40 research outputs found

    Two substitutable perishable product disaster inventory systems

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    A disaster inventory system is considered in which two substitutable items are stored for disaster management. In the event of disaster management, a particular product may become stock-out and the situation warrants that a demand for the particular product during its stock-out period may be substituted with another available similar product in the inventory. From the utility point of view, continuous review inventory models are quite appro-priate in disaster inventory management. In this paper, a continuous review two substitutable perishable product disaster inventory model is proposed and analyzed. Since the inventory is maintained for disaster management, an adjustable joint reordering policy for replenishment is adopted. There is no lead time and the replenishment is instantaneous. For this model, some measures of system performance are obtained. The stationary behavior of the model is also considered. Numerical examples are also provided to illustrate the results obtained.http://link.springer.com/journal/10479hb2016Industrial and Systems Engineerin

    Outbreak of Parasitic Dinoflagellate Piscinoodinium sp. Infection in an Endangered Fish from India: Arulius Barb (Dawkinsia arulius)

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    Freshwater velvet disease is caused by the dinoflagellate parasite, Piscinoodinium sp. This parasite has been reported in tropical and subtropical fishes, and it can cause devastating losses. Moreover, Piscinoodinium sp. is identified as one of the least studied finfish parasites, and the available molecular information about this parasite is meager. Recently, Piscinoodinium sp. was responsible for the 100% cumulative mortality of the captive-bred F1 generation of Arulius barb (Dawkinsia arulius), an endangered freshwater fish native to India. The trophont stages of the parasite were observed in the skin and gills of the affected fish. The total DNA was extracted from the trophonts collected from the affected Arulius barb and the partial nucleotide sequence of the rDNA complex region (2334 bp) was amplified using PCR. The amplified PCR product exhibited a high sequence identity (97.61%) with Piscinoodinium sp. In the phylogenetic analysis of the SSU rDNA, Piscinoodinium sp. emerged as a separate clade from other dinoflagellate species. This is the first report of the infection of Piscinoodinium sp. in Arulius barb and the molecular information generated from this study can serve as a baseline to study the diversity of the parasite in India. Furthermore, the impact of this parasite among wild fish stock is not known, and this parasite needs further research focus to generate more molecular information and to understand the host–pathogen interaction

    The Impact of Brand Quality on Shareholder Wealth

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    This study examines the impact of brand quality on three components of shareholder wealth: stock returns, systematic risk, and idiosyncratic risk. The study finds that brand quality enhances shareholder wealth insofar as unanticipated changes in brand quality are positively associated with stock returns and negatively related to changes in idiosyncratic risk. However, unanticipated changes in brand quality can also erode shareholder wealth because they have a positive association with changes in systematic risk. The study introduces a contingency theory view to the marketing-finance interface by analyzing the moderating role of two factors that are widely followed by investors. The results show an unanticipated increase (decrease) in current-period earnings enhances (depletes) the positive impact of unanticipated changes in brand quality on stock returns and mitigates (enhances) their deleterious effects on changes in systematic risk. Similarly, brand quality is more valuable for firms facing increasing competition (i.e., unanticipated decreases in industry concentration). The results are robust to endogeneity concerns and across alternative models. The authors conclude by discussing the nuanced implications of their findings for shareholder wealth, reporting brand quality to investors, and its use in employee evaluation

    Effect of Filler Content of Chemically Treated Short Bagasse Fiber-Reinforced Cardanol Polymer Composites

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    In this work, the sugarcane bagasse fiber was used as a filler to make a new type of biodegradable composite, using the cardanol resin, as a fully biodegradable thermosetting polymer matrix. Biocomposite performance was improved by chemically modified bagasse fiber using alkaline treatment. Two sets of composites were prepared with a fiber length of 10 and 20 mm with various weight percentages viz., 0, 5, 10, 15, and 20 of cardanol resin using a compression molding machine. The mechanical properties were studied using some tests and the morphological study in flexural fractured specimens was carried out using SEM. The thermal properties of biodegradable polymer composites were evaluated using TGA. The chemical formation of the new biocomposites was also examined by the FT-IR spectroscopy technique. The result proved that the morphology of the composites has improved the bonding between the fiber and resin, thus leading to enhancement of the mechanical properties. The result had shown the tensile and flexural strength with an increase in the range of bagasse fiber up to 15 wt% in both the sets. The TGA results showed that biocomposites of 15 wt% in both sets had the highest thermal stability. This investigation recommended the possibility of introducing bio-fiber obtained from waste agricultural residues in polymer matrix composites

