The paranasal sinuses in a range of mammals.
\\n\\n
IntechOpen was founded by scientists, for scientists, in order to make book publishing accessible around the globe. Over the last two decades, this has driven Open Access (OA) book publishing whilst levelling the playing field for global academics. Through our innovative publishing model and the support of the research community, we have now published over 5,700 Open Access books and are visited online by over three million academics every month. These researchers are increasingly working in broad technology-based subjects, driving multidisciplinary academic endeavours into human health, environment, and technology.
\\n\\nBy listening to our community, and in order to serve these rapidly growing areas which lie at the core of IntechOpen's expertise, we are launching a portfolio of Open Science journals:
\\n\\nAll three journals will publish under an Open Access model and embrace Open Science policies to help support the changing needs of academics in these fast-moving research areas. There will be direct links to preprint servers and data repositories, allowing full reproducibility and rapid dissemination of published papers to help accelerate the pace of research. Each journal has renowned Editors in Chief who will work alongside a global Editorial Board, delivering robust single-blind peer review. Supported by our internal editorial teams, this will ensure our authors will receive a quick, user-friendly, and personalised publishing experience.
\\n\\n"By launching our journals portfolio we are introducing new, dedicated homes for interdisciplinary technology-focused researchers to publish their work, whilst embracing Open Science and creating a unique global home for academics to disseminate their work. We are taking a leap toward Open Science continuing and expanding our fundamental commitment to openly sharing scientific research across the world, making it available for the benefit of all." Dr. Sara Uhac, IntechOpen CEO
\\n\\n"Our aim is to promote and create better science for a better world by increasing access to information and the latest scientific developments to all scientists, innovators, entrepreneurs and students and give them the opportunity to learn, observe and contribute to knowledge creation. Open Science promotes a swifter path from research to innovation to produce new products and services." Alex Lazinica, IntechOpen founder
\\n\\nIn conclusion, Natalia Reinic Babic, Head of Journal Publishing and Open Science at IntechOpen adds:
\\n\\n“On behalf of the journal team I’d like to thank all our Editors in Chief, Editorial Boards, internal supporting teams, and our scientific community for their continuous support in making this portfolio a reality - we couldn’t have done it without you! With your support in place, we are confident these journals will become as impactful and successful as our book publishing program and bring us closer to a more open (science) future.”
\\n\\nWe invite you to visit the journals homepage and learn more about the journal’s Editorial Boards, scope and vision as all three journals are now open for submissions.
\\n\\nFeel free to share this news on social media and help us mark this memorable moment!
\\n\\n\\n"}]',published:!0,mainMedia:{caption:"",originalUrl:"/media/original/237"}},components:[{type:"htmlEditorComponent",content:'
After years of being acknowledged as the world's leading publisher of Open Access books, today, we are proud to announce we’ve successfully launched a portfolio of Open Science journals covering rapidly expanding areas of interdisciplinary research.
\n\n\n\nIntechOpen was founded by scientists, for scientists, in order to make book publishing accessible around the globe. Over the last two decades, this has driven Open Access (OA) book publishing whilst levelling the playing field for global academics. Through our innovative publishing model and the support of the research community, we have now published over 5,700 Open Access books and are visited online by over three million academics every month. These researchers are increasingly working in broad technology-based subjects, driving multidisciplinary academic endeavours into human health, environment, and technology.
\n\nBy listening to our community, and in order to serve these rapidly growing areas which lie at the core of IntechOpen's expertise, we are launching a portfolio of Open Science journals:
\n\nAll three journals will publish under an Open Access model and embrace Open Science policies to help support the changing needs of academics in these fast-moving research areas. There will be direct links to preprint servers and data repositories, allowing full reproducibility and rapid dissemination of published papers to help accelerate the pace of research. Each journal has renowned Editors in Chief who will work alongside a global Editorial Board, delivering robust single-blind peer review. Supported by our internal editorial teams, this will ensure our authors will receive a quick, user-friendly, and personalised publishing experience.
\n\n"By launching our journals portfolio we are introducing new, dedicated homes for interdisciplinary technology-focused researchers to publish their work, whilst embracing Open Science and creating a unique global home for academics to disseminate their work. We are taking a leap toward Open Science continuing and expanding our fundamental commitment to openly sharing scientific research across the world, making it available for the benefit of all." Dr. Sara Uhac, IntechOpen CEO
\n\n"Our aim is to promote and create better science for a better world by increasing access to information and the latest scientific developments to all scientists, innovators, entrepreneurs and students and give them the opportunity to learn, observe and contribute to knowledge creation. Open Science promotes a swifter path from research to innovation to produce new products and services." Alex Lazinica, IntechOpen founder
\n\nIn conclusion, Natalia Reinic Babic, Head of Journal Publishing and Open Science at IntechOpen adds:
\n\n“On behalf of the journal team I’d like to thank all our Editors in Chief, Editorial Boards, internal supporting teams, and our scientific community for their continuous support in making this portfolio a reality - we couldn’t have done it without you! With your support in place, we are confident these journals will become as impactful and successful as our book publishing program and bring us closer to a more open (science) future.”
\n\nWe invite you to visit the journals homepage and learn more about the journal’s Editorial Boards, scope and vision as all three journals are now open for submissions.
\n\nFeel free to share this news on social media and help us mark this memorable moment!
\n\n\n'}],latestNews:[{slug:"intechopen-supports-asapbio-s-new-initiative-publish-your-reviews-20220729",title:"IntechOpen Supports ASAPbio’s New Initiative Publish Your Reviews"},{slug:"webinar-introduction-to-open-science-wednesday-18-may-1-pm-cest-20220518",title:"Webinar: Introduction to Open Science | Wednesday 18 May, 1 PM CEST"},{slug:"step-in-the-right-direction-intechopen-launches-a-portfolio-of-open-science-journals-20220414",title:"Step in the Right Direction: IntechOpen Launches a Portfolio of Open Science Journals"},{slug:"let-s-meet-at-london-book-fair-5-7-april-2022-olympia-london-20220321",title:"Let’s meet at London Book Fair, 5-7 April 2022, Olympia London"},{slug:"50-books-published-as-part-of-intechopen-and-knowledge-unlatched-ku-collaboration-20220316",title:"50 Books published as part of IntechOpen and Knowledge Unlatched (KU) Collaboration"},{slug:"intechopen-joins-the-united-nations-sustainable-development-goals-publishers-compact-20221702",title:"IntechOpen joins the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals Publishers Compact"},{slug:"intechopen-signs-exclusive-representation-agreement-with-lsr-libros-servicios-y-representaciones-s-a-de-c-v-20211123",title:"IntechOpen Signs Exclusive Representation Agreement with LSR Libros Servicios y Representaciones S.A. de C.V"},{slug:"intechopen-expands-partnership-with-research4life-20211110",title:"IntechOpen Expands Partnership with Research4Life"}]},book:{item:{type:"book",id:"9686",leadTitle:null,fullTitle:"Brassica Breeding and Biotechnology",title:"Brassica Breeding and Biotechnology",subtitle:null,reviewType:"peer-reviewed",abstract:"The family Brassicaceae constitutes one of the world’s most economically important plant groups. These plants are important sources of vegetable oil, vegetables, and condiments. Most of these crops belong to the genus Brassica, which includes common crops such as oilseeds (oilseed rape, mustard) and vegetables (broccoli, cauliflower, brussels sprouts, cabbage, turnip, Chinese cabbage, etc.). Brassica species play an essential role in horticulture and agriculture as well as contribute to the health of populations around the world. The current global climatic model predicts a significant decrease in growth, yield, and productivity of Brassica due to various biotic and abiotic stress factors. Thus, high-yielding, climate-resilient, and disease-resistant Brassica varieties are required to maintain as well as increase future agricultural production. The development of improved cultivars of these crops may become exhausted and improvement could become stagnant when plant breeding is merely based on a single breeding approach. Therefore, the goal of a breeding program should be to develop genetically superior Brassica cultivars suitable for a wide range of environments. This book examines the introgression of insect and disease resistance and other desirable traits into Brassica crops using inter-and/or intra-specific hybridization as well as biotechnological and molecular techniques, which could be useful for improving Brassica crops to ensure food security.",isbn:"978-1-83968-697-9",printIsbn:"978-1-83968-696-2",pdfIsbn:"978-1-83968-698-6",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.87490",price:119,priceEur:129,priceUsd:155,slug:"brassica-breeding-and-biotechnology",numberOfPages:174,isOpenForSubmission:!1,isInWos:null,isInBkci:!1,hash:"1afe175ea39b01d4e6e0c9d6427486a6",bookSignature:"A. K. M. Aminul Islam, Mohammad Anwar Hossain and A. K. M. Mominul Islam",publishedDate:"July 7th 2021",coverURL:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/books/images_new/9686.jpg",numberOfDownloads:3476,numberOfWosCitations:3,numberOfCrossrefCitations:9,numberOfCrossrefCitationsByBook:0,numberOfDimensionsCitations:15,numberOfDimensionsCitationsByBook:0,hasAltmetrics:0,numberOfTotalCitations:27,isAvailableForWebshopOrdering:!0,dateEndFirstStepPublish:"September 4th 2020",dateEndSecondStepPublish:"October 2nd 2020",dateEndThirdStepPublish:"December 1st 2020",dateEndFourthStepPublish:"February 19th 2021",dateEndFifthStepPublish:"April 20th 2021",currentStepOfPublishingProcess:5,indexedIn:"1,2,3,4,5,6",editedByType:"Edited by",kuFlag:!1,featuredMarkup:null,editors:[{id:"191072",title:"Prof.",name:"A. K. M. Aminul",middleName:null,surname:"Islam",slug:"a.