Academic literature on the topic 'Technical Hindi'

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Journal articles on the topic "Technical Hindi"

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Puri, Shalini, and Satya Prakash Singh. "Hindi Text Document Classification System Using SVM and Fuzzy." International Journal of Rough Sets and Data Analysis 5, no. 4 (2018): 1–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/ijrsda.2018100101.

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In recent years, many information retrieval, character recognition, and feature extraction methodologies in Devanagari and especially in Hindi have been proposed for different domain areas. Due to enormous scanned data availability and to provide an advanced improvement of existing Hindi automated systems beyond optical character recognition, a new idea of Hindi printed and handwritten document classification system using support vector machine and fuzzy logic is introduced. This first pre-processes and then classifies textual imaged documents into predefined categories. With this concept, this article depicts a feasibility study of such systems with the relevance of Hindi, a survey report of statistical measurements of Hindi keywords obtained from different sources, and the inherent challenges found in printed and handwritten documents. The technical reviews are provided and graphically represented to compare many parameters and estimate contents, forms and classifiers used in various existing techniques.
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Sharma, Sandeep. "Short Note: Chichewa and Hindi Back Translations of the Bible: A Comparative Check of Translation Techniques." Journal of Translation 14, no. 1 (2018): 42–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.54395/jot-69624.

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The Bible in India has been seen by some as an offshoot of the missionary movement in pre- and post-independence times. Such allegations belie a technical or stylistic reading of the translated scriptures into Hindi, which is the great unread aspect of the Bible. The Bible translated into Hindi is titled Dharmasastra. The present study aims to compare the Hindi version with another translation in a completely different part of the world, the Chichewa Bible. Chichewa is a Bantu language widely spoken in SE Africa. It turns out that the Hindi translation of the Bible is surprisingly close to the Chichewa Buku Loyera translation, a fact which might motivate further comparative research into these two languages and cultural domains.
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Singh, Rajendra, and Balkrishan Kachroo. "Textual Cohesion in Hindi." ITL - International Journal of Applied Linguistics 76 (January 1, 1987): 1–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/itl.76.01sin.

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The purpose of this paper is to summarize some preliminary research on textual cohesion in Hindi. The study of linguistic cohesion attempts to isolate linguistic devices used to ‘link’ sentences in a discourse. The present study was undertaken to find out exactly what cohesion devices are used in Hindi and how the linking texture of Hindi discourses differs from that of English. Although both Hindi and English use some of the same cohesion devices, there are both quantitative and qualitative differences in their textures. This paper focuses on Hindi-particular cohesion devices and on devices differentially exploited to Hindi and English. An example of a Hindi particular cohesion device is ‘Adjective Promotion’. The differential exploitation of the device of co-referential NP provides an example of the second type of difference between the two languages. Hindi uses it far more frequently than English. Our results also provide evidence for the hypothesis that parallel sublanguages of Hindi and English are more alike in their cohesive texture than are different sub-languages of either of these two languages. ‘Stylistic contact’ in the domain of more technical sublanguage may provide an explanation for this. Our study shows not only what some of the Hindi-particular cohesion devies are but also how a large number of shared cohesion devices are differentially exploited by different languages and what sorts of trade-offs are made amongst the major types of cohesion devices (semantic, syntactic, morphological, and lexical).
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Dubey, Rachana, Tejal Kawale, Twisha Choudhary, and Vaibhav Narawade. "Hindi Language Interface to Database." ITM Web of Conferences 32 (2020): 01007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/itmconf/20203201007.

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In our everyday lives we require information to accomplish daily tasks. Database is one of the most important sources of information. Database systems have been widely used in data storage and retrieval. However, to extract information from databases, we need to have some knowledge of database languages like SQL. But SQL has predefined structures and format, so it is hard for the non-expert users to formulate the desired query. To override this complexity, we have turned to natural language to retrieve information from database, which can be an ideal channel between a non-technical user and the application. But the application cannot understand natural language so an interface is required. This interface is capable of converting the user’s natural language query to an equivalent database language query. In this paper, we address the system architecture for translating a Hindi sentence in the form of an audio to an equivalent SQL query. The users don’t need to learn any formal query language; hence it’s easy to use for common people.
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Wig, N. N., D. K. Menon, H. Bedi, et al. "Expressed Emotion and Schizophrenia in North India." British Journal of Psychiatry 151, no. 2 (1987): 156–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjp.151.2.156.

