Abstract: | One of the basic functions of management is to employ capital efficiently so as to provide maximum customer service and earn a profit in the proces1s. It is possible to achieve these objectives in different ways with the given amount of capital, either by maximising the output or by maximising the margin of profit or by a combination of both these methods. This would mean that the management must try to make this capital work as fast as possible, which is often difficult to achieve under the present conditions of the factors of production. It is also not possible to increase extensively the margin of profit due to competition in business and in this process the capital turn over and productivity of capital often becomes totally ineffective. Several modern techniques have been developed and employed by managers to remedy this situation. Among these, materials management has become one of the most effective methods to achieve both the above goals. Materials management enables a manager to improve productivity of capital by reducing material costs, preventing blocking up of large working capital for long periods and improving the capital turn over This study examines the working of materials management departments in public sector undertakings in India and Suggests méthods to improve its efficiency. |
Description: | School of Mangement Studies, Cochin University of Science and Technology |
URI: | http://dyuthi.cusat.ac.in/purl/3393 |
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Dyuthi-T1370.pdf | (19.61Mb) |
Abstract: | The current study is aimed at the development of a theoretical simulation tool based on Discrete Element Method (DEM) to 'interpret granular dynamics of solid bed in the cross section of the horizontal rotating cylinder at the microscopic level and subsequently apply this model to establish the transition behaviour, mixing and segregation.The simulation of the granular motion developed in this work is based on solving Newton's equation of motion for each particle in the granular bed subjected to the collisional forces, external forces and boundary forces. At every instant of time, the forces are tracked and the positions velocities and accelarations of each partcle is The software code for this simulation is written in VISUAL FORTRAN 90 After checking the validity of the code with special tests, it is used to investigate the transition behaviour of granular solids motion in the cross section of a rotating cylinder for various rotational speeds and fill fraction.This work is hence directed towards a theoretical investigation based on Discrete Element Method (DEM) of the motion of granular solids in the radial direction of the horizontal cylinder to elucidate the relationship between the operating parameters of the rotating cylinder geometry and physical properties ofthe granular solid.The operating parameters of the rotating cylinder include the various rotational velocities of the cylinder and volumetric fill. The physical properties of the granular solids include particle sizes, densities, stiffness coefficients, and coefficient of friction Further the work highlights the fundamental basis for the important phenomena of the system namely; (i) the different modes of solids motion observed in a transverse crosssection of the rotating cylinder for various rotational speeds, (ii) the radial mixing of the granular solid in terms of active layer depth (iii) rate coefficient of mixing as well as the transition behaviour in terms of the bed turnover time and rotational speed and (iv) the segregation mechanisms resulting from differences in the size and density of particles.The transition behaviour involving its six different modes of motion of the granular solid bed is quantified in terms of Froude number and the results obtained are validated with experimental and theoretical results reported in the literature The transition from slumping to rolling mode is quantified using the bed turnover time and a linear relationship is established between the bed turn over time and the inverse of the rotational speed of the cylinder as predicted by Davidson et al. [2000]. The effect of the rotational speed, fill fraction and coefficient of friction on the dynamic angle of repose are presented and discussed. The variation of active layer depth with respect to fill fraction and rotational speed have been investigated. The results obtained through simulation are compared with the experimental results reported by Van Puyvelde et. at. [2000] and Ding et at. [2002].The theoretical model has been further extended, to study the rmxmg and segregation in the transverse direction for different particle sizes and their size ratios. The effect of fill fraction and rotational speed on the transverse mixing behaviour is presented in the form of a mixing index and mixing kinetics curve. The segregation pattern obtained by the simulation of the granular solid bed with respect to the rotational speed of the cylinder is presented both in graphical and numerical forms. The segregation behaviour of the granular solid bed with respect to particle size, density and volume fraction of particle size has been investigated. Several important macro parameters characterising segregation such as mixing index, percolation index and segregation index have been derived from the simulation tool based on first principles developed in this work. |
URI: | http://dyuthi.cusat.ac.in/purl/2381 |
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Dyuthi-T0653.pdf | (5.339Mb) |
Abstract: | One can do research in pointfree topology in two ways. The rst is the contravariant way where research is done in the category Frm but the ultimate objective is to obtain results in Loc. The other way is the covariant way to carry out research in the category Loc itself directly. According to Johnstone [23], \frame theory is lattice theory applied to topology whereas locale theory is topology itself". The most part of this thesis is written according to the rst view. In this thesis, we make an attempt to study about 1. the frame counterparts of maximal compactness, minimal Hausdor - ness and reversibility, 2. the automorphism groups of a nite frame and its relation with the subgroups of the permutation group on the generator set of the frame |
