Manuscripts

Recent Papers

Analysis of Genetic Diversity and Relationships of Silkworm Varieties Using Molecular Marker

The genomic DNA of seventeen silkworms were amplified with OPA-02 primer revealed 45 RAPD bands out of which 90% is polymorphism and 10% is monomorphic silkworm is polygenic. Silkworm variety 9 was not shown any amplification of bands however the varieties 1 and 2 showed one band each Some of the DNA fragments were strain specific and some could differentiate the multivoltine from the bivoltine strains or vice versa.Silkworm genetic resources that are being maintained in Hosur, Tamil Nadu, India, are yet to be adequately tapped to develop elite varieties that are subjected to a different agro-eco-climatic condition of the country like India. Molecular markers are known to provide an unambiguous estimate of the genetic variability of silkworm populations. Since they are independent confounding effects of environment, the genetic similarity among the seventeen silkworm varieties/strains and their genetic diversity and relationships were discussed. The amplification bands were very poor.

Published by: C. N. Venkatesh, B. K. Chikkaswamy

Author: C. N. Venkatesh

Paper ID: V3I1-1300

Paper Status: published

Published: January 31, 2017

Full Details

Effect of Stripping Of the Umbilical Cord Blood Towards The Baby At Birth On Haematological And Developmental Outcome In Infants

Abstract: Background- The base for the common practice of cutting the umbilical cord after birth is in view of either that it is very little or no benefit by additional placental transfusion to the newborn. Active milking of the umbilical cord towards the baby prior to clamping (rather than passive) should take less than 10 seconds to perform and should resuscitation. Objectives. Assess the selected neonatal and infant and developmental outcomes of the newborn after stripping of the umbilical cord blood at birth in interventional group.2. Assess the selected neonatal and infant and developmental outcomes of the newborn in control group3.To compare the effectiveness of selected neonatal and infant and developmental outcomes in interventional group and control group. Method- the sampling technique used was randomization. Results: Majority (56%) of the newborns were male and (44%) female in the experimental group and 60% male and 40% female in the control group. The post-test Mean PCV at 6months, 9months and 12months study group was 36.84, 35.56, 35.88 and control group was 32.22, 28.90, and 26.80. - DDST-II the revised Denver developmental screening tool as per the percentile presentation ages of p25, p50, p75 and p90 reading of infants from study group for gross motor milestones showed that there are lift head up 45 degrees at 2months milestones, sit head steady at 4months, chest up arm supported at 5months, roll-over 5 months, pull to sit no head lag 6months, is in advanced stage when compared to that of control group milestones. language milestones showed that Vocalizes, jabbers at and make sound OOO/AAH at one month at p50, p75 and p90 and laughs, Dada/mama specific by one year at p75 and p90 is in advanced stage Squeals at 4months, Dada/mama Non-specific at 7months is delayed at of p25, p50, p75 and p90 readings, Imitate speech sounds is delayed at p50. Conclusion- Stripping of the umbilical cord towards the baby at birth is a safe, simple and low-cost delivery procedure. Early screening using DDST-II is a valuable test for immediate and late infant developmental outcome to detect early developmental delays.

Published by: Mrs. Manisha N. Pawar, Dr. Nimain Mohanty, Dr. Mary Mathews

Author: Mrs. Manisha N. Pawar

Paper ID: V3I1-1299

Paper Status: published

Published: January 31, 2017

Full Details

Secure Convergent Key and Deduplication using Distributed Convergent Key Management

Data deduplication is a specific form of compression where redundant data is eliminated and has been used in cloud computing to improve storage utilization. In the deduplication process, duplicate data is deleted, leaving only one copy of the data to be stored. In the traditional encryption, different users required to encrypt their data with own keys. So different ciphertexts are produced, it makes difficult to deduplication. The new scheme has been proposed, convergent encryption, to protect the confidentiality of sensitive data while making deduplication is possible. In this paper, this convergent key managers efficiently and reliability. Firstly in this paper baseline approach is used in which a master key means the encrypted convergent key is kept individually and outsourcing them to cloud. Each user has a master key, increase the enormous number of keys. And users also want to protect the master key. A new approach is proposed in which Dickey is used in which user share key on multiple servers, he do not require manage the key. Ramp Secret Sharing scheme is used to implement Dickey in which each key distributed on multiple servers.