    Transient Analysis of a Non-Preemptive Priority Queueing System

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    A single server queueing system is considered in which two types of customers arrive according to independent Poisson processes. Customers of type 1 are of priority nature and the other customers of type 2 are of non-priority. Type 1 customers have nonpreemptive priority over type 2 customers. Assuming that service times for both types of customers have exponential distribution with mean 1/m, we obtain explicit expressions for the transient solution for the state probability distribution. We deduce the steady-state joint distribution of the number of customers of type 1 and customers of type 2 and also obtain performance measures of the system

    Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology

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    Not AvailableThe accuracy of quantitative real time PCR (RTqPCR) can be attained only when a suitable reference gene is used. The gene expression for a particular gene may vary within different cells at different conditions. Hence, the suitability and stability of various potential reference genes have to be determined for expression studies. In this study, we have examined the potential of four different reference genes including ?-Actin (ACTB), 18S ribosomal RNA (18S), glyceraldehyde-3P-dehydrogenase (GAPDH), and elongation factor 1 alpha (EF1AA) in seven different tissues including gill, liver, kidney, spleen, heart, muscle and intestine of goldfish (Carassius auratus). The housekeeping genes were analyzed from healthy fish and in CyHV-2 challenged fish. Based upon the real time PCR results the gene expression varied among the genes and in tissues. The expression levels of the housekeeping genes were then compared and evaluated with the RefFinder web tool which analyses results using four different algorithms ? BestKeeper, delta Ct, geNorm and NormFinder. EF1AA was ranked to be the best gene in healthy fish by BestKeeper and geNorm analysis. The delta Ct and NormFinder algorithm have found 18S to be a stable gene in healthy fish but 18S was given to be least expressed in challenged fish. ACTB was also given as a stable gene by geNorm analysis in both healthy and challenged fish. Also, in CyHV-2 challenged fish, EF1AA was identified as the best gene by all the three analysis except by BestKeeper analysis, where it has ranked GADPH as the best housekeeping gene. Expression of the four candidate reference genes differed across all tissue types tested, inferring that a thorough study of the reference genes is necessary for cross tissue comparison. These results can be further used in the immune gene response study of goldfish infected with any viral pathogen to develop better health strategies in the disease management of goldfish aquaculture

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    Engaged in all aspects of fish biologyWe describe a new cell line, Clarias dussumieri fin (ClDuF), from the caudal fin of C. dussumieri using the explant technique followed by cryopreservation. The cryopreserved CiDuF cells were validated for quality and other characteristics. They showed typical epithelial morphology in vitro and epithelial cells outgrew their fibroblast cells after the fifth passage. ClDuF cells had a characteristic sigmoid curve with population doubling in 24 h. Immunotyping of the ClDuF cells against cytokeratin suggested the epithelial lineage. Chromosome analysis showed normal diploid (2n = 50) numbers and the cells did not contain any contamination, including Mycoplasma and other microbes. Partial sequencing of fragments of mitochondrial 16s rRNA and COI genes of ClDuF confirmed that the cell line was initiated from C. dussumieri. Cells at the 10th and 25th passages had more than 80% and 70% viability in the culture, respectively, after 6 months of storage at LN2 . These ClDuF cells were morphologically identical to the cells before freezing and the genetic resource of C. dussumieri was preserved. The species-specific cells can serve as a valuable source for virus isolation, conservation and cloning of somatic cells.Director, ICAR-National Bureau of Fish Genetic Resources, Lucknow, India, and also to the Director General, Indian Council of Agricultural Research, New Delhi and Secretary Department of Agriculture, Department of Agriculture Education and Reserach, Government of India, New Delhi, and Deputy Director General (Fy. Sc.), Indian Council of Agricultural Research, New Delhi for funding support, guidance and encouragement
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