-k.-m.-aminul-islam",fullName:"A. K. M. Aminul Islam",profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/191072/images/system/191072.png",biography:"Prof. Dr. A. K. M. Aminul Islam is Professor of Genetics and Plant Breeding at Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman Agricultural University (BSMRAU), Gazipur, Bangladesh, where he is also a director of research. He received bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Bangladesh Agricultural University (BAU), Mymensingh, Bangladesh, and a Ph.D. in Chemical and Process Engineering from Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia. Dr. Islam is the author of 120 articles published in nationally and internationally reputed journals, twenty book chapters, and four books. He is an editorial board member and referee for several national and international journals. He is also the general secretary of the Plant Breeding and Genetics Society of Bangladesh, the seminar and research secretary of JICA Alumni Association of Bangladesh, and a lifetime member of several professional societies. Dr. Islam developed and released nineteen varieties of different crops for commercial cultivation by farmers. He supervised twenty-two MS and two Ph.D. students as major professor and forty MS and two Ph.D. students as a committee member. His major areas of research are the development of hybrid vegetables, canola-grade Brassica napus using a CMS system, and salinity-tolerant rice, as well as renewable energy research with Jatropha curcas.",institutionString:"Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman Agricultural University",position:null,outsideEditionCount:0,totalCites:0,totalAuthoredChapters:"4",totalChapterViews:"0",totalEditedBooks:"1",institution:{name:"Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman Agricultural University",institutionURL:null,country:{name:"Bangladesh"}}}],equalEditorOne:null,equalEditorTwo:null,equalEditorThree:null,coeditorOne:{id:"321236",title:"Prof.",name:"Mohammad Anwar",middleName:null,surname:"Hossain",slug:"mohammad-anwar-hossain",fullName:"Mohammad Anwar Hossain",profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/321236/images/system/321236.png",biography:"Dr. Mohammad Anwar Hossain is a professor in the Department of Genetics and Plant Breeding, Bangladesh Agricultural University (BAU), Mymensingh, Bangladesh. He received his BSc in Agriculture and MS in Genetics and Plant Breeding from BAU. He also received an MSc in Agriculture from Kagawa University, Japan, in 2008, and a Ph.D. in Abiotic Stress Physiology and Molecular Biology from Ehime University, Japan, in 2011 through a Monbukagakusho scholarship. As a JSPS postdoctoral researcher in 2015–2017, he worked on isolating low-phosphorus, stress-tolerant genes from rice at the University of Tokyo, Japan. His current research program focuses on understanding physiological, biochemical, and molecular mechanisms underlying abiotic stress tolerance in crop plants and the generation of stress-tolerant and nutrient-efficient plants through breeding and biotechnology. He has more than sixty peer-reviewed publications to his credit and has edited twelve books, including this one.",institutionString:null,position:null,outsideEditionCount:null,totalCites:0,totalAuthoredChapters:"1",totalChapterViews:"0",totalEditedBooks:"0",institution:null},coeditorTwo:{id:"234696",title:"Prof.",name:"A. K. M. Mominul",middleName:null,surname:"Islam",slug:"a.-k.-m.-mominul-islam",fullName:"A. K. M. Mominul Islam",profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/234696/images/system/234696.png",biography:"Dr. A. K. M. Mominul Islam is a professor in the Department of Agronomy, Bangladesh Agricultural University (BAU), Mymensingh, Bangladesh. He received both bachelor’s and master’s degrees from BAU. Dr. Islam obtained a second master’s degree in Physical Land Resources from Ghent University, Belgium, and a Ph.D. in Plant Allelopathy from United Graduate School of Agricultural Science, Ehime University, Japan, with his dissertation “Allelopathy of five Lamiaceae medicinal plant species.” Dr. Islam also completed his post-doctoral research at the Department of Horticulture and Landscape Architecture, Purdue University, Indiana, USA. Dr. Islam is the author of seventy-four articles published in nationally and internationally reputed journals, six book chapters, and three books. He is an editorial board and referee for several national and international journals. To date, he has supervised twenty-one MS students. Dr. Islam is currently supervising the research of two MS and six Ph.D. students in the areas of field crop production and management.",institutionString:"Bangladesh Agricultural University",position:null,outsideEditionCount:0,totalCites:0,totalAuthoredChapters:"2",totalChapterViews:"0",totalEditedBooks:"0",institution:{name:"Bangladesh Agricultural University",institutionURL:null,country:{name:"Bangladesh"}}},coeditorThree:null,coeditorFour:null,coeditorFive:null,topics:[{id:"341",title:"Olericulture",slug:"olericulture"}],chapters:[{id:"74816",title:"Advances in Breeding in Vegetable Brassica rapa Crops",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.95769",slug:"advances-in-breeding-in-vegetable-em-brassica-rapa-em-crops",totalDownloads:364,totalCrossrefCites:2,totalDimensionsCites:2,hasAltmetrics:0,abstract:"Brassica rapa includes oil and vegetable crops having a variety of forms, such as oilseeds, leafy vegetables and turnips. Leafy types, which are called turnip greens and turnip tops, are popular crops in NW Spain, and they represent an important part of the diet. However, their cultivation is limited in southern areas or in the Mediterranean basin, probably due to a lack of adaptation. Still, they could occupy a prominent place in the Mediterranean diet, which is based on a high consumption of fruits and vegetables. In this review, we summarize the studies on the agronomical and nutritional value of these crops when grown under Mediterranean climate conditions. Data reported here might be useful for a deeper understanding of these crops for both nutritional quality and bioaccessibility, and for selecting varieties adapted to the two abovementioned Mediterranean conditions, as well as for organic farming systems, thus contributing to the diversification of traditional Brassica vegetable production systems.",signatures:"María Elena Cartea, Fernando Cámara-Martos, Sara Obregón, Francisco Rubén Badenes-Pérez and Antonio De Haro",downloadPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-download/74816",previewPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-preview/74816",authors:[{id:"142197",title:"Prof.",name:"Fernando",surname:"Cámara-Martos",slug:"fernando-camara-martos",fullName:"Fernando Cámara-Martos"},{id:"229534",title:"Dr.",name:"Antonio",surname:"De Haro-Bailón",slug:"antonio-de-haro-bailon",fullName:"Antonio De Haro-Bailón"},{id:"334691",title:"Dr.",name:"María Elena",surname:"Cartea",slug:"maria-elena-cartea",fullName:"María Elena Cartea"},{id:"335952",title:"Dr.",name:"Sara",surname:"Obregon-Cano",slug:"sara-obregon-cano",fullName:"Sara Obregon-Cano"},{id:"342339",title:"Dr.",name:"Francisco",surname:"Badenes-Pérez",slug:"francisco-badenes-perez",fullName:"Francisco Badenes-Pérez"}],corrections:null},{id:"75542",title:"Rapeseed-Mustard Breeding in India: Scenario, Achievements and Research Needs",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.96319",slug:"rapeseed-mustard-breeding-in-india-scenario-achievements-and-research-needs",totalDownloads:736,totalCrossrefCites:3,totalDimensionsCites:6,hasAltmetrics:0,abstract:"Brassica spp., commonly known as rapeseed-mustard, plays a significant role in the Indian economy by providing edible oils, vegetables, condiments and animal feed. Globally, India holds second and third position in rapeseed-mustard area under cultivation and production, respectively. However, anthropogenically accelerated climate change thwarts yield potential of rapeseed-mustard by employing abiotic (drought, flood, temperature variation and salinity) and biotic (disease and insects) stresses. Various approaches such as molecular breeding, pre-breeding, −omics and biotechnological interventions have been used to develop varieties for improved yield and oil quality, climate resilient and resistance or tolerance to abiotic and biotic stresses. In this context, this chapter highlighted the different cytoplasmic male sterility (CMS) sources and their potential use for hybrid development. At the end, this chapter also enlisted salient achievement by the government and non-government institutes and briefly described the future perspective for improvement of rapeseed-mustard in India.",signatures:"Subhash Chand, Om Prakash Patidar, Rajat Chaudhary, Ranjit Saroj, Kailash Chandra, Vijay Kamal Meena, Omkar M. Limbalkar, Manoj Kumar Patel, Priya P. Pardeshi and Prashant Vasisth",downloadPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-download/75542",previewPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-preview/75542",authors:[{id:"249796",title:"Dr.",name:"Kailash",surname:"Chandra",slug:"kailash-chandra",fullName:"Kailash Chandra"},{id:"326742",title:"Dr.",name:"Subhash",surname:"Chand",slug:"subhash-chand",fullName:"Subhash Chand"},{id:"348860",title:"Dr.",name:"Om Prakash",surname:"Patidar",slug:"om-prakash-patidar",fullName:"Om Prakash Patidar"},{id:"348861",title:"Dr.",name:"Rajat",surname:"Chaudhary",slug:"rajat-chaudhary",fullName:"Rajat Chaudhary"},{id:"348862",title:"Dr.",name:"Ranjit",surname:"Saroj",slug:"ranjit-saroj",fullName:"Ranjit Saroj"},{id:"348863",title:"Dr.",name:"Vijay Kamal",surname:"Meena",slug:"vijay-kamal-meena",fullName:"Vijay Kamal Meena"},{id:"348865",title:"Dr.",name:"Omkar M.",surname:"Limbalkar",slug:"omkar-m.