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A bilingual rater was trained in English in a technique of assessing relatives emotional attitudes to patients, and was then required to rate material in Hindi without any further experience. This strategy revealed that the rating of critical comments, hostility and positive remarks could be transferred from English to Hindi without distortion. There were problems with the remaining two scales, over-involvement and warmth, but these were due to technical issues connected with rating and not to cross-cultural distortion.
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Madaan, Vishu, and Prateek Agrawal. "Anuvaad." International Journal of Social Ecology and Sustainable Development 13, no. 1 (2022): 1–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/ijsesd.295088.

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Machine Translation is best alternative to traditional manual translation. The corpus of Sanskrit literature includes a rich tradition of philosophical and religious texts as well as poetry, music, drama, scientific, technical and other texts. Due to the modernization of tradition and languages, Sanskrit is not on everyone's lips. Translation makes it convenient for users to understand the unknown text. This paper presents a language Machine Translation System from Hindi to Sanskrit and Sanskrit to Hindi using a rule-based technique. We developed a machine translation tool 'anuvaad' which translates Sanskrit prose text into Hindi & vice versa. We also developed bi-lingual corpora to deal with Sanskrit and Hindi grammar rules and text applied rule based method to perform the translation. The experimental results on different 110 examples show that the proposed anuvaad tool achieves overall 93% accuracy for both types of translations. The objective of our work is to ensure confidentiality and multilingual support, which can be tedious and time consuming in case of manual translation.
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Kumar, Ravindra. "Hindi mass media: Regarding globalization." International Journal of Research -GRANTHAALAYAH 5, no. 3 (2017): 274–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.29121/granthaalayah.v5.i3.2017.1779.

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Curiosity is an important and important quality of human nature, on the basis of which spiritual and material development of human has been possible, whatever difference or development or change we have been feeling in the journey from the beginning to modernity and perhaps will continue . Curious nature has a special place behind them all. This applies to all regions of the world as well as language. If we look at the attention of Hindi literature, then we see many changes in the history of its nearly 2000 years. Language continued to act as a medium of mass communication and continues to the day. But due to technical education, along with language, many such technical tools have been added, due to which the language seems to be paralyzed today. The change of time between 1980 and 2000 shook the smallest world. The effect of which was also certain on India. This effect has also taken the language in its grip. Today, without these tools and tools, language is inanimate. Its development, its spread seems to be stagnant. Today language technicians are using equipment and equipment is taking help of language. The information from these two mails reaches from one corner of the world to the other in a blink of an eye. The era of globalization has complemented these two.
 जिज्ञासा‘ मानवीय प्रवृति का एक अहम व महत्त्वपूर्ण गुण है, जिसके आधार तहत मानव का आध्यात्मिक व भौतिक विकास संभव हो पाया हैा आदि से आधुनिकता तक के सफर में हम जितना भी फर्क अथवा विकास या बदलाव महसूस करते आ रहे है और कदाचित् करते भी रहेंगे। उन सब के पीछे जिज्ञासु प्रवृति का विशेष स्थान रहा है। यह बात संसार के सभी क्षेत्रों के साथ-साथ भाषा पर भी लागू होती है। हिन्दी साहित्य के ध्यानहित यदि हम इस पर दृष्टिपात करें तो इसके लगभग 2000 वर्षों के इतिहास में हमें अनेक बदलाव नजर आते हैं। जन संचार के रूप में भाषा एक माध्यम का कार्य करती आ रही थी और बदस्तूर आज भी जारी है। किन्तु तकनीकि शिक्षा के कारण भाषा के साथ-साथ अनेक ऐसे तकनीकि उपकरण जुड गये हैं, जिनके अभाव में भाषा आज पंगु नजर आती है। 1980 से 2000 के बीच के समय के बदलाव ने तो स्मस्त संसार को हिला के रख दिया थ। जिसका असर भारत पर भी निश्चित था। इस असर ने भाषा को भी अपनी जकड़ में ले लिया है। आज इन उपकरणों व साधनों बिना भाषा निर्जीव है।उसका विकास, उसका फैलाव कदाचित् रुका हुआ सा लगता है। आज भाषा तकनीकि उपकरर्णों का इस्तेमाल कर रही हैं तथा उपकरण भाषा की मदद ले रहे हैं। इन दोनों के मेल से सूचनाएँ पलक झपकते ही दुनिया के एक कोने से दूसरे कोने मे पहुँच जाती हैं। वैश्वीकरण के दौर ने इन दोनों को पूरक बना दिया है।
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Roy, Somnath. "A Technical Guide to Concatenative Speech Synthesis for Hindi using Festival." International Journal of Computer Applications 86, no. 8 (2014): 30–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.5120/15008-3287.

