1 - 6
- Saleem, Muhammad, author.
- Amsterdam, Netherlands : IOS Press, 2018.
- Description
- Book — 1 online resource
- Summary
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- Intro; Title Page; Acknowledgments; Contents; Abstract; Introduction; Federated SPARQL Query Processing; The Need for Efficient Source Selection; The Need for More Comprehensive SPARQL Benchmarks; Contributions; Chapter Overview; Basic Concepts and Notation; Semantic Web; URIs, RDF; SPARQL Query Language; Triplestore; SPARQL Syntax, Semantic and Notation; State of the Art; Federation systems evaluations; Benchmarks; Federated engines public survey; Survey Design; Discussion of the survey results; Details of selected systems; Overview of the selected approaches; Performance Variables.
- EvaluationExperimental setup; Evaluation criteria; Experimental results; Discussion; Effect of the source selection time; Effect of the data partitioning; Hypergraph-Based Source Selection; Problem Statement; HiBISCuS; Queries as Directed Labelled Hypergraphs; Data Summaries; Source Selection Algorithm; Pruning approach; Evaluation; Experimental Setup; Experimental Results; Trie-based Source Selection; TBSS; TBSS Data Summaries; TBSS Source Selection Algorithm; TBSS Pruning approach; QUETSAL; Quetsal's Architecture; Quetsal's SPARQL 1.1 Query Re-writing; Evaluation; Experimental Setup.
- Experimental ResultsDuplicate-Aware Source Selection; DAW; Min-Wise Independent Permutations (MIPs); DAW Index; DAW Federated Query Processing; Experimental Evaluation; Experimental Setup; Experimental Results; Policy-Aware Source Selection; Motivating Scenario; Methodology and Architecture; Evaluation; Experimental Setup; Experimental Results; Data Distribution-Based Source Selection; Motivation; Biological query example; Methods; Transforming TCGA data to RDF; Linking TCGA to the LOD cloud; TCGA data workflow and schema; Data distribution and load balancing.
- TopFed federated query processing approachSource selection; Results and discussion; Evaluation; Availability of supporting data; LargeRDFBench: SPARQL Federation Benchmark; Background; The Need of More Comprehensive SPARQL Federation Benchmark; Benchmark Description; Benchmark Datasets; Benchmark Queries; Performance Metrics; Evaluation; Experimental Setup; SPARQL 1.0 Experimental Results; SPARQL 1.1 Experimental Results; FEASIBLE: SPARQL Benchmarks Generation Framework; Key SPARQL Features; A Comparison of Existing Triple Stores Benchmarks and Query Logs; FEASIBLE Benchmark Generation.
- Data Set CleaningNormalization of Features Vectors; Query Selection; Complexity Analysis; Evaluation and Results; Composite Error Estimation; Experimental Setup; Experimental Results; Conclusion; HiBISCuS; TBSS/Quetsal; DAW; SAFE; TopFed; LargeRDFBench; FEASIBLE; Bibliography.
- Saleem, Muhammad, author.
- Cham : Springer, 2015.
- Description
- Book — 1 online resource (viii, 152 pages) : illustrations (some color) Digital: text file; PDF.
- Summary
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- Chapter 1. Microbiome ecosystem ecology: unseen majority in an anthropogenic ecosystem Authors: M. Saleem Abstract 1. Microbiome ecosystem ecology References Chapter 2. Theories, mechanisms and patterns of microbiome species coexistence in an era of climate change Authors: M. Saleem, ZH Pervaiz, MB Traw Abstract 2.1. Niche theory and microbial diversity 2.1.1. Temperature-metabolic theory of ecology (i). Thermal niche specialization (ii). Temperature as a driver of ecological divergence, evolution, speciation and thermal niche evolution trade-offs 2.1.2. Implication of habitat heterogeneity in determining ecological niche (i). Resource heterogeneity Factors determining resource heterogeneity Optimal foraging theory of ecology r/K selection theory of ecology (ii). Role of habitat physical structure and variations in determining ecological niche (iii). Role of habitat pH in determining ecological niche (iv). Role of biotic factors in determining ecological niche 2.2. Island biogeography theory and microbial diversity 2.2.1. Ecology theory of species area relationship 2.2.2 Ecological theory of distance decay relationships (DDR) (i). Elevational patterns of microbial diversity (ii). Latitudinal pattern of microbial diversity 2.3. Species-time relationships (STRs) 2.4. Neutral theory and microbial diversity References
- Chapter 3. Eco-evolutionary processes regulating microbiome community assembly in a changing global ecosystem Authors: M. Saleem Abstract 3. Processes underlying microbiome community assembly 3.1. Selection 3.1.1. Constant selection pressure 3.1.2. Frequency- or density-dependent selection (i). Negative frequency- or density-dependent selection (ii). Positive frequency- or density-dependent selection (iii). Spatially- or temporally-variable selection 3.2. Drift 3.2.1. Ecological drift 3.2.2. Evolutionary or genetic drift 3.2.3. Neutral drift 3.3. Dispersal 3.3.1. Environmental factors determining dispersal (i). Dispersal in air/atmospheric ecosystem and air mediated microbial dispersal (ii). Water currents and movement (iii). Nutrients-mediated microbial dispersal (iv). Miscellaneous factors determining microbial dispersal 3.3.2. Factors liming the dispersal of microbes 3.4. Diversification, speciation and mutation 5. Dormancy References Chapter 4. Loss of microbiome ecological niches and diversity by global change and trophic downgrading