-limbalkar",fullName:"Omkar M. Limbalkar"},{id:"348867",title:"Dr.",name:"Manoj Kumar",surname:"Patel",slug:"manoj-kumar-patel",fullName:"Manoj Kumar Patel"},{id:"348868",title:"Dr.",name:"Priya P.",surname:"Pardeshi",slug:"priya-p.-pardeshi",fullName:"Priya P. Pardeshi"},{id:"348869",title:"Dr.",name:"Prashant",surname:"Vasisth",slug:"prashant-vasisth",fullName:"Prashant Vasisth"}],corrections:null},{id:"75023",title:"Innovative Strategies to Develop Abiotic and Biotic Stress Tolerance in Mustard (Brassicaceae)",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.95973",slug:"innovative-strategies-to-develop-abiotic-and-biotic-stress-tolerance-in-mustard-brassicaceae-",totalDownloads:357,totalCrossrefCites:0,totalDimensionsCites:0,hasAltmetrics:0,abstract:"Mustard crop is the third important source of vegetable oil randomly below soybean L. and palm, all over the world. Brassica crop is extremely susceptible to some biotic and abiotic stresses and they significantly influence the quality and quantity of the crop. In the past generally breeding techniques are used to develop resistance in mustard to avoid diseases though various pathogens are soon able to overcome that resistance by modifying their metabolic cycles. To bear the challenge there is an urgent need to develop abiotic as well as biotic stress tolerant plants using advanced techniques by understanding metabolic and biochemical pathways of plants and pathogens. Several techniques such selection of stress tolerance microbes, metabolite, enzymes, and genes are very important to avoid stresses. Whereas several techniques such as deployment of molecular markers for breeding, identification of Quantitative trait loci (QTL), in vitro tissue culture etc. can be more useful to improve biotic and abiotic stress tolerance in mustard. To develop healthy and high yield varieties, the mix of these techniques is needs to be implemented.",signatures:"Bahaderjeet Singh, Amanpreet Singh Sran and Gagandeep Singh Sohi",downloadPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-download/75023",previewPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-preview/75023",authors:[{id:"331114",title:"Assistant Prof.",name:"Bahaderjeet",surname:"Singh",slug:"bahaderjeet-singh",fullName:"Bahaderjeet Singh"}],corrections:null},{id:"75263",title:"Embryo Culture and Embryo Rescue in Brassica",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.96058",slug:"embryo-culture-and-embryo-rescue-in-em-brassica-em-",totalDownloads:363,totalCrossrefCites:1,totalDimensionsCites:1,hasAltmetrics:0,abstract:"Somatic embryogenesis is the best demonstration of totipotency in higher plants in which somatic cell produce whole plant like zygotic embryo. It is also demonstrated that immature, weak, hybrid or sometimes inviable embryos can be saved through in vitro culture to prevents its degradation. It may help to cross the reproductive barriers when interspecific hybrids developed. Brasssica is an economically valuable oil yielding and vegetable crop and India is the largest producer of oil seed rape in the world. Various factors affect the embryo rescue in Brassica like growth stage of the embryos, types and composition of the rescue medium etc. The embryo regeneration potential can improve through the modification of culture conditions in both zygotic as well as somatic embryo. Except the embryo culture other parts like ovule, ovary culture can also be done to developed interspecific hybrids. This chapter is focused on the embryo rescue techniques in the genus Brassica and summarizes possible ways of improving the technique used.",signatures:"Mohammad Akmal",downloadPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-download/75263",previewPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-preview/75263",authors:[{id:"181036",title:"Dr.",name:"Mohammad",surname:"Akmal",slug:"mohammad-akmal",fullName:"Mohammad Akmal"}],corrections:null},{id:"74043",title:"Breeding Mustard (Brassica juncea) for Salt Tolerance: Problems and Prospects",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.94551",slug:"breeding-mustard-em-brassica-juncea-em-for-salt-tolerance-problems-and-prospects",totalDownloads:303,totalCrossrefCites:0,totalDimensionsCites:0,hasAltmetrics:0,abstract:"Salt stress is currently one of the most critical factors, reducing agricultural production. Indian mustard (Brassica juncea) is a major oilseed crop in these areas. However, salt affects as much as 50–90% worldwide yield reduction. Salt tolerance is a very complex factor controlled by a number of independent and/or interdependent mechanisms and genetic modification that lead to many changes in physiology and biochemistry at the cellular level. The classical methods of plant breeding for salt tolerance involves the widespread use of inter and intraspecific variations in the available germplasm which is essential for any crop development program. This large germplasm is then tested under various salt levels in microplots, which is a quick, reliable, reproducible and inexpensive method of salt tolerance. Genotypes that have shown better indications of stress tolerance without significant yield reduction are considered to be tolerant and are also used as potential donor in the breeding programs. In this way, ICAR-Central Soil Salinity Research Institute (ICAR-CSSRI), Karnal developed and produced five varieties of Indian mustard that tolerate high salt namely, CS 52, CS 54, CS 56, CS 58 and CS 60 in the country, and many other high-quality pipeline lines exploration and development. These salt-tolerant species work better under conditions of salt stress due to various manipulations (physiology, genes and molecular level) to fight salt stress has led to detrimental effects. Recent molecular tools to add classical breeding systems to improve saline-tolerant mustard varieties in a short span of time, including the Marker Assisted Selection (MAS) and backcrossing, that have helped using simple sequence repeats (SSR) and single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) markers to identify quantitative trait loci (QTLs) that control the polygenic traits like tolerance of salt and seed yield.",signatures:"Jogendra Singh, Parbodh Chander Sharma and Vijayata Singh",downloadPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-download/74043",previewPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-preview/74043",authors:[{id:"245615",title:"Dr.",name:"Jogendra",surname:"Singh",slug:"jogendra-singh",fullName:"Jogendra Singh"}],corrections:null},{id:"75554",title:"Salinity Tolerance in Canola: Insights from Proteomic Studies",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.96649",slug:"salinity-tolerance-in-canola-insights-from-proteomic-studies",totalDownloads:350,totalCrossrefCites:2,totalDimensionsCites:4,hasAltmetrics:0,abstract:"Salinity considerably lowers crop yield worldwide. Production of salt stress-tolerant species will be essential to maintain the food supply in the coming decades. Brassicas, including various members of the family Brassicaceae, are very necessary sources of human food. Importantly, the key crop species that are members of the Brassicaceae family are genetically diverse and therefore their response reaction and adaptation to salinity varies greatly. Canola (Brassica napus L.) is commonly grown for edible oils and other uses such as biodiesel fuel production. Although most types of canola are identified as salt-resistant, plant yield and development are reduced significantly by rising salinity levels. In saline situations, the plant’s genome supports a range of physiological changes in some plant characteristics. Since the function of genes cannot indicate the exact condition of cells, proteomic approaches are emerged as methods to investigate the plant’s responses to stresses in the molecular levels. Exploring the proteome complements research at the genome and transcriptome level and helps elucidate the mechanism of salt tolerance in plants. Proteins are reliable indicators of salinity responses, as they are directly involved in forming the new phenotype providing adaptation to salinity. In this chapter, we review the response of the rapeseed proteome to salinity stress.",signatures:"Ali Bandehagh, Zahra Dehghanian, Robert Henry and Mohammad Anwar Hossain",downloadPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-download/75554",previewPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-preview/75554",authors:[{id:"321236",title:"Prof.",name:"Mohammad Anwar",surname:"Hossain",slug:"mohammad-anwar-hossain",fullName:"Mohammad Anwar Hossain"},{id:"333759",title:"Dr.",name:"Ali",surname:"Bandehagh",slug:"ali-bandehagh",fullName:"Ali Bandehagh"},{id:"333782",title:"BSc.",name:"Zahra",surname:"Dehghanian",slug:"zahra-dehghanian",fullName:"Zahra Dehghanian"},{id:"349347",title:"Dr.",name:"Robert",surname:"Henry",slug:"robert-henry",fullName:"Robert Henry"}],corrections:null},{id:"75610",title:"Epidemiology, Genetics and Resistance of Alternaria Blight in Oilseed Brassica",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.96454",slug:"epidemiology-genetics-and-resistance-of-em-alternaria-em-blight-in-oilseed-em-brassica-em-",totalDownloads:300,totalCrossrefCites:0,totalDimensionsCites:0,hasAltmetrics:0,abstract:"Alternaria blight is one of the most deadly diseases of oilseed Brassica. This recalcitrant disease causes up to 50% yield loss across the globe. The disease is mainly caused by Alternaria brassicae and Alternaria brassicicola. These pathogens lack sexual stages and survive as conidia or condiospores on the debris of previous crops and susceptible weeds. Developing resistant oilseed Brassica cultivars to this disease has become a prime concern for researchers over the years. In absence of resistant oilseed Brassica cultivar, identification and introgression of resistance related genes can be a potential source for Alternaria blight resistance. As resistance toward Alternaria blight is governed by polygenes, intercrossing