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Vaish, Amit, Prashant Kumar, and Beena Kumari. "Significance and application of Hindi technical terms in the teaching of Botany." International Journal of Plant Pathology and Microbiology 3, no. 2 (2023): 32–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.22271/27893065.2023.v3.i2a.55.

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Singh, R. K. "Problems of Mining Terminology in India." Meta 31, no. 2 (2002): 173–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/004163ar.

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Abstract In 1961 the Government of India appointed a Standing Commission for Scientific and Technical Terminology to formulate principles for evolution of terminology and preparation of standard textbooks in Hindi and other Indian Languages. The Commission published several glossaries of Engineering terminology, but none of mining engineering. From 1943 to 1954, Professor Raghu Vira, the noted Indian linguist, also published quite a few special dictionaries, and for the first time collected and compiled some mining terms in his Comprehensive English-Hindi Dictionary (1981). Though these indicate a first positive move toward collecting, processing and disseminating specialised vocabularies, their authors' principles and methods of developing terminologies vary. For want of a standard terminology of mining in Hindi and a lack of understanding of terminological concepts and their interrelationships, no textbook of mining could be written in or translated into Indian languages. It is also realised that translation of mining literature should be done by mining engineer translators who understand the systems of concepts, systems of terms and principles of translation. For a wider dissemination of scientific knowledge and technical skills, development of terminologies in Indian languages on internationally accepted sound terminological principles is necessary, even though presently subject specialists communicate in English. With the present government formulating programmes to use on a large scale the new communication technology in our school system, teaching of terminology within the framework of ESP syllabus at undergraduate level is also suggested.
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Books on the topic "Technical Hindi"

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Paṭairiyā, Manoja Kumāra. Hindī vijñāna patrakāritā =: Hindi science journalism. Takshaśilā Prakāśana, 1990.

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Terminology, India Commission for Scientific and Technical. Prasāraṇa takanīkī śabdāvalī: Aṅgrejī-Hindī = Broadcast technical terminology : English-Hindi. Commission for Scientific and Technical Terminology, Ministry of Human Resource Development, Dept. of Higher Education, Govt. of India, 2009.

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Terminology, India Commission for Scientific and Technical. Prasāraṇa takanīkī śabdāvalī: Aṅgrejī-Hindī = Broadcast technical terminology : English-Hindi. Commission for Scientific and Technical Terminology, Ministry of Human Resource Development, Dept. of Higher Education, Govt. of India, 2009.

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Hardev, Bahri, ред. Rājapāla aṅgrezī-Hindī pāribhāshika śabdakośa =: Rajpal English-Hindi dictionary of technical terms. Rajpal & Sons, 1995.

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India. Commission for Scientific and Technical Terminology., ed. Br̥hat pāribhāshika śabda-saṅgraha, vijñāna: Hindī-Aṅgrejī = Comprehensive glossary of technical terms, science : Hindi-English. 2nd ed. Vaijñānika tathā Takanīkī Śabdāvalī Āyoga, Mānava Saṃsādhana Vikāsa Mantrālaya, Śikshā Vibhāga, Bhārata Sarakāra, 1997.