- Authors: M. Saleem Abstract 4. Habitat alteration, trophic downgrading and microbiome biodiversity loss 4.1. Atmosphere ecosystem 4.2. Phyllosphere ecosystem 4.3 Rhizosphere ecosystem 4.4. Human and animal ecosystem 4.5 Aquatic ecosystems 4.6 Extreme ecosystems 4.6. Miscellaneous References Chapter 5. Microbiome mediated multitrophic interactions in an age of microbial extinction Authors: M. Saleem Abstract 5.1. Trophic interactions 5.1.1 Trophic interactions with protists predators 5.1.2. Trophic interactions with predatory bacteria 5.1.3. Trophic interactions with viruses 5.1.4. Multi-trophic interactions 5.2 Non-trophic interactions References
- Chapter 6. Global microbiome for agroecology, industry and human well-being: opportunities and challenges in climate change Authors: M. Saleem Abstract 6. Microbiome diversity-functioning research in the context of biodiversity and ecosystem functioning research 6.1 Major applications of microbiome diversity-functioning research 6.1.1. Nutrient management 6.1.2. Plant growth promotion (i) Phyllosphere associated microbiome and plant fitness (ii) Rhizosphere associated microbiome and plant fitness 6.1.3 Bioremediation and phytoremediation 6.1.4 Human and animal host fitness 6.1.5 Eco-biotechnology/microbiome industrial processes 6.2 Emerging issues in microbiome diversity-functioning research 6.2.1 Mechanisms of microbiome species coexistence 6.2.2 Linking microbiome diversity to multi-trophic interactions 6.2.3 Habitat alterations, greenhouse gas emissions and microbiome diversity loss 6.2.4 Methodological, experimental and theoretical limitations References.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
3. GATT and the impact on the GCC countries [1997]
- Saleem, Muhammad
- Abu Dhabi, U.A.E. : The Emirates Center for Strategic Studies and Research, 1997-
- Description
- Book — 37 p. ; 21 cm.
- Online
SAL1&2 (on-campus storage)
SAL1&2 (on-campus storage) | Status |
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Stacks | Request (opens in new tab) |
DS41 .E65 V.2 | Available |
Online 4. Oral history with Muhammad Saleem, 2016 December 9 [2016]
- Saleem, Muhammad (Interviewee)
- Lahore (Pakistan), December 9, 2016
- Description
- Video — 2 video files
- Summary
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Muhammad Saleem was born in Gurdaspur. His father, Sufi Abdul Aziz had a business of construction materials in the city but they lived in a village of Gurdaspur. They were well off in India. His mother’s name was Rehmat Bibi. Mr. Saleem believes that he was 8 to 9 years old when Jallianwala Bagh massacre took place and he was a witness to it. He was in Jallianwala Bagh with his father when the shooting started. Mr. Saleem and his father hid inside stairs near which they were sitting. They stayed there all night. Next day, his elder brother who was in army came to get them.In Gurdaspur, Muslims, Hindus and Sikhs lived together but there used to be a lot of conflicts on festivals like Holi. Mr. Saleem also discussed different Hindu festivals and killings of people. His area was called Abdullah Pur as it was a Muslim majority area. Now the name has been changed and Sikhs live in that area as he discovered on his tour to India after Partition. He visited India twice and stayed with the Sikh family in Koocha Pundit, Delhi which had saved their lives during Partition. This Sikh family was a friend of his grandfather and so they helped them reach River Beas safely. They called the father of that family Bapu which was used for all the elders in India.On his way to Pakistan, Mr. Saleem has seen a lot of bloodshed and looting which is a painful memory. He is still homeless in Pakistan and adores the freedom that Pakistan has for Muslims.
- Washington, D.C. : United States. Dept. of Energy. ; Oak Ridge, Tenn. : distributed by the Office of Scientific and Technical Information, U.S. Dept. of Energy, 2004
- Description
- Book — 1 online resource (vp.) : digital, PDF file.
- Summary
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The authors have measured the branching fractions of the Cabibbo-suppressed decays Λ{sub c}⁺ --> Λ°K⁺ and Λ{sub c}⁺ --> Σ°K⁺ relative to the Cabibbo-allowed decay modes Λ{sub c}⁺ --> Λ°π⁺ and Λ{sub c}⁺ --> Σ°π⁺ to be 0.044 ± 0.004 (stat.) ± 0.002 (syst.) and 0.040 ± 0.005 (stat.) ± 0.004 (syst.), respectively. They also present the first observation of Λ{sub c}⁺ --> Λ°K⁺π⁺π⁻ and have measured the branching fraction relative to Λ{sub c}⁺ --> Λ°π⁺ to be 0.266 ± 0.027 (stat.) ± 0.032 (syst.). The upper limit of the branching fraction into the decay Λ{sub c}⁺ --> Σ°K⁺π⁺π⁻ relative to Λ{sub c}⁺ --> Σ°π⁺ has been measured to be < 3.9 x 10⁻² at the 90% confidence level. This analysis was performed using a data sample of 125 fb⁻¹ (integrated luminosity) collected by the BABAR detector at the PEP-II asymmetric-energy B Factory at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center. All results presented in this contribution are preliminary.
- Online
- Washington, D.C. : United States. Dept. of Energy. ; Oak Ridge, Tenn. : distributed by the Office of Scientific and Technical Information, U.S. Dept. of Energy, 2006
- Description
- Book — 1 online resource (144 pages) : digital, PDF file.
- Summary
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This dissertation reports on a study of the relative branching fraction measurement of the charmed baryon Λ{sub c} decaying to the Cabibbo-suppressed modes.
- Online
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