quantify mean trends for countries in the regions of South Asia and found that temperature trends are spatially less coherent than rainfall trends in most south Asian countries.
56 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors considered a dual-hop amplify-and-forward (AF) relaying system where the relay is equipped with multiple antennas, while the source and the destination are equipped with a single antenna.
Abstract: This paper considers a dual-hop amplify-and-forward (AF) relaying system where the relay is equipped with multiple antennas, while the source and the destination are equipped with a single antenna. Assuming that the relay is subjected to co-channel interference (CCI) and additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN) while the destination is corrupted by AWGN only, we propose three heuristic relay precoding schemes to combat the CCI, namely, 1) Maximum ratio combining/maximal ratio transmission (MRC/MRT), 2) Zero-forcing/MRT (ZF/MRT), 3) Minimum mean-square error/MRT (MMSE/MRT). We derive new exact outage expressions as well as simple high signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) outage approximations for all three schemes. Our findings suggest that both the MRC/MRT and the MMSE/MRT schemes achieve a full diversity of N, while the ZF/MRT scheme achieves a diversity order of N-M, where N is the number of relay antennas and M is the number of interferers. In addition, we show that the MMSE/MRT scheme always achieves the best outage performance, and the ZF/MRT scheme outperforms the MRC/MRT scheme in the low SNR regime, while becomes inferior to the MRC/MRT scheme in the high SNR regime. Finally, in the large N regime, we show that both the ZF/MRT and MMSE/MRT schemes are capable of completely eliminating the CCI, while perfect interference cancelation is not possible with the MRC/MRT scheme.
56 citations
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TL;DR: The results indicated that motile spermatozoa increased the secretion of PG by OEC as well as cellular expression of mRNA for cyclooxygenase, PGES, and PGFS in a dose- and time-dependent manner, providing the first evidence that live spermatoza in the oviduct up-regulate the local PG system, and thereby, enhance ovidUCTal contractions.
Abstract: The dynamic action of oviductal secretory compounds on spermatozoa function is well documented. In contrast, the effect of spermatozoa on oviductal function remains poorly characterized. Previously, our lab and others have shown that prostaglandin (PG), together with other vasoactive peptides, plays major roles in oviductal contractions and sperm transport. We therefore examined the effect of spermatozoa on the production of PG by cow oviductal epithelial cells (OEC). A bovine spermatozoa-OEC co-culture system was utilized for this purpose. OECs in the second passage were co-cultured for 0, 1, 3, 6, 12, and 24 h with six doses of motile, killed, or truncated spermatozoa heads (control; without spermatozoa, 10(2)-10(6) spermatozoa/ml medium). The levels of PGE(2) and PGF(2alpha) in the medium were measured using enzyme immunoassays. Messenger RNA expression of cyclooxygenase-2, PGF synthase (PGFS), and PGE synthase (PGES) was investigated using real-time RT-PCR. The results indicated that motile spermatozoa increased the secretion of PG by OEC as well as cellular expression of mRNA for cyclooxygenase, PGES, and PGFS in a dose- and time-dependent manner. A maximum three- to fivefold increased secretion of PG was observed with a dose of 10(5) spermatozoa/ml after a 12-h co-incubation. Neither killed spermatozoa nor truncated spermatozoa heads stimulated oviductal biosynthesis and secretion of PG at any dose or time point observed. The results provide the first evidence that live spermatozoa in the oviduct up-regulate the local PG system, and thereby, enhance oviductal contractions. Thus, spermatozoa may bear a role in accelerating their own transport into the fertilization site.
56 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, three experiments were conducted to evaluate the effectiveness of urea as a source of ammonia in an "ensiling" process for improving the nutritive value of chopped rice straw.
56 citations
Authors
Showing all 5992 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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David Gunnell | 114 | 688 | 79867 |
Michael S. Roberts | 82 | 740 | 27754 |
Richard F. Gillum | 77 | 217 | 84184 |
Lakshman P. Samaranayake | 75 | 586 | 19972 |
Adrian C. Newton | 74 | 453 | 21814 |
Nick Jenkins | 71 | 325 | 22477 |
Michael Eddleston | 63 | 310 | 16762 |
Velmurugu Ravindran | 63 | 280 | 14057 |
Samath D Dharmaratne | 62 | 151 | 103916 |
Nicholas A. Buckley | 62 | 419 | 14283 |
Saman Warnakulasuriya | 60 | 282 | 15766 |
Keith W. Hipel | 58 | 543 | 14045 |
Geoffrey K. Isbister | 57 | 468 | 12690 |
Fiona J Charlson | 53 | 91 | 80274 |
Abbas Shafiee | 51 | 418 | 8679 |