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Sāgara, Rāmacandra Siṃha. Vr̥hata praśāsanika-pāribhāshika śabdakośa: Aṅgrejī-Hindī-Aṅgrejī = Comprehensive administrative-technical terminology : English-Hindi-English dictionary. Śrī Almoṛā Buka Ḍipo, 1996.

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1937-, Giri Raj Kishore, and Indian Institute of Technology (Kānpur, India). Racanātmaka Lekhana evaṃ Prakāśana Kendra., eds. Bhāshā aura praudyogikī. Racanātmaka Lekhana evaṃ Prakāśana Kendra, Āī. Āī. Ṭī. Kānapura, 1988.

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India. Department of Publication, ред. Comprehensive glossary of technical terms: Medical sciences : English-Hindi = Br̥hat pāribhāshika śabda-saṅgraha : āyuvijñāna : Aṅgrejī-Hindī. Commission for Scientific & Technical Terminology, Ministry of Human Resource Development, Department of Higher Education, Government of India, 2014.

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Nathamal. Jaina pāribhāshika śabdakośa =: Dictionary of technical terms of Jainism. Jaina Viśva Bhāratī evaṃ Jaina Viśvabhāratī Viśvavidyālaya, 2009.

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Nathamal. Jaina pāribhāshika śabdakośa =: Dictionary of technical terms of Jainism. Jaina Viśva Bhāratī evaṃ Jaina Viśvabhāratī Viśvavidyālaya, 2009.

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Book chapters on the topic "Technical Hindi"

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Juvvigunta, Janardhan, Gondi Surender Dhanunjay, Adesh Kumar, Manoj Kumar Padhy, Abhishek Kumar, and Pranjal Singh. "Role of Digital Marketing Data Analytics in Film Industry: Telugu Cinema into Pan India Magnum Opus." In Advances in Parallel Computing. IOS Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/apc210107.

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The Indian film industry is at average growth rate of 11.5% year-on-year basis. After the Hindi film industry, regional cinema like the Telugu industry (popularly known as Tollywood) is the next big industry in the country in terms of both quantitative and qualitative values (Neway, 2020). Despite having limitations of language, nativity audience, market size, the Telugu film industry has emerged as synonyms for magnum opus with the help of digital marketing approaches in the 21st Century. S.S. Rajamouli’s visually spectacular, Baahubali franchise garner incredible national appeal and emerged as the biggest box-office opener in the country. With INR 600 crore gross worldwide, Bahubali: The Beginning not only became a benchmark for technical and aesthetic values but also became a well-studied case for its marketing approaches which changed the entire style of film promotions in the digital era. Similar kind of strategy has been followed by Syraa and Saaho in the Telugu film industry. At this juncture, the researcher aims to study the film audience pulling marketing strategies that applied particularly in all three stages (pre, post & production stages) of film production in Telugu Cinema. Purposively the researcher selected Syraa and Saaho as samples to study the objectives of this research work and adopted the content analysis to interpret the secondary data to present the research findings.
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Penumala, Pratap Kumar. "Hindu Diaspora and Hinduisms in Africa, with Special Focus on South Africa." In Hindu Diasporas. Oxford University PressOxford, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198867692.003.0007.

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Abstract The chapter deals with the range of Hindu practices and traditions and histories found in Africa, with emphasis on South Africa. Although, technically, Mauritius and La Réunion come under East Africa, they are treated separately at the beginning of the chapter, and South Africa, East Africa, and West Africa are dealt with in that order because Mauritius, La Réunion, and South Africa share a common indenture history. While Hinduism in Mauritius is underpinned by its creole culture, La Réunion Hinduism is closely tied with Roman Catholicism. A marked tension between non-Brahmanical Hinduism and the various neo-Hindu organizations is found in South Africa. It is safe to say that the East African Hinduism is primarily situated within the Gujarati community’s migration to that region; other contemporary movements and traditions gradually made their presence felt. Quite uniquely, however, Ghananian Hinduism begins with indigenous efforts, although later on those efforts were joined by other organizations. As such, Hinduism in Africa shares a variety of histories, migrations patterns, and socio-economic conditions as well as political struggles. Hinduism shows resilience by its ability to adapt to these varied conditions.
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Saxena, Akshya. "Law." In Vernacular English. Princeton University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691219981.003.0002.

