852 research outputs found
Participatory Irrigation Management and its Financial Viability: A Case Study
Water is a key input of agriculture. In the past, the area under cultivation was small and there was less stress on farmers to grow more and more of each crop. Water was considered a free good. The situation has changed since. The increase in cropping intensity has led to a rise in the demand for irrigation water. Water is not a free good any more. The provision of irrigation water to the farmer’s fields is going to be costlier. The Government of Pakistan is spending heavily on the operation and maintenance of the irrigation system yet shortage of funds is a major reason for deferred maintenance, which threatens the operational integrity of the irrigation system [World Bank (1988) and Haq (1995)]. The shortfall in O&M funding was estimated to be more than 24 percent in 1993 [World Bank (1994)]. As poor O&M has direct effect on the productivity of agriculture, indirectly it affects the whole economy [Carruthers (1981)]. The allocation of funds for the increasing O&M costs is becoming a problem for the Government of Pakistan with every successive year. One logical answer to this problem is to increase abiana1 fees from the users of irrigation water supplies. The revenue collected through abiana may be used for O&M purposes, but it has been reported that the revenue collection is far less than the expenditures incurred. Resultantly the gap has been increasing every year [Chaudhry (1989)]. This situation demands investigation of abiana recovery and increasing O&M costs to know the real situation which in turn will help in deciding whether it is feasible to divert the financing of O&M activities towards farmer organisations (completely or partially). This paper aims at estimating the present level of operation and maintenance expenditures of the H-4-R Distributary and the present situation of the abiana collection and the extent of its leakage through different means.
Flowfield-dependent variant method for moving-boundary problems
A novel numerical scheme using the combination of flowfield-dependent variation method and arbitrary Lagrangian–Eulerian method is developed. This method is a mixed explicit–implicit numerical scheme, and its implicitness is dependent on the physical properties of the flowfield. The scheme is discretized using the finite-volume method to give flexibility in dealing with complicated geometries. The formulation itself yields a sparse matrix, which can be solved by using any iterative algorithm. Several benchmark problems in two-dimensional inviscid and viscous flow have been selected to validate the method. Good agreement with available experimental and numerical data in the literature has been obtained, thus showing its promising application in complex fluid–structure interaction problems
Functionally guided alignment of protein interaction networks for module detection
Motivation: Functional module detection within protein interaction networks is a challenging problem due to the sparsity of data and presence of errors. Computational techniques for this task range from purely graph theoretical approaches involving single networks to alignment of multiple networks from several species. Current network alignment methods all rely on protein sequence similarity to map proteins across species
An enzymatic method for the detection of human serum albumin
Albumin is the most abundant protein in human serum. A dye-binding method is commonly used in clinical laboratories for its estimation using different types of dyes. However, all these dye methods were interfered by a variety of compounds. Here we present a method for the detection of albumin in human serum and other biological fluids. The principle is based on the fact that lactate dehydrogenase isoenzyme-5 (LDH-5) binds specifically to Dextran-Blue (DB). Albumin inhibits the binding of LDH-5 with DB. Absence of LDH activity in DB fraction after gel filtration indicates the presence of albumin in sample and vice versa
Precise Estimates of the Unrecorded Economy
Informal economy in Pakistan is the backbone of the economy.
However, the problem is that we do not know how big it is due to
non-availability of the precise estimates of unrecorded1 economy.
Precise estimates of the unrecorded economy would help policy-makers to
make better macroeconomic policies. If unrecorded economy becomes part
of the recorded economy government can seek revenues from it and rest of
the sectors may have to take lesser burden of taxes. This would be a
win-win situation for the government and for those sectors that are part
of the documented system. In return, by becoming part of the documented
economic system the undocumented sector can enjoy all those benefits and
incentives that are available to the formal sector
Banti\u27s syndrome: case report and review of literature.
In 1898 Banti described a disorder characterized by splenomegaly and hypersplenism, resulting in portal hypertension and anemia in the absence of hematological disease. 1 Banti\u27s syndrome is also known as non-cirrhotic portal hypertension (NCPH) in India and Idiopathic Portal Hypertension (IPH) in Japan. Hepatoportal sclerosis seems to be its counterpart in the United States. 2,3 Banti\u27s syndrome is a disorder of unknown etiology, clinically characterized by portal hypertension (varices and portosystemic collateral vessels), splenomegaly, and anemia (hypersplenism). 3 It has been reported from Indian subcontinent. 4-6 In a Pakistani case series of portal hypertension, 18 out of 37 patients were found to have IPH as the etiology. 6 We report a case of Banti\u27s syndrome in an 20-year old girl presenting to us with anemia and splenomegaly
Participatory Irrigation Management and its Financial Viability: A Case Study
Water is a key input of agriculture. In the past, the area
under cultivation was small and there was less stress on farmers to grow
more and more of each crop. Water was considered a free good. The
situation has changed since. The increase in cropping intensity has led
to a rise in the demand for irrigation water. Water is not a free good
any more. The provision of irrigation water to the farmer’s fields is
going to be costlier. The Government of Pakistan is spending heavily on
the operation and maintenance of the irrigation system yet shortage of
funds is a major reason for deferred maintenance, which threatens the
operational integrity of the irrigation system [World Bank (1988) and
Haq (1995)]. The shortfall in O&M funding was estimated to be more
than 24 percent in 1993 [World Bank (1994)]. As poor O&M has direct
effect on the productivity of agriculture, indirectly it affects the
whole economy [Carruthers (1981)]. The allocation of funds for the
increasing O&M costs is becoming a problem for the Government of
Pakistan with every successive year. One logical answer to this problem
is to increase abiana1 fees from the users of irrigation water supplies.
The revenue collected through abiana may be used for O&M purposes,
but it has been reported that the revenue collection is far less than
the expenditures incurred. Resultantly the gap has been increasing every
year [Chaudhry (1989)]
Maximally spatial-disjoint lightpaths in optical networks
Lightpaths enable end-to-end all-optical transmission between network nodes. For survivable routing, traffic is often carried on a primary lightpath, and rerouted to another disjointed backup lightpath in case of the failure of the primary lightpath. Though both lightpaths can be physically disjointed, they can still fail simultaneously if a disaster affects them simultaneously on the physical plane. Hence, we propose a routing algorithm for provisioning a pair of link-disjoint lightpaths between two network nodes such that the minimum spatial distance between them (while disregarding safe regions) is maximized. Through means of simulation, we show that our algorithm can provide higher survivability against spatial-based simultaneous link failures (due to the maximized spatial distance)
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