Published by: Nilam Vijaykumar Patil, Dr. B. K Sarkar

Author: Nilam Vijaykumar Patil

Paper ID: V3I1-1298

Paper Status: published

Published: January 31, 2017

Full Details

Sybil Attack in Wireless Sensor Networks: A Survey

The wireless sensor networks are prone to various attacks; this is primarily due to the fact that these networks once deployed are left unattended. So any attacker with the intention of stealing the information from the network can compromise any node and gain access to the data being propagated in the network. Various attacks possible are black hole attack, wormhole attack, Sybil attack, clone attack etc. This paper represents the various techniques that have been presented in the past for the detection and prevention of the Sybil attack.

Published by: Mandeep Kaur, Mr. Avinash Jethi

Author: Mandeep Kaur

Paper ID: V3I1-1297

Paper Status: published

Published: January 30, 2017

Full Details

Study of Dry Eyes in Post Menopausal Women-A Rural Hospital Based Study

Purpose: To establish the occurrence and prevalence of dry eye in postmenopausal women in a rural hospital and also to establish the effect of age on dry eye. Material and methods: Female patients of postmenopausal age groups, i.e. 45 years and above age group, attending Ophthalmology Out Patient Department at Acharya Vinoba Bhave Rural Hospital, Sawangi, Wardha underwent complete eye check-up. Patients suffering from Lid disorders, trauma, diabetes, contact lens wearers, on medications which can cause dry eye and those not giving consent were excluded from the study. Their detailed ophthalmological examination was carried out and also their evaluation by the physician was done. Schirmer's test 1 was done for diagnosis of dry eye. Discussion: In this study, total 500 female patients were examined, out of which 185 fit the criteria for our study, i.e., they presented with dry eye. So the prevalence came out to be 37%.The 185 female patients included were between the age group of 45 and above years of age.So they were divided into five age groups. First 45 to 49 years of age which included 20 females, second was 50 to 54 years of age which included 31 females, third was 55 to 59 years of age which included 52 females, fourth was 60 to 64 years of age which included 60 females and fifth was above 64 years of age which included 22 females. According to our study, as age progressed, the percentage of patients with dry eye increased with the Pearson's Correlation Factor (r=0.9714).The minimum percentage of dry eye was in patients within the age group of 45-49 years i.e. 30% while a maximum number of patients with the dry eye was in patients > 64 years of age i.e. 44%.This proves that dry eye incidence increases in post-menopausal women, as age progresses. Conclusion: The prevalence of dry eye occurring in Central India among postmenopausal women came out to be 37% in our study. Also, it was established that as age progresses in postmenopausal women, the prevalence of dry eye increases.

Published by: Dr. Aditi Gadegone, Surabhi Sharma

Author: Dr. Aditi Gadegone

Paper ID: V3I1-1294

Paper Status: published

Published: January 30, 2017

Full Details

A Survey on Clustering Algorithms used to Perform Image Segmentation

: The goal of this survey is to use different Clustering techniques to perform image segmentation. Clustering means a grouping of images which share some common attributes. The purpose of clustering is to get a meaningful result, effective storage, and fast retrieval in various areas. The clustering methods are mainly divided into hierarchical, partitioning, density-based, model-based, grid-based, and soft-computing methods. The goal of this survey is to provide a comprehensive review of different clustering techniques. There are a number of clustering algorithms proposed to perform image segmentation. One needs to choose the best algorithm among them by analyzing the nature of the input image in order to get optimal results.

Published by: Sandhya Prabhakar H, Mr. Sandeep Kumar

Author: Sandhya Prabhakar H

Paper ID: V3I1-1293

Paper Status: published

Published: January 30, 2017

Full Details
Request a Call
If someone in your research area is available then we will connect you both or our counsellor will get in touch with you.

    [honeypot honeypot-378]

    X
    Journal's Support Form
    For any query, please fill up the short form below. Try to explain your query in detail so that our counsellor can guide you. All fields are mandatory.

      X
       Enquiry Form
      Contact Board Member

        Member Name

        [honeypot honeypot-527]

        X
        Contact Editorial Board

          X

            [honeypot honeypot-310]

            X