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This chapter examines the English language in India as an object of democratic promise shaped by the bilingual English—Hindi Indian Constitution and as part of the bureaucratic scriptural economy. With its opening proclamation of “We, the people of India,” the Constitution offers an exemplary case of a people speaking English. Of all the ironies that characterize postcolonial India, perhaps the biggest irony is that the language of the erstwhile colonizer came to be indispensably tied to postcolonial assertion. The Constitution carries a voice that belongs both to the sovereign people and the colonial and postcolonial state. The relation of English with Hindi and other Indian languages is a key way in which these competing voices are maintained. The chapter examines the life of English as just such a democratic object through India Demands English Language (1960), a little-known collection of pro-English essays by influential Indian political leaders, and contrasts the statist vision of English found there with the bureaucratic technics on the ground in Srilal Sukla's satirical Hindi novel Raag Darbari (1968) and Upamanyu Chatterjee's English novels, English, August (1988) and Mammaries of the Welfare State (2004).
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Williams, Richard David. "Sounding Out the Divine." In The Oxford History of Hinduism. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198733508.003.0013.

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From Vedic sacrifices to kīrtan podcasts, sound art and music shape how Hindu religions are experienced. Nonetheless, the social and discursive value of music is easily underemphasized in accounts of religious practice and thought: frequently, music is either viewed as a technical field—best left alone by non-specialists—or taken for granted and dismissed as part of the ‘background’ in rituals and texts. However, the auditory dimensions of religion have very real consequences: historically, musical transmission has been crucial in the dissemination of ideas and texts, while soundscapes and performance genres continue to cultivate identities and moral positions. There is more to music than decoration or mediation: in some contexts, it is possible to consider music and sonic practices as the substance of a theological system, the centre of gravity for doctrine, behaviour, and soteriology.
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Patton, Laurie L. "Women and language in the early Indian tradition." In Women in the History of Linguistics. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198754954.003.0018.

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While Indian history contains few records of women ‘linguists’ per se, there are traditions of women’s relationship to language. In the Vedic period, there is evidence of women’s use of ritual mantras. Vedic texts understand language (Vāc) as an all-encompassing goddess. The philosophical Upaniṣads also mention brahmavādiṇis, women speakers about brahman, the monistic force animating the universe. In their early technical discourse about language, the pre-Pāṇinean grammarians as well as Pāṇini and his commentators discuss women in some of their examples and explain gender as a concept. In the medieval period, Hindu tantric practices and philosophies emphasize the coincidence of opposites. Female energy (śakti) features prominently, and is identified with language itself. In the second millennium Sanskrit traditions, women provided poetic and linguistic commentaries, but many are not translated, and some are no longer extant. These traditions may have provided a basis for women linguists to flourish in contemporary India.
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Graulau, Jeannette. "A ‘Lengthy Digression’: Why Mining Lagged Elsewhere." In The Underground Wealth of Nations. Yale University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300218220.003.0005.

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This chapter provides the mining history of the mountains of the rest of the world. It begins with England in which major silver discoveries took place in Bere Ferrers or Bere Ferris, a valley of the Tamar River in North Devon, southwest of Dartmoor, and at Combe Martin in the north after the mid-thirteenth century. However, English mines were challenging as they were physically distant from the central arteries of international trade of continental Europe and the commercial cities with continental catchment areas. This chapter also talks about silver mining that flourished in the Persian Province of Khorasan, the Samanid region of Transoxiana, and the Hindu Kush. These are the lands of the most spectacular mountain heights, where mountains piled up one behind another and mountain development assumes its grandest forms. It ends with mining history in India in which its mining exploits did not compete with the achievements of European mining regions. Mining in Zawar endured technical difficulties. Geologist Bagghi states that miners worked on hard siliceous quarzitic ore bodies, where drilling today calls for the use of tungsten carbide bits.
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Conference papers on the topic "Technical Hindi"

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Goswami, Pankaj K. "Multi-Engine Machine Translation of Technical E-Contents from English to Hindi." In WCCCE '16: Western Canadian Conference on Computing Education. ACM, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2910925.2910946.