between the tolerant genotypes and subsequent selection will be the most appropriate way to transfer the quantitative resistance. For that reason, future breeding goal should focus on screening of germplasms for selecting genotypes containing resistance genes and structural features that favors resistance, like thick epicuticular wax, biochemical components such as phenols, phytoalexins and lower soluble sugars, reducing sugars and soluble nitrogen. Selected genotypes should be brought under appropriate breeding programs for attaining Alternaria blight resistance.",signatures:"Subroto Das Jyoti, Naima Sultana, Lutful Hassan and Arif Hasan Khan Robin",downloadPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-download/75610",previewPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-preview/75610",authors:[{id:"322667",title:"Prof.",name:"Arif Hasan Khan",surname:"Robin",slug:"arif-hasan-khan-robin",fullName:"Arif Hasan Khan Robin"},{id:"329291",title:"Prof.",name:"Lutful",surname:"Hassan",slug:"lutful-hassan",fullName:"Lutful Hassan"},{id:"330722",title:"Mr.",name:"Subroto Das",surname:"Jyoti",slug:"subroto-das-jyoti",fullName:"Subroto Das Jyoti"},{id:"342026",title:"Ms.",name:"Naima",surname:"Sultana",slug:"naima-sultana",fullName:"Naima Sultana"}],corrections:null},{id:"75379",title:"Breeding for Disease Resistance in Brassica Vegetables Using DNA Marker Selection",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.96263",slug:"breeding-for-disease-resistance-in-brassica-vegetables-using-dna-marker-selection",totalDownloads:380,totalCrossrefCites:1,totalDimensionsCites:2,hasAltmetrics:0,abstract:"The Brassica genus comprises of agro-economically important vegetables. Disease causes great yield loss of Brassica vegetables worldwide. Different traditional methods such as crop rotation and chemical control have limited effect on different diseases of Brassica vegetables and cannot completely eradicate the pathogens by these methods. Development of disease resistant cultivars is one of the most effective, ecofriendly, and cheapest measure to control Brassica diseases. With the development of genomics, molecular biology techniques, and biological methods, it is possible to discover and introduce resistance (R) genes to efficiently control the plant diseases caused by pathogens. Some R genes of major diseases such as Fusarium wilt and clubroot in Brassica vegetables have been already identified. Therefore, we will focus to review the Fusarium wilt and clubroot resistance in Brassica vegetables and the methodologies for identification, mapping, and pyramiding of R genes/quantitative trait loci (QTLs) to develop disease resistant cultivars. These techniques will be helpful for sustainable crop production and to maintain global food security and contribute to ensure protection of food supply in the Asian country as well as throughout the world.",signatures:"Mst Arjina Akter, Hasan Mehraj, Takeru Itabashi, Tomoe Shindo, Masaaki Osaka, Ayasha Akter, Naomi Miyaji, Naoki Chiba, Junji Miyazaki and Ryo Fujimoto",downloadPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-download/75379",previewPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-preview/75379",authors:[{id:"233726",title:"Dr.",name:"Ryo",surname:"Fujimoto",slug:"ryo-fujimoto",fullName:"Ryo Fujimoto"},{id:"233727",title:"Ms.",name:"Ayasha",surname:"Akter",slug:"ayasha-akter",fullName:"Ayasha Akter"},{id:"345922",title:"Ms.",name:"Mst Arjina",surname:"Akter",slug:"mst-arjina-akter",fullName:"Mst Arjina Akter"},{id:"345923",title:"Dr.",name:"Hasan",surname:"Mehraj",slug:"hasan-mehraj",fullName:"Hasan Mehraj"},{id:"345924",title:"Mr.",name:"Takeru",surname:"Itabashi",slug:"takeru-itabashi",fullName:"Takeru Itabashi"},{id:"345925",title:"Ms.",name:"Tomoe",surname:"Shindo",slug:"tomoe-shindo",fullName:"Tomoe Shindo"},{id:"345926",title:"Mr.",name:"Naoki",surname:"Chiba",slug:"naoki-chiba",fullName:"Naoki Chiba"},{id:"345927",title:"Dr.",name:"Masaaki",surname:"Osaka",slug:"masaaki-osaka",fullName:"Masaaki Osaka"},{id:"345928",title:"Ms.",name:"Naomi",surname:"Miyaji",slug:"naomi-miyaji",fullName:"Naomi Miyaji"},{id:"345929",title:"Dr.",name:"Junji",surname:"Miyazaki",slug:"junji-miyazaki",fullName:"Junji Miyazaki"}],corrections:null},{id:"75968",title:"Brassica-Aphid Interaction: Modulated Challenges and Sustainable Approach for Management",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.96903",slug:"brassica-aphid-interaction-modulated-challenges-and-sustainable-approach-for-management",totalDownloads:325,totalCrossrefCites:0,totalDimensionsCites:0,hasAltmetrics:0,abstract:"Insect pests act as main barrier in enhancing yield potential of Brassica crops. Lipaphis erysimi is considered as one of the most destructive insect species in mustard production due to its voracious type feeding and multiplication. Therefore application of insecticide is inevitable for cultivation of cruciferous crops, although systemic insecticides has been found to be suitable for management of aphid, despite of high cost, residual effect and ecological ramification have necessitated the application of bio and botanical insecticides as novel approach and are recorded significant in research. Aphids having exclusively viviparous parthenogenesis type reproduction from January to March month with the completion of eight generations are helpful in quick mass multiplication. Natural enemies Coccinella spp., Syrphid larvae and bio-pesticide found effective in suppress aphid numbers. Manipulation in sowing dates of mustard crop provides good yield and less incidence of aphid which is proved through research. Lack of environmental resistant varieties has dispensed toward non feasibility of conventional breeding approaches for developing aphid-resistant Brassica. Although application of genetic engineering plan has resulted in moderate success in development of aphid resistance, so far commercialization of such genetically modified crops has not conceivable, intimate the necessity of further insights in to host plant and aphid communication to form effective approach against aphid resistance. Therefore in this chapter the components involved in Brassica aphid communication are highlighted and present statuses and problem in aphid management are discussed.",signatures:"S.A. Dwivedi, Lelika Nameirakpam and Ajay Tomer",downloadPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-download/75968",previewPdfUrl:"/chapter/pdf-preview/75968",authors:[{id:"330948",title:"Dr.",name:"S.A.",surname:"Dwivedi",slug:"s.a.-dwivedi",fullName:"S.A. 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\r\n\tSchiff base (imine -N=CH-) is one of a popular group of organic compounds prepared from primary amines and aldehyde. Not only as organic compounds but also as ligands for metal complexes, a number of studies have been carried out so far. In this context, this book aims to record a wider range of interdisciplinary content on Schiff base compounds, with an emphasis on the latest advances. This book will aim to compile research results, commentary, reviews, etc., that have dealt with preparation, spectroscopy, crystallography, (asymmetric) synthetic roles, physical properties (magnets, optics, and so on), computational chemistry, and/or theoretical chemistry and their discussions. The book will also intend to focus on Schiff base and its strong connection from organic chemistry to biochemistry or polymer materials chemistry.
",isbn:"978-1-80355-679-6",printIsbn:"978-1-80355-678-9",pdfIsbn:"978-1-80355-680-2",doi:null,price:0,priceEur:0,priceUsd:0,slug:null,numberOfPages:0,isOpenForSubmission:!0,isSalesforceBook:!1,isNomenclature:!1,hash:"ce51efbe2cae97ca3199350ef6c498ec",bookSignature:"Dr. Takashiro Akitsu",publishedDate:null,coverURL:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/books/images_new/12078.jpg",keywords:"Schiff Base, Imine, Azomethine, Synthesis, Characterization, Crystal Structure, Chirality, Liquid Crystals, Polymers or Biopolymers, Metal Complex, Salen-Type Ligand, Computational Chemistry",numberOfDownloads:null,numberOfWosCitations:0,numberOfCrossrefCitations:null,numberOfDimensionsCitations:null,numberOfTotalCitations:null,isAvailableForWebshopOrdering:!0,dateEndFirstStepPublish:"May 20th 2022",dateEndSecondStepPublish:"July 21st 2022",dateEndThirdStepPublish:"September 19th 2022",dateEndFourthStepPublish:"December 8th 2022",dateEndFifthStepPublish:"February 6th 2023",dateConfirmationOfParticipation:null,remainingDaysToSecondStep:"a month",secondStepPassed:!0,areRegistrationsClosed:!1,currentStepOfPublishingProcess:3,editedByType:null,kuFlag:!1,biosketch:"A professor from the University of Science, Japan, has published 220 articles and book chapters. 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Venkateswarlu",coverURL:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/books/images_new/371.jpg",editedByType:"Edited by",editors:[{id:"58592",title:"Dr.",name:"Arun",surname:"Shanker",slug:"arun-shanker",fullName:"Arun Shanker"}],productType:{id:"1",chapterContentType:"chapter",authoredCaption:"Edited by"}},{type:"book",id:"3092",title:"Anopheles mosquitoes",subtitle:"New insights into malaria vectors",isOpenForSubmission:!1,hash:"c9e622485316d5e296288bf24d2b0d64",slug:"anopheles-mosquitoes-new-insights-into-malaria-vectors",bookSignature:"Sylvie Manguin",coverURL:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/books/images_new/3092.jpg",editedByType:"Edited by",editors:[{id:"50017",title:"Prof.",name:"Sylvie",surname:"Manguin",slug:"sylvie-manguin",fullName:"Sylvie Manguin"}],productType:{id:"1",chapterContentType:"chapter",authoredCaption:"Edited by"}}]},chapter:{item:{type:"chapter",id:"73269",title:"Equations of Relativistic and Quantum Mechanics (without Spin)",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.93336",slug:"equations-of-relativistic-and-quantum-mechanics-without-spin-",body:'In 1913, Bohr, based on the Balmer empirical formulas, constructed a model of atom based on the quantization of the orbital momentum [1], which was subsequently supplemented by the more general Sommerfeld quantization rules. In those years, naturally, the presence of a spin or an intrinsic magnetic moment of the particle or, especially, spin-orbit interaction, or interaction with the nuclear spin, was not supposed.