Description: | Department of Mathematics Cochin University of Science and Technology |
URI: | http://dyuthi.cusat.ac.in/purl/4746 |
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Dyuthi-T1844.pdf | (460.2Kb) |
Abstract: | Computational Biology is the research are that contributes to the analysis of biological data through the development of algorithms which will address significant research problems.The data from molecular biology includes DNA,RNA ,Protein and Gene expression data.Gene Expression Data provides the expression level of genes under different conditions.Gene expression is the process of transcribing the DNA sequence of a gene into mRNA sequences which in turn are later translated into proteins.The number of copies of mRNA produced is called the expression level of a gene.Gene expression data is organized in the form of a matrix. Rows in the matrix represent genes and columns in the matrix represent experimental conditions.Experimental conditions can be different tissue types or time points.Entries in the gene expression matrix are real values.Through the analysis of gene expression data it is possible to determine the behavioral patterns of genes such as similarity of their behavior,nature of their interaction,their respective contribution to the same pathways and so on. Similar expression patterns are exhibited by the genes participating in the same biological process.These patterns have immense relevance and application in bioinformatics and clinical research.Theses patterns are used in the medical domain for aid in more accurate diagnosis,prognosis,treatment planning.drug discovery and protein network analysis.To identify various patterns from gene expression data,data mining techniques are essential.Clustering is an important data mining technique for the analysis of gene expression data.To overcome the problems associated with clustering,biclustering is introduced.Biclustering refers to simultaneous clustering of both rows and columns of a data matrix. Clustering is a global whereas biclustering is a local model.Discovering local expression patterns is essential for identfying many genetic pathways that are not apparent otherwise.It is therefore necessary to move beyond the clustering paradigm towards developing approaches which are capable of discovering local patterns in gene expression data.A biclusters is a submatrix of the gene expression data matrix.The rows and columns in the submatrix need not be contiguous as in the gene expression data matrix.Biclusters are not disjoint.Computation of biclusters is costly because one will have to consider all the combinations of columans and rows in order to find out all the biclusters.The search space for the biclustering problem is 2 m+n where m and n are the number of genes and conditions respectively.Usually m+n is more than 3000.The biclustering problem is NP-hard.Biclustering is a powerful analytical tool for the biologist.The research reported in this thesis addresses the problem of biclustering.Ten algorithms are developed for the identification of coherent biclusters from gene expression data.All these algorithms are making use of a measure called mean squared residue to search for biclusters.The objective here is to identify the biclusters of maximum size with the mean squared residue lower than a given threshold. All these algorithms begin the search from tightly coregulated submatrices called the seeds.These seeds are generated by K-Means clustering algorithm.The algorithms developed can be classified as constraint based,greedy and metaheuristic.Constarint based algorithms uses one or more of the various constaints namely the MSR threshold and the MSR difference threshold.The greedy approach makes a locally optimal choice at each stage with the objective of finding the global optimum.In metaheuristic approaches particle Swarm Optimization(PSO) and variants of Greedy Randomized Adaptive Search Procedure(GRASP) are used for the identification of biclusters.These algorithms are implemented on the Yeast and Lymphoma datasets.Biologically relevant and statistically significant biclusters are identified by all these algorithms which are validated by Gene Ontology database.All these algorithms are compared with some other biclustering algorithms.Algorithms developed in this work overcome some of the problems associated with the already existing algorithms.With the help of some of the algorithms which are developed in this work biclusters with very high row variance,which is higher than the row variance of any other algorithm using mean squared residue, are identified from both Yeast and Lymphoma data sets.Such biclusters which make significant change in the expression level are highly relevant biologically. |
Description: | Dept.of Computer Science,Cochin University of Science and Technology |
URI: | http://dyuthi.cusat.ac.in/purl/2956 |
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Dyuthi-T0947.pdf | (8.801Mb) |
Abstract: | The assessment of maturity of software is an important area in the general software sector. The field of OSS also applies various models to measure software maturity. However, measuring maturity of OSS being used for several applications in libraries is an area left with no research so far. This study has attempted to fill the research gap. Measuring maturity of software contributes knowledge on its sustainability over the long term. Maturity of software is one of the factors that positively influence adoption. The investigator measured the maturity of DSpace software using Woods and Guliani‟s Open Source Maturity Model-2005. The present study is significant as it addresses the aspects of maturity of OSS for libraries and fills the research gap on the area. In this sense the study opens new avenues to the field of library and information science by providing an additional tool for librarians in the selection and adoption of OSS. Measuring maturity brings in-depth knowledge on an OSS which will contribute towards the perceived usefulness and perceived ease of use as explained in the Technology Acceptance Model theory. |