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Blackwell, Michael L. "A case history: Newman Field, Hinds County, Mississippi." In 1985 SEG Technical Program Expanded Abstracts. SEG, 1985. http://dx.doi.org/10.1190/1.1892625.

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Shourijeh, Mohammad Sharif, and John McPhee. "Efficient Hyper-Volumetric Contact Dynamic Modelling of the Foot Within Human Gait Simulations." In ASME 2013 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/detc2013-13446.

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This study describes the development of a multi-body foot contact model consisting of spherical volumetric models for the surfaces of the foot. The developed model is two-dimensional, and consists of two segments, the hind-foot, mid-foot, and forefoot as one rigid body and the phalanges collectively as the second rigid body. The model has four degrees of freedom: ankle x, y, hind-foot orientation, and metatarsal joint angle. Both ankle and metatarsal joints are assumed to be revolute joints. Three different types of contact elements are targeted: Kelvin-Voigt, linear volumetric, and nonlinear volumetric. The models are kinematically driven at the ankle and the metatarsal joints, and simulated horizontal and vertical ground reaction forces as well as center of pressure location are compared against the measured quantities within a complete human gait cycle. The hyper-volumetric foot contact model was found to be a suitable choice for foot/ground interaction modelling within human gait simulations.
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Foo, C. K., E. F. Fichter, and B. L. Fichter. "Workspace of Beetle Body As a Function of Foot Position." In ASME 1992 Design Technical Conferences. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/detc1992-0260.

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Abstract Body workspace with foot positions fixed was examined for 16 sets of foot positions at 3 body heights using a simulation model of a darkling beetle. Body orientation was held constant and all foot positions were symmetrical about the bilateral symmetry plane. Horizontal plane sections of body workspace were plotted. Maximum body workspace areas were nearly always at the observed normal resting height of the beetle. Maximum body workspace areas occurred with feet in the relative positions they have when near the centers of their respective workspaces. Changing positions of front and hind feet had much more influence on shape and area of body workspace than changing positions of middle feet. Conclusions from this study raise important considerations for the design of walking machines.
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Marghitu, Dan B., Steven F. Swaim, Paul F. Rumph, Dorian Cojocaru, Robert L. Gillette, and M. Stacie Scardino. "Contact Pressure of Quadrupedal Animals." In ASME 2003 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference. ASMEDC, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/detc2003/vib-48427.

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In this study we determine the pressure on the central area of each of the weight bearing pads of the paws of dogs at the walk. Pressure signal data from stance phase during walking were analyzed. Within paws, there were significant pressure differences among pads on both fore and hind limbs. The coefficient of restitution, the embedding dimension, and the Lyapunov exponents were calculated. The ability to measure and analyze pressure on individual paw pads provides insight into soft tissue stresses on the palmar/plantar surface of the paw. Pressure at a wound site on the pads has a detrimental effect on wound healing and a better understanding these stresses will be of benefit when suturing and bandaging pad wounds. Such information is especially important in athletic and working dogs, e.g. search and rescue dogs.
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Wilson, Emma, Emiliano Rustighi, Philip L. Newland, and Brian R. Mace. "A Model of Force Generation by Locust Skeletal Muscle in Response to Individual Stimuli." In ASME 2009 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference. ASMEDC, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/detc2009-86620.