In 1916, Sommerfeld, within the framework of relativistic approaches, derived a formula for the energy levels of a hydrogen-like atom, without taking into account the spin [2]. Sommerfeld proceeded from the model of the Bohr atom and used the relativistic relation between the momentum
where
In an external field with a four-dimensional potential (
In the case of the Coulomb potential
where
where
where the principal quantum number
The formula (6) perfectly described all the peculiarities of the structure of the spectrum of hydrogen and other similar atoms with the limiting for those years accuracy of measurements, and there was no doubt about the correctness of the formula itself. Therefore, the Sommerfeld formula was perceived as empirical, and instead of the quantum number l, a ‘
where
Formula (7) also indicated a strange limitation of value the charge of a nucleus with the atomic number
In 1925–1926, Schrödinger worked on the derivation of the equation for the wave function of a particle describing the De Broglie waves [6]. The derivation of the equation also was based on the relativistic relation (1) between the momentum
Like Sommerfeld, Schrödinger used the following representation for a particle in an external field
In the case of stationary states of a charged particle in the field of the Coulomb potential for a hydrogen atom it was necessary to solve the equation
As can be seen, the quadratic expression of potential energy
The sample dependency of the attractive field potential
Next, the wave vector
and when considering the problem of the passage of a particle with energy
Passage of a particle through a potential barrier
Another difficulty is that, as the solution of the particle problem in a potential well shows, at a sufficient depth, a particle with a wavelength
A particle with a wavelength
Also, the solution of the problem of a hydrogen-like atom is limited by the value of the ordinal number of the atomic nucleus
In order to get rid of the quadratic term or reverse its sign, in recent years it has been proposed to represent potential energy in the Klein-Gordon and Dirac equations as the difference of squares from the expressions of scalar and vector potentials (S-wave equation) [9, 10, 11]. Such a mathematical formalism corrects the situation, but from a physical point of view such representations are in no way justified, and the fields corresponding to such pseudo-potentials do not exist in nature.
Things are even worse with the presence of a quadratic term of the vector field, because of the sign of which we obtain non-existent states in nature and solutions that contradict experience.
According to the solutions of the equations of quantum mechanics and Hamilton-Jacoby, it turns out that a charged particle in a magnetic field, in addition to rotating in a circle, also has radial vibrations—Landau levels [12] (even in the case of zero orbital momentum).
Over these 90 years, especially in very accurate cyclotron resonance experiments, none has detected the electron radial vibrations and the Landau levels.
Solving this equation, Schrödinger, like Sommerfeld, received the formula (5), which described the structure of the hydrogen spectrum not exactly. Moreover, from the solution of the problem for a particle in a potential well, it turns out that a particle with a wavelength
In 1925 Schrödinger sent this work to the editors of ‘Annalen der Physik’ [13], but then took the manuscript, refused the relativistic approaches and in 1926 built a wave equation based on the classical Hamiltonian expression, the Schrödinger equation [14].
Equation described the spectrum of the hydrogen atom only qualitatively, however, it did not have any unreasonable restrictions or singular solutions in the form of the Sommerfeld-Dirac formula. Klein [15], Fock [16] and Gordon [17] published the relativistic equation based on the wave equation for a particle without spin in 1926; it is called the Klein-Fock-Gordon equation.
With the discovery of the spin, the situation changed drastically, and in 1926 Heisenberg and Jordan [18] showed that, within the Pauli description of the spin of an electron, half the energy of the spin-orbit interaction is equal to a term with a power of α4 in the Taylor series expansion of the Sommerfeld formula
Why exactly the half, Thomas tried to explain this in 1927 by the presence of a relativistic precession of an electron in the reference frame of motion along the orbit [19]. The energy of the Thomas precession is exactly equal to half the value of the energy of the spin-orbit interaction with the inverse (positive) sign, which should be added to the energy of the spin-orbit interaction. However, the incorrect assumption that the Thomas precession frequency is identical in both frames of reference and the absence of a common and correct derivation for non-inertial (rotating) frames of reference raised doubts about the correctness of such approaches. The reason for the appearance of half the energy of the spin-orbit interaction in the Sommerfeld formula is still under investigation and is one of the unresolved problems in modern physics.
On the other hand, both in the derivation of the Sommerfeld formula and at the solution of the Klein-Fock-Gordon equation for the hydrogen atom problem [20], neither the spin nor the spin-orbit interaction energy was taken into account initially. Therefore, the obtained fine splitting can in no way be owing to the spin-orbit interaction. This is a relativistic but purely mechanical effect, when the mass (inertia) of a particle is already depends on the velocity of motion along the orbit (of the angular momentum), because of which the radial motion of the electron changes, and vice versa. Just this dependence, which results in the splitting of the energy levels of the electron, and to the impossibility of introducing only one, the principal quantum number. Nevertheless, even with this assumption, the order of splitting of the levels according to formula (8) contradicts to the logic; it turns out to be that the greater the orbital angular momentum, the lesser the energy of the split level.
The matrix representation of the second-order wave Eq. (9) by a system of equations of the first order is the Dirac construction of the relativistic electron equation [21] (the Dirac matrices are the particular representation of the Clifford-Lipschitz numbers [22]). In the standard representation the Dirac equation for a free particle has the form [23].
where
are the Pauli matrices (the unit matrix in the formulas is omitted).
For a particle in an external field, Eq. (16) is usually written in the form
where for an invariant representation in the case of a free particle, the equations are composed for the difference between the generalized momentum and the momentum of the field.
In the case of the potential energy of an immobile charge in a Coulomb field, we obtain the Sommerfeld-Dirac formula as a result of an exact solution of this particular equation. There, again, although for a system with spin
More accurate measurements of Lamb in 1947 and subsequent improvements in the spectrum of the hydrogen atom revealed that, in addition to the lines with the maximum j, all the others are also split and somewhat displaced (the Lamb shift). To harmonize the results of the theory with more accurate experimental data on the spectrum of the hydrogen atom, one had to propose other solutions and approaches than were laid down by the derivation of the Dirac equation.
The new theoretical approaches had yield nothing and only supplemented the theory with the illogical and non-physical proposals to overcome the emerging singularity of solutions: the renormalization, the finite difference of infinities with the desired value of the difference, and so on. The accounting for the size of the nucleus corrected only the
The results of solution of the problem for a particle in a potential well both in the case of the Klein-Fock-Gordon equation and of the Dirac equation contradict to the basic principle of quantum mechanics, to the uncertainty principle. From the solutions, it turns out to be that a particle can be in a bound state in a well with any dimensions, in particular, with the size much smaller than the wavelength of the particle itself,
Despite Dirac himself proposed a system of linear first-degree relativistic equations in the matrix representation that described the system with spin
The reason for the failure of these theories is quite simple—it is in the ignoring of the dependence of the interaction energy with the field on the velocity of the particle. The generalized momentum of the system, the particle plus the external field, is the sum of the relativistic expression for the mechanical momentum of the particle and the field momentum in the case of interaction with the immobile particle
which is not an invariant representation of the particle velocity. To construct some invariant from such a representation, an ‘invariant’ relation was used in all cases in the form of a difference between the generalized momentum of the system and the field momentum in the case of interaction with the immobile particle
Obviously, the permutation of the components of the generalized momentum for the construction of the invariant does not solve the posed problem. The statement that the expression (20) is the mechanical momentum of a particle and therefore is an invariant is unproven and it is necessary to apprehend the formula (20) as an empirical. Therefore, at high velocities or strong interactions, an unaccounted dependence of the energy of particle interaction with the field on the velocity of the particle motion, which results to the erroneous results or the impossibility of calculations.
In [26], an invariant representation of the generalized momentum of the system was suggested, where the dependence of the interaction energy of the particle with the field on the velocity was taken into account:
which is the four-dimensional representation of the generalized momentum of the system based on the expression for the generalized momentum of an immobile particle in a state of rest
whose invariant is always equal to the expression (19) regardless of the state of the system.
The application of variational principles to construct the relativistic and quantum theory was based on the principles of construction the mechanics with the help of the Lagrangian of the system [27], which originally was not intended for relativistic approaches. The Lagrangian construction is parametric with the one time variable τ = ct, singled out from the variables of the four-dimensional space (the rest are represented by the dependence on this variable τ) and contains the total differential with respect to this variable, the velocity of the particle. Such a construction is unacceptable because of the impossibility to apply the principle of invariance of the representation of variables and the covariant representation of the action of the system.
In [28], to construct the relativistic theory on the basis of variational principles, the canonical (non- parametric) solutions of the variational problem for canonically defined integral functionals have been considered and the canonical solutions of the variational problems of mechanics in the Minkowski spaces are written. Because of unifying the variational principles of least action, flow, and hyperflow, the canonically invariant equations for the generalized momentum are obtained. From these equations, the expressions for the action function and the wave function are obtained as the general solution of the unified variational problem of mechanics.
Below, we present the generalized invariance principle and the corresponding representation of the generalized momentum of the system, the equations of relativistic and quantum mechanics [29], give the solutions of the problems of charge motion in a constant electric field, the problems for a particle in a potential well and the passage of a particle through a potential barrier, the problems of motion in an exponential field (Morse), the problems of charged particle in a magnetic field, and also the problems of a hydrogen atom are given.
The principle of invariance of the representation of a generalized pulse is applicable also in the case of motion of a particle with the velocity
The four-dimensional momentum of a particle
This is the property of invariance of the representation of the four-dimensional momentum
If to consider the representation of the four-dimensional momentum of an immobile particle with a mass
This is a property of invariance of the representation of the four-dimensional momentum
For an invariant of the system
At
Thus, the generalized momentum of a particle has an invariant representation on the particle velocity
If a charged particle is in an external electromagnetic field with potentials
The fact that the interaction of a charged particle with a field depends on the speed of motion is evidently represented in the formula for the Liénard-Wiechert potential [8].