Description: | Department of Computer Applications |
URI: | http://dyuthi.cusat.ac.in/purl/5012 |
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Dyuthi-T2079.pdf | (3.633Mb) |
URI: | http://dyuthi.cusat.ac.in/purl/1014 |
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RAVEENDRAN NAIR B 1988.pdf | (259.7Kb) |
Abstract: | The incidence of diabetes is rapidly increasing and by 2030 an expected 592 million individuals are projected to be affected (WHO report). Hyperglycaemic condition is recognized as the causal link between diabetes and its complications. The chronic hyperglycemia resulting from diabetes brings about a rise in oxidative stress due to overproduction of reactive oxygen species (ROS) as a result of glucose auto oxidation and protein glycosylation. Generation of ROS leads to oxidative damage of the structural components (such as lipids, DNA and proteins) of cells and potentiate diabetes related complications. Oxidative insult in cells is also created by the impairment in functioning of endogenous antioxidant enzymes because of their non enzymatic glycosylation and oxidation. The prolonged exposure of oxidative stress may cause insulin resistance by triggering an alteration in cellular redox balance. Several lines of evidence suggest that oxidative stress occurs in diabetes and could have a role in the development of insulin resistance. The cause and cellular mechanism responsible for this abnormality is not fully understand despite of intense investigative efforts. However it is unknown whether it is the cause or consequence of diabetes. Despite strong experimental evidence indicating that oxidative stress may determine the onset and progression of late-diabetic complications, controversy exists between the cause and associative relationship between oxidative stress and diabetes mellitus. Disruption of glucose homeostasis is a characteristic feature of Non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) and is associated with some complications including cardiovascular disease and renal failure. Glucose transport, the rate limiting step in glucose metabolism, can be activated in peripheral tissues by two distinct pathways. One stimulated by insulin through IRS-1/PI3K, Preface Page 2 the other by muscle contraction/exercise through the activation of AMPK. Both pathways also increase the phosphorylation and activity of MAPK family components of which p38 MAPK participates in the full activation of GLUT4.Insulin exerts its biological effect upon binding with the insulin receptor (IR) thereby activating the downstream signaling that lead to enhanced glucose uptake. In skeletal muscle, it potentiates glucose transport through PI3K mediated or non-PI3K mediated pathways. Alterations or defects in its signal transduction pathway was found in diabetic patients associated with decreased levels of IRb, IRS-1, and PI3K. In the insulin signaling, PI3K is a key molecule and inhibition of PI3K completely abolish insulin stimulated uptake. Akt or Pkb is an important downstream target of insulin stimulated glucose transport and metabolism.Impairment in fuel metabolism occurs in obesity, and this impairment is a leading pathogenic factor in type 2 diabetes. The insulin resistance associated with type 2 diabetes is most profound at the level of skeletal muscle as this is the primary site of glucose and fatty acid utilization. Therefore, an understanding of how to activate AMPK in skeletal muscle would offer significant pharmacologic benefits in the treatment of type 2 diabetes. Metformin and the thiazolidinedione drugs exert the effects via activation of AMPK. Activation of AMPK occurs in response to exercise, an activity known to have significant benefit for type 2 diabetics. AMPK serves as sensor of energy status whose activity is triggered in response to changes in nutritional status in order to modulate tissue-specific metabolic pathways |
URI: | http://dyuthi.cusat.ac.in/purl/5151 |
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Dyuthi-T2185.pdf | (9.806Mb) |
Abstract: | Median filtering is a simple digital non—linear signal smoothing operation in which median of the samples in a sliding window replaces the sample at the middle of the window. The resulting filtered sequence tends to follow polynomial trends in the original sample sequence. Median filter preserves signal edges while filtering out impulses. Due to this property, median filtering is finding applications in many areas of image and speech processing. Though median filtering is simple to realise digitally, its properties are not easily analysed with standard analysis techniques, |
Description: | Department of Electronics, Cochin University of Science and Technology |
URI: | http://dyuthi.cusat.ac.in/purl/3364 |
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Dyuthi-T1341.pdf | (5.349Mb) |
Description: | Department of Marine Biology, Microbiology and Biochemistry, Cochin University of Science and Technology |
URI: | http://dyuthi.cusat.ac.in/purl/2669 |
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Dyuthi-T0721.pdf | (4.766Mb) |
Description: | Department of Marine Biology, Microbiology and Biotechnology, Cochin University of Science and Technology |
URI: | http://dyuthi.cusat.ac.in/xmlui/purl/2096 |
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Dyuthi-T0429.pdf | (14.88Mb) |
Abstract: | This is a study in criminal law. The problem probed is the relationship between mental abnormality and criminal responsibility. The subject is yet an unsolved area in criminal jurisprudence. It is of great interest to many jurists lawyers philosophers and psychiatrists. The study lays special emphasis on the Indian law .Comparative assessment wherever found necessary,especially of positions in England ,United states and Germany is made. The thesis is in six parts and sixteen chapters. |
Description: | School of Legal Studies,Cochin University of Science And Technology |
URI: | http://dyuthi.cusat.ac.in/purl/3287 |
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Dyuthi-T1262.pdf | (26.28Mb) |
URI: | http://dyuthi.cusat.ac.in/purl/1313 |
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Sadasivan Nair G 1984.PDF | (626.8Kb) |
Abstract: | The Arabian Sea and the Bay of Bengal are both highly dynamic ecosystems, due to the seasonally reversing monsoon winds, but the processes affecting the mesozooplankton community remain poorly understood. These are important basins exhibiting enhanced biological production as a result of upwelling, winter cooling and other episodic events such as eddies and gyres. Zooplankters are primarily the prey for almost all fish larvae. Seasonal changes in the biogeochemical processes can strongly affect zooplankton density and distribution, which in turn, strongly affect the larval growth, and consequently, the pelagic fish recruitment. It is clear that plankton biomass and biogeochemical fluxes are not in steady state. Acoustic data on mesozooplankton abundance suggests that they also exist in the mesopelagic zone. Earlier studies were confined only to the upper 200 m and hence the structure of mesozooplankton community in the deeper layers was not well known. Copepods are the dominant mesoplankton group, and therefore the majority of the studies were focused on them. The planktonic ostracods are the second major crustacean group and at times, their swarms can outnumber all other planktonic groups. The understanding of the community structure of the ostracods is essential to establish their role in the marine food web. Mesozooplankton is responsible for the vertical flux of organic matter produced by phytoplankton and is assumed to be equivalent to new production (Eppley & Peterson, 1979). Since the fate of newly produced organic matter depends upon their consumers, the zooplankton biomass must be estimated in size fractions or taxonomic components to understand the vertical flux of organic carbon. It is thus important to update our knowledge on different groups of zooplankton on the basis of seasonal and temporal distribution. The distribution in space and time is essential for modeling the carbon cycling that structure the marine ecosystems |
Description: | Department Of Marine Sciences,Cochin University of Science and Technology |
URI: | http://dyuthi.cusat.ac.in/purl/3522 |
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Dyuthi-T1495.pdf | (7.437Mb) |
Abstract: | The investigation was aimed at establishing the effect of salinity on the culture performance of Peneus Indicus in pokkali fields and also to find out the growth performance of the shrimp at varying salinities. The experiments were laid out at Rice Research Station, Vyttila of Kerala Agriculture University in three fields of area 1000 m2 each. The results of the experiment clearly establish that shrimps when stocked at higher salinity (20-25 ppt) for 45 days has given higher growth, survival and production than those stocked at lower salinity (10-15 ppt) in all the above parameters even when the culture experiment was maintained for longer periods in lower salinity. In the prolonged culture experiments conducted for 120 days in 10-25 ppt salinity, the results were poorer than the short period culture in higher salinity and the production values similar to lower saline culture. This clearly establishes the importance of salinity as an ecological factor which will have profound influence in shrimp farming operations. |
Description: | Division of Marine Biology, Microbiology and Biochemistry, School of Marine Sciences, Cochin University of Science and Technology |
URI: | http://dyuthi.cusat.ac.in/xmlui/purl/2084 |
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Dyuthi-T0430.pdf | (4.203Mb) |
Abstract: | The present research is aimed at studying the charnockites and associated rocks of the Madurai Granulite Block (MGB), especially in terms of their field settings, texture, mineralogy, and mineral chemistry analyzing their petrogenesis with the help of thermobarometrical studies and geochronological constraints. The mechanism of charnockitization by the influx of CO2 rich fluids and its relation to the graphite mineralization is actually a matter of discussion and study. The objectives of the present study are, to delineate petrological and structural relationship of charnockites and associated gneissic rocks, to study the field and petrogenetic aspects of graphite mineralization in the MGB, to establish and re-evaluate the P-T conditions of formation of the rocks with the aid of thermbarometric computations and to compare with the earlier studies, characterization of graphite with XRD, Raman spectroscopy and isotope studies together with a search in to its genesis and its relation to the high-grade metamorphism of the terrain, to evaluate the role of CO2 bearing fluids in the processes of charnockitization as well as in the genesis of graphite within the high-grade terrain and to delineate the metamorphic geochronology of selected rocks using ‘monazite dating’ technique with EPMA. |
URI: | http://dyuthi.cusat.ac.in/purl/970 |
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Dyuthi-T0195.pdf | (8.095Mb) |
URI: | http://dyuthi.cusat.ac.in/purl/5083 |
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Dyuthi-T 2146.pdf | (10.28Mb) |
Description: | Department of Marine Biology, Microbiology and Biochemistry, Cochin University of Science and Technology |
URI: | http://dyuthi.cusat.ac.in/xmlui/purl/1922 |
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Dyuthi-T0431.pdf | (4.122Mb) |
URI: | http://dyuthi.cusat.ac.in/purl/5122 |
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Dyuthi-T 2187.pdf | (6.440Mb) |
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