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A mathematical model of the locust hind leg extensor muscle is presented. The model accounts for the force response of the muscle due to individual stimuli under isometric conditions. Experimental data was collected by stimulating the muscle directly and force measured at the tibia. Joint dimensions were calculated, enabling tibial force to be converted into muscle force. In developing a model it was assumed that the response to a single isolated stimulus was linear, but no assumptions were made about the model order. Models of various order were fitted using time and frequency domain methods to data obtained from well-separated input pulses. The response could be approximated as an impulse response, with the response to each stimulus best described by a linear third-order system. Responses where input pulses were not well-separated, so that summation of subsequent pulses occurred, were also investigated. As has been observed in mammalian muscle, both facilitation and force depression were evident in locust muscle. The linear third-order model was found to provide an adequate fit to data in which depression and facilitation were evident if the parameters describing the system were allowed to vary between each response.
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Flamen, S., M. Taha, and A. M. Barr. "Use and Conversion of an Existing Marine Drilling Riser for a System Integration Test for the Collection of Seafloor Polymetallic Nodules." In Offshore Technology Conference. OTC, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4043/35309-ms.

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Abstract The world's demand for metal is rising and new solutions must be explored to meet the needs associated with population growth, urbanization, decarbonized energy systems and circular economy goals. There is increasing recognition that seafloor minerals could help diversify the world's supply of responsibly sourced minerals and metals. As an example, polymetallic nodules found on the seafloor of the Clarion Clipperton Zone (CCZ) in the Pacific Ocean contain substantial quantities of nickel, cobalt, manganese and copper – all are minerals that have been highlighted as being important for the energy transition. A number of entities are undertaking mineral exploration in the CCZ, and some are developing technology for the collection of nodules on a commercial scale. One of the key components is a lift system to bring the nodules from the seafloor to a surface support vessel/platform. This study examines the feasibility of using a modified marine drilling riser for a Vertical Transport System (VTS) for deep-sea mining operations. In particular, it examines whether it would be feasible to use such a configuration during a System Integration Test (SIT), a full-scale mining trial which could be executed ahead of commercial mining operations. This paper examines several topics including: Rated capacity of existing marine drilling riser joints and handling equipment.Drill ship and drilling riser joint modifications.The arrangement of riser joints and pump modules, including the influence on riser dynamics.Effects of internal fluids on riser dynamics.Operability of the riser within the CCZ metocean environmentModified riser fatigue analysis. Initially a sensitivity analysis was performed to determine which parameters have the most effect on the dynamic behavior of the riser. Afterwards, many iterations were simulated with different variables tested such as pump locations, riser joint types, buoyancy distributions, etc., in order to optimize the design of the riser. After validation of the in-house simulations, the second phase of the study analyzed the riser dynamics including the effects of internal fluids while the riser is pumping slurry. The operability and fatigue analysis were conducted using a 35-year hind-cast metocean data set, based on wave buoys, satellites and models. The study resulted in a riser configuration that provided high operability (~99.9%) and sufficient fatigue life to conduct a test mining campaign in the Clarion Clipperton Zone. The proposed mining riser consists of existing riser joints and new-build joints hung-off on the spider-gimbal of the drill ship during operations (Hard hang-off). The existing riser joints need to undergo minor modifications to be able to reuse them for the mining riser. The riser modifications work with the vessel's existing handling equipment to deploy and retrieve the mining riser with minor changes. The study concludes that a modified marine drilling riser offers an economical, technically and environmentally suitable solution for a deep-sea mining vertical transport system used during the SIT.
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Reports on the topic "Technical Hindi"

1

Richard, C., and K. Hoffmann. Strategic Innovations for Improving Pastoral Livelihoods in the Hindu Kush-Himalayan Highlands; Volume II: Technical Papers. International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD), 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.53055/icimod.423.

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Richard, C., and K. Hoffmann. Strategic Innovations for Improving Pastoral Livelihoods in the Hindu Kush-Himalayan Highlands; Volume II: Technical Papers. International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD), 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.53055/icimod.423.

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3

Shrestha, M. Regional Cooperation for Flood Disaster Mitigation in the Hindu Kush-Himalayan Region: Report of the 2nd High Level Consultative Meeting on Establishment of a Regional Flood Information System (Technical Papers). International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD), 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.53055/icimod.409.

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Summary report of the consultative technical workshop on High Altitude Wetlands in the Hindu Kush-Himalayas. International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD), 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.53055/icimod.515.

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Summary report of the consultative technical workshop on High Altitude Wetlands in the Hindu Kush-Himalayas. International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD), 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.53055/icimod.515.

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