More clearly, this can be demonstrated by an example of the Doppler effect for two atoms in the field of a resonant radiation, when one of the atoms is at rest and the other moves with the velocity
Two atoms in the field of a resonant radiation.
The atom, which is at rest, absorbs a photon, and the moving one does not absorb or interacts weakly with the field, because of the dependence of the interaction on the velocity of the atom. It is also known that the acting field for an atom moving with the velocity v corresponds to the interaction with the field moving with the velocity
Thus, for a moving charge, the effective values of the potentials
If one represents the generalized momentum of the particle in the form
where
The expression (30) can be represented in the form
or
This transformation can be presents in matrices form
where a Lorentz transformation have a form
The matrices of the invariant representation of a four-dimensional vector, which preserve the vector module in four-dimensional space, form the Poincare group (inhomogeneous Lorentz group). In addition to displacements and rotations, the group contains space-time reflection representations
For the module
which is the four-dimensional representation of the generalized momentum of the system on the basis of the expression of the generalized momentum of a particle in the state of rest
whose invariant is defined by the expression (30).
Thus, the generalized momentum of the particle in an external field is not only invariant relative to the transformations at the transition from one reference system to another but also has an invariant representation in terms of the velocity of motion of the particle (30); at each point of space, the value of the invariant
Let us generalize this result to the case of representation of the generalized momentum of any systems and interactions, arguing that, regardless of the state (the motion) of the system, the generalized four-dimensional momentum always has an invariant representation
where ε и p are the energy and momentum of the system, respectively, and the invariant is determined by the modulus of sum of the components of the generalized momentum of the system
Let us represent the expression for the invariant
and divide it by
that is, we obtain the formula for the correspondence between the energy of the system
For example, the potential energy
Note, whatever is the dependence of the potential
Many well-known expressions of the potential energy of interaction with attractive fields have a repulsive component in the form of half the square of these attractive potentials—Kratzer [30], Lennard-Jones [31], Morse [32], Rosen [33] and others. Expression (41) justifies this approach, which until now is phenomenological or the result of an appropriate selection for agreement with experimental data.
The Hamiltonian
Let us use the parametric representation of the Hamilton action in the form [28].
where ds is the four-dimensional interval and
The functional that takes into account the condition of the invariant representation of the generalized momentum
where
where the four-dimensional momentum is represented in the form
Thus, the action is represented in the form
and the canonical Lagrangian of the system is given by
The correctness of the presented parametrization is confirmed by the obtained expressions for the generalized momentum and energy from the Lagrangian of the system in the form
which coincide with the initial representations of the generalized momentum and energy. Accordingly, the Lagrange equation of motion takes the form
If we multiply Eq. (50) by
If the invariant is clearly independent of time, then the energy ε is conserved and the equation of motion is represented in the form of the Newtonian equation
For a particle in an external field we have
Using the explicit form of the generalized momentum (32) with the accuracy of the expansion to the power of
where the velocity-dependent components of the force are present. In particular, the velocity-dependent force is present in the Faraday law of electromagnetic induction [34], which is absent in the traditional expression for the Lorentz force.
The Hamilton-Jacobi equation is represented in the form
and it reflects the invariance of the representation of the generalized momentum. The well-known representations of the Hamilton-Jacobi Eq. (8) also contain the differential forms of potentials—the components of the electric and the magnetic fields.
Let us consider the motion of a charged particle with the mass m and charge
Let us represent the action
where
We find the solution from the condition
or
The well-known solution in the framework of the traditional theory [8] is the following:
In the ultrarelativistic limit
Dependence of the flight time of the gap between the electrodes on the applied voltage according to the
The electron velocity
Let us consider the motion of an electron with the mass m and charge
Choosing the polar coordinates
Let us represent the action
where
We find trajectories from the condition
which results in the solution
The coefficient of the repulsive effective potential is essentially positive, that is,
The secular precession is found from the condition
whence, we obtain
that has the opposite sign as compared with the solution in [8]. The reason for the discrepancy of the sign is the unaccounted interaction of the self-momentum with the rotating field, that is, the spin-orbit interaction.
Using the principle of the invariant representation of the generalized momentum
it is possible to compose the corresponding equation of the relativistic quantum mechanics by representing the energy and momentum variables by the corresponding operators
and
The case of conservative systems, when any energy losses or sources in space are absent, corresponds to the relation
For the charged particle in an external field with an invariant in the form of (30), the equations will take the form
For stationary states we obtain
Rewriting the equations taking into account the formulas of the classical correspondence (40), we will obtain the equations for the wave function in the traditional representation
the first of which formally coincides with the Schrödinger equation for the wave function of stationary states.
For the action function S associated with the wave function by the representation
which represents the exact classical correspondence instead of the quasiclassical approximation [12]. Note, the equations similar to (78) also follow from the Eq. (46) in [12] if we demand for an exact correspondence and equate to zero the real and imaginary parts.
Let us consider the particle of mass
From the first equation of system (70) we have
Then,
where
In the three-dimensional case, the bound state with the energy
The solution of this simple example is fundamental and accurately represents the uncertainty principle
Let us consider the problem of penetration of a particle through the rectangular potential barrier [23] with the height
and at
where
For the problem of the passage of a particle with energy
and if the particle energy does not exceed the potential barrier, then the transmission coefficient is zero, regardless of the height of the barrier and not have. In this case, there is no contradiction similar to the Klein paradox.
The vector potential of a uniform magnetic field
where
In this form, the Eq. (87) does not have a finite solution depending on the variable
Or
From (89) we have for the energy levels
where
If an electron is excited by a magnetic field from a state of rest, then
or
From (92) for a magnetic flux quantum we have
We get the same results when solving the Hamilton-Jacobi equation.
We determine the energy levels for a particle moving in a field with a potential
According to (41), for the potential energy of interaction
The exponential potential of the field
Schrödinger equation takes the form
Following the procedure for solving Eq. (95) in [12], introducing a variable (taking values in the interval [0,
We get
Given the asymptotic behavior of function
equation of degenerate hypergeometric function (Kummer function).
A solution satisfying the finiteness condition for
In accordance with (96) and (99), we obtain values for energy levels
The dependence of the energy of particle
For the binding energy in the ground state
The dependence of the binding energy of the ground state
Because parameter
Dependency of function
The interaction constant
Dependency of function
We emphasize that despite the fact that the potential energy for a stationary particle
The dependency of the potential energy of the interaction of Morse
The motion of a charged particle in the Coulomb field can be described as a motion in the field of an atomic nucleus (without the spin and magnetic moment) with the potential energy
In spherical coordinates, Eq. (70) for the wave function takes the form
Separating the variables
and introducing the notations [12]
(only the positive root is taken for
where
The solution of Eq. (88) formally coincides with the well-known Fuse solution for the molecular Kratzer potential in the form
where the radial quantum number
For the ground state with the
without any restrictions for the value of
In this case, the obtained fine splitting is in no way connected with the spin-orbit interaction and is due to the relativistic dependence of the mass on the orbital and radial velocity of motion, which results to the splitting of the levels.
In the standard representation, the Dirac equations in compact notation for a particle have the form [21].
In addition, for the particle in an external field they can be represented in theorm
By writing the wave equations for the wave functions, we obtain
where we used the properties of the Pauli matrices. It is easy to verify that the functions
In the case of a stationary state, the standard representation of the wave Eq. (110) has the form
For a charge in a potential field with the central symmetry [23], we have
After substituting (96) into (95), we obtain
Let us represent the functions f and
where
Substituting (116) into the Eq. (117), for the sum and difference of the equations we have
Close to
Then
Forming equations of the second order and solving with respect to
With allowance for (121), the solution of these equations is
where
From expressions (117), we obtain
where
and taking into account the obtained values of χ, we finally have
where the principal quantum number
without any limitations for the value of
In the resulting formula (126), the order of sequence of the fine splitting levels is inverse relative to the order of sequence in the well-known Sommerfeld-Dirac formula. If to compare the expansions in a series in the degree of the fine-structure constant of two formulas
then the difference will be equal to
where the last term is the expression for the spin-orbit interaction energy. Thus, to obtain the true value of the energy levels of the hydrogen atom, it is necessary to add the energy of the spin-orbit interaction in formula (126) in the form (130). This is completely justified, because such an interaction was not initially included in Eq. (115) and was not reflected in the final result.
The principle of invariance is generalized and the corresponding representation of the generalized momentum of the system is proposed; the equations of relativistic and quantum mechanics are proposed, which are devoid of the above-mentioned shortcomings and contradictions. The equations have solutions for any values of the interaction constant of the particle with the field, for example, in the problem of a hydrogen-like atom, when the atomic number of the nucleus Z > 137. The equations are applicable for different types of particles and interactions.
Based on the parametric representation of the action and the canonical equations, the corresponding relativistic mechanics based on the canonical Lagrangian is constructed and the equations of motion and expression are derived for the force acting on the charge moving in an external electromagnetic field.
The matrix representation of equations of the characteristics for the action function and the wave function results in the Dirac equation with the correct enabling of the interaction. In this form, the solutions of the Dirac equations are not restricted by the value of the interaction constant and have a spinor representation by scalar solutions of the equations for the action function and the wave function.
The analysis of the solutions shows the full compliance with the principles of the relativistic and quantum mechanics, and the solutions are devoid of any restrictions on the nature and magnitude of the interactions.
The theory of spin fields and equations for spin systems will be described in subsequent works.
The paranasal sinuses develop via evagination into the spongy bone between the external and internal plates of the cranial and facial bones [1]. Therefore, the lining of each sinus comprises of respiratory epithelium. With the exception of the lacrimal and palatine sinuses which are diverticula of the maxillary sinus, each sinus has a direct opening into the nasal cavity. One of the largest problems with sinuses is inflammation, which can be caused by numerous problems including infection and structural abnormalities, and in itself can cause pain and increased infections. Unfortunately, when inflammation occurs, the mucous membrane swells and closes the aperture, this blocks normal sinus drainage [1]. This condition may require surgical drainage. The extensive sinus system possesses considerable clinical interest, especially as it is susceptible to infection that may spread from the nose or from an alveolar abscess [2, 3]. The paranasal sinuses of sheep include the frontal, maxillary, ethmoidal, lacrimal and palatine sinuses. Ovine sinuses differ slightly to cattle, including buffalo, which have frontal, maxillary, sphenoidal, ethmoidal, lacrimal and palatine sinuses [3, 4, 5]. Camels are somewhat similar to cattle with frontal, maxillary, sphenoidal, ethmoidal, and lacrimal sinuses [6] with an additional palatine sinus [7, 8, 9]. However, in equids, three paranasal sinuses have been recorded: the frontal, maxillary and sphenopalatine [10, 11, 12]. Computed tomography of equine, ruminant and camel heads has enabled production of detailed cross-sectional images of structures and cavities such as the brain case, paranasal sinuses and nasal cavity whilst ensuring that other anatomical structures are not superimposed [4, 6, 11, 12].
The frontal sinus is an air-filled space which occupies the two cortical layers of the frontal bone, the dorsal part of the skull, medial and dorsal to the orbital cavity. It superimposes both the cranial and nasal cavities. The sinus divides into left and right sinuses using a complete median bony interfrontal septum.
In the horse and donkey (Figures 1–3), the frontal sinus lies close to the dorsal nasal concha that forms the conchofrontal sinus in horse and donkey (Figure 1). The interior of the sinus cavity is incompletely divided by several bony spicules [11]. There is a convexity which exists on the floor of the frontal sinus due to the presence of the underlying ethmoidal labyrinth (Figures 1 and 3). It communicates directly with the caudal maxillary sinus by a large oval frontomaxillary opening, there is no frontomaxillary opening in any other domestic animal except in equines [1]. This opening is at the level of the caudal third of second molar tooth and extends caudally by 2–3 cm to the last molar tooth on the lateral floor of the conchofrontal sinus (Figure 1, see label 15) [11, 13].
Topography of frontal and maxillary sinuses in the donkey skull. 1. Nasoincisive notch. 2. Medial angle of the eye. 3. Supraorbital foramen. 4. Caudal border of supraorbital process. 5. Zygomatic arch. 6. Midline of skull. 7. Facial crest. 8. The end of facial crest. 9. Frontal bone. 10. Nasal bone. 11. Orbit. 12. Frontal sinus. 13. Frontal septum between right and left frontal sinuses. 14. Lateral compartment of caudal maxillary sinus. 15. Frontomaxillary opening. 16. Rostral maxillary sinus. 17. Medial compartment of caudal maxillary sinus. 18. Maxillary septum between rostral and caudal maxillary sinuses. 19. Infraorbital foramen. 20. Infraorbital canal. 21. Nasomaxillary opening. 22. Conchomaxillary opening. 23. Maxillary bone. 24. Dotted line indicated the caudal approach line of conchofrontal sinus. 25. Dotted line indicated the rostral approach line of conchofrontal sinus. 26. 2nd maxillary molar tooth. 27. 3rd maxillary molar tooth. 28. Site of approach of caudal maxillary sinus. 29. Site of approach of rostral maxillary sinus. 30. Dorsal Conchal sinus. 31. The lateral segment connected the lateral extent of the caudal and rostral lines. 32. Bulla of ventral nasal Conchal sinus (opened). 33. Bony plate. A, B) 5 year old donkeys, C&D) 12 year old donkeys. Reproduced with permission [
Sagittal sections of the donkey head. 1. Frontal sinus. 2. Dorsal Conchal sinus. 3. Ventral Conchal sinus. 4. Middle Conchal sinus. 5. Sphenopalatine sinus. 6. Ethmoidal turbinate. 7. Bulla of the dorsal nasal concha. 8. Bulla of the ventral nasal concha. 9. Septum of ventral nasal concha. 10. Septum of dorsal nasal concha. 11. Straight fold. 12. Alar fold. 13. Basal fold. 14. Dorsal nasal meatus. 15. Middle nasal meatus. 16. Ventral nasal meatus. 17. Hard palate. 18. Soft palate. 19. Frontal bone. 20. Nasal bone. 21. Pharynx. 22. Frontomaxillary opening. 23. Infraorbital nerve. 24. Maxillary bone. 25. Bulla of ventral nasal Conchal sinus. 26. Conchomaxillary opening. 27. Nasomaxillary opening. 28. Lateral part of caudal maxillary sinus. 28′. Medial part of caudal maxillary sinus. 29. Rostral maxillary sinus. 30. Maxillary septum. 31. Infraorbital canal. 32. Nasolacrimal duct. 33. Sphenopalatine opening. 34. Frontal septum. 35. Opening of middle nasal Conchal sinus into caudal maxillary sinus. 36.1st maxillary premolar tooth; 37. Second maxillary premolar. 38. 3rd maxillary premolar. 39. 1st maxillary molar tooth. 40. 2nd maxillary molar tooth. 41. 3rd maxillary molar tooth. 42. Facial crest. Reproduced with permission [
Sinus anatomy in the donkey. (A) Lateral CT scan shows the levels of the section and paranasal sinus. (B) CT at the level of the second cheek tooth maxillary sinus and frontal sinus. (C) Cross section at head) showing the frontal sinus (F). Maxillary sinus (M). Sphenopalatine sinus (SP). Adapted with permission [
In cattle and buffalo, the frontal sinus extends rostrally to the level of the middle of the third molar tooth at the level of rostral half of orbital rim, which is represented by the nasofrontal suture in the macerated skull. The caudal boundary of the sinus is the nuchal line of occipital bone. The sinus extends laterally to the medial boundary of the orbital rim and temporal line. In turn the cranial cavity bulges into the central part of the frontal sinus. The sinus cavity is subdivided into several compartments; these vary in size and differ in position between differing animals and also from left and right sinus [4]. The frontal sinus cavity is divided by an oblique transverse septum creating the rostral and caudal sinuses. The rostral sinus is subdivided into several small lateral, medial and intermediate compartments by the presence of two irregular oblique longitudinal and transverse septa. The rostral sinus compartments all communicate separately with the ethmoidal meatus and rostrally with the dorsal nasal sinus via a nasofrontal opening [4]. One part of the dorsal nasal concha projects caudally between the medial and intermediate rostral sinuses, in addition the lateral rostral sinus is separated by a thin septum from the lacrimal sinus. The caudal sinus is subdivided into the large caudolateral and small rostromedial sinuses by an incomplete oblique transverse septum, the two latter are also able to communicate with each other. An oblique frontal transverse septum divides the caudolateral sinus into two sub-compartments, of which the caudolateral part is separated from nuchal diverticulum by an oblique transverse septum. The caudolateral sinus cavity has three diverticula: the nuchal, cornual and postorbital diverticula. The nuchal diverticulum is more extensive due to the well-developed parietal bone, and is itself subdivided into four sub-compartments. The cornual diverticulum extends into the cornual process of the frontal bone, and is subdivided by a septum [2]. The postorbital diverticulum is located medially, caudal to the orbital cavity, and dorsal to the cranial cavity, and occupies the space between the orbital cavity and rostral frontal small compartments. The relatively short supraorbital canal passes through the lateral border of the caudal frontal sinus through an apparently bony septum. The caudal frontal sinus opens up in the ethmoidal meatus (Figures 4–6).
Topography of the frontal and maxillary sinuses of the buffalo head (a& B). 1. Supraorbital foramen. 2. Medial angle of the eye. 3. Cornual process. 4. Infraorbital foramen. A. Medial limit of frontal sinus (Medline of the head). B. Lateral limit of frontal sinus. C. Rostral limit of frontal sinus. D. Caudal limit of frontal sinus. E. Rostral limit of maxillary sinus. F. Dorsal limit of maxillary sinus. G. Ventral limit of maxillary sinus. H. Caudal limit of maxillary sinus.
Frontal surface of sheep (a) and buffalo (B) skulls showing the frontal sinuses. 1. Median interfrontal septum. 2. Parietal bone. 3. Nasal bone. 4. Cornual process of the frontal bone. 5. Postorbital diverticulum of the frontal sinus. 6. Cornual diverticulum of the frontal sinus. 7. Nuchal diverticulum of the frontal sinus. 8. Cornual septum. 9. Orbital cavity.
Lateral CT scan shows the levels of the section and paranasal sinus in the buffalo. F. frontal sinus. C.D. Cornual diverticulum of frontal sinus. P. Palatine sinus. M. Maxillary sinus. L. Lacrimal sinus.
In the camel, each frontal sinus is subdivided by bony plates into six large compartments; two caudal, two lateral and two rostral, surrounding eight small compartments that communicate with the nasal fundus through small openings. The supraorbital canal is traverse to the large caudolateral compartment where the supraorbital foramen is present (Figure 7) [6].
Frontal surface of the camel skull showing the frontal sinuses.
In sheep and goats, each frontal sinus is subdivided into interconnected lateral and medial chambers, differing in size, by many bony plates. The medial chamber has only one elongated chamber, which contains no bony plates, communicating only with the middle part of the lateral chamber. Meanwhile the lateral chamber has three portions rostral, middle and caudal, and three diverticula nuchal, cornual and orbital [14]. The dorsal part of the lateral chamber communicates with the dorsal conchal sinus, the middle part communicates with the medial chamber and its caudal part communicates with the three frontal diverticula. The cornual diverticulum is the largest diverticula and is itself divided into a small dorsal part and a large ventral part by an oblique transverse septum [14]. The orbital diverticulum is surrounded by the orbital cavity dorsally and caudally, however, the nuchal diverticulum is the smallest one. The supraorbital canal meanwhile is a short canal, located at the longitudinal interfrontal septum between the lateral chamber and orbital diverticulum of each frontal sinus (Figure 5).
In the dog and cat, the paired frontal sinuses have open communication with the nasal cavity. The rostral frontal sinus lies between the median osseous septum of the frontal sinus and the orbit. The lateral frontal sinus is the largest of the frontal sinuses and extends into the zygomatic process of the frontal bone. The medial frontal sinus is very small and lies between the other two, occasionally it is absent.
In the horse and donkey, the maxillary sinus divides into rostral and caudal compartments via a thin incomplete bony septum in the donkey or a complete septum in horse. The dorsal part of the septum was designed by the bulla of the ventral conchal sinus. This septum angles obliquely caudally and its rostral aspect is varied in with regards to location; it usually crosses the roots of the second and third molar teeth, approximately 4–5 cm caudal to the rostral end of the facial crest. Most specimens have a septum measuring around 1.5 cm high, whilst the sinus can be 4–5 cm deep with bony spicules [11]. The caudal maxillary sinus is incompletely divided by the infraorbital canal into lateral and medial compartments. The canal also facilitates free communication between the two parts. Only the third maxillary molar tooth root embeds in the caudal maxillary sinus. The rostral and caudal maxillary sinuses connect with the middle nasal meatus via a slit-like nasomaxillary opening. The capacious caudal maxillary sinus appears larger than the smaller rostral maxillary sinus. The rostral maxillary sinus communicates with the ventral conchal sinus via the wide conchomaxillary opening dorsal to the infraorbital canal. The opening of which located at the level of the rostral part of the first molar tooth until the caudal part of the second molar tooth. The rostral maxillary sinus is around 4–5 cm long and 0.3–0.4 cm wide (Figures 1–3) [11, 13]. When CT imaged, the maxillary sinus is low in density but has high-density structures; the infraorbital canal, maxillary septum and bony spicules.
In cattle and buffalo, the maxillary sinus excavates into the maxillary and lacrimal bones. The sinus cavity is triangular in shape as the base is located caudally with a cranial apex behind the infraorbital foramen. The cavity extends rostrally towards the facial tuberosity at the level of the caudal border of the second premolar tooth. Around 2-3 cm ventral to the orbit and caudal to third molar tooth, the sinus continues caudally into the lacrimal bulla which has thinner walls and the zygomatic bone [4]. The dorsal limit of the cavity is determined by a line extending from the infraorbital foramen to the medial canthus of eye, while the ventral limit is around 1–2 cm above the alveolar border. Under computed tomography imaging, the more dense infraorbital canal and bony spicules of the maxillary sinus are observed. The maxillary sinus communicates with the caudal part of middle nasal meatus in common with the palatine sinuses through the nasomaxillary opening. This opening is positioned on the medial wall just ventral to the nasolacrimal canal, over the infraorbital canal and at around the midpoint between the orbit and facial tuber at a level from the first molar to third molar teeth. The maxillary and palatine sinuses communicate through an oval maxillopalatine opening, located above the infraorbital opening at a level from second premolar to the second molar teeth [4]. Caudally, it also communicates with the lacrimal sinus through maxillolacrimal opening. There is a rostral crest within the maxillary sinus (Figure 4).
In camels, the maxillary sinus is in an excavation of a small part of the maxillary bone and the rostral part of the zygomatic bone. The maxillary sinus extends towards the level of the rostral border of the third upper cheek tooth. The medial boundary is formed by the osseous nasolacrimal canal and it communicates dorsally with the lacrimal sinus and with the caudal part of the middle nasal meatus via the nasomaxillary opening which in turn is partly covered by the lateral part of the dorsal conchal sinus [6].
In sheep and goats, the maxillary sinus is located in a triangular excavation of the maxillary bone and rostral part of the zygomatic bone. The sinus extends to the level of the rostral border of the third upper cheek tooth and rostral to the facial tuberosity. The sinus is incompletely separated by the infraorbital canal, therefore presenting as a smaller dorsomedial part and a larger ventrolateral part, [14]. Caudally, the sinus become larger and extends by the lacrimal bulla. This lacrimal bulla presents as dorsal and ventral orbital diverticula inside the orbital cavity. The sinus communicates dorsally with the lacrimal sinus by the maxillolacrimal opening, whilst the caudal section of the sinus communicates with the palatine sinus via the maxillopalatine opening on the medial side of the infraorbital canal. In addition, the sinus communicates with the caudal part of the middle nasal meatus via the nasomaxillary opening which is partially covered by the lateral part of the dorsal nasal conchal sinus at the level of the fourth cheek tooth (Figure 5) [14].
In the dog and cat, in contrast to the other domestic mammals, the canine maxilla has no paranasal sinus, but rather a laterally directed outpouching, the maxillary recess.
In the horse and donkey, the sphenoidal and palatine sinuses communicate with each other. The sphenopalatine sinuses are excavated into the palatine and sphenoid bones ventromedial to the orbit and ventral to forebrain [11]. There is a septum separating the left and right sphenoidal sinuses, however, it is not frequently in the midline. The dorsal and lateral walls of the sphenopalatine sinus are thin. The sinus communicates with the caudal maxillary sinus via the sphenopalatinal opening, which is the most caudal opening of the maxillary sinus. The opening itself appears sagittal oblique and is located between the caudal origin of the infraorbital canal and the pterygopalatine fossa, caudal to the last molar tooth roots (Figure 2 structures 5 and 33 [13]).
In cattle and buffalo, the sphenoid sinus is shallow and excavated in the body and wing of the sphenoid bone [4]. The right and left sinuses are divided by a septum forming unequal small parts, the rostral canal and caudal cavity. It opens into the ethmoidal meatus via the nasosphenoidal opening.
In camels, the sphenoidal sinus is in a cavity within the body and wing of the sphenoidal bone. The sinus contains bony plates which subdivide it into small compartments, which alongside the frontal sinus compartments encircle the cranial cavity [6]. The sphenoidal sinus opens directly into the nasal fundus through the nasosphenoidal opening [6].
In the dog and cat, in some cases a sphenoidal sinus develops but not always.
In cattle and buffalo, the ethmoidal cells are small cavities in the medial wall of the orbit [4]. The ethmoid bone forms the medial wall whereas their lateral walls are formed by the frontal, palatine and the wing of presphenoid bones. The ethmoidal cells open into the ethmoidal meatus.
In camels, the ethmoidal sinus is apparent in the ethmoid labyrinths. It communicates directly with the ethmoidal meatus into the nasal fundus [6].
In sheep and goats, the ethmoidal sinus is located at the nasal fundus part of the nasal cavity [14]. The ethmoidal sinus is apparent in the five triangular projections of the ethmoidal labyrinths. It communicates directly with the ethmoidal meatus into the nasal fundus.
In cattle and buffalo, the lacrimal sinus is a small excavation in the lacrimal and frontal bones rostromedial to the orbit. The lacrimal bones forms the lateral wall and the lateral mass of the ethmoidal bone forms the medial wall. The sinus cavity is not divided by osseous plates and the nasolacrimal canal traverses its lateral wall. It communicates with the maxillary sinus via maxillolacrimal opening (Figures 5 and 6).
In camels, the lacrimal sinus is occupies a small cavity in the lacrimal bone rostromedial to the orbit. The lacrimal bone forms the lateral wall, while the lateral mass of the ethmoidal bone forms the medial wall. The lacrimal sinus is separated rostrally from the maxillary sinus by the nasolacrimal canal and it communicates with the maxillary sinus via the maxillolacrimal opening, just anterior to the orbital cavity at the level of third cheek tooth [6].
In sheep and goats, the lacrimal sinus is occupies a small cavity in the lacrimal bone rostromedial to the orbit. The lateral wall is formed by the lacrimal bone, while the medial wall is formed by the lateral border of the dorsal lamellae of the ventral nasal conchae [14]. It is separated rostrally from the maxillary sinus by the nasolacrimal canal and communicates with the maxillary sinus via the maxillolacrimal opening just anterior to the orbital cavity at the level of the third cheek tooth (Figure 5).
In cattle and buffalo, the palatine sinus appears larger than the maxillary sinus and is located within the horizontal part of the palatine bone and the palatine process of maxillary bone. The right and left palatine sinuses are separated by a median interpalatine septum, which is undulant caudally. The sinus extends from the caudal border of the palatine bone and rostral border of the orbit roughly 2 cm caudal to the third molar tooth to around 3–4 cm rostral to the first premolar teeth [4]. The sinus cavity contains an incomplete transverse bony crest which arises from the floor of sinus and subdivides the sinus into two unequal compartments. The caudal part of the sinus is traversed obliquely by the infraorbital canal that divides it into medial and lateral compartments. The palatine sinus communicates with the maxillary sinus via a maxillopalatine opening over the infraorbital canal (Figure 6).
In sheep and goats, the palatine sinuses are located within the horizontal part of the palatine bone and the palatine process of the maxillary bone, and it is the smallest sinus. The right and left palatine sinuses are separated by a median inter-palatine septum [14]. The sinus extends from the caudal border of the palatine bone and rostral border of the orbit caudal to the third molar tooth. The palatine sinus communicates with the maxillary sinus by the maxillopalatine opening over the infraorbital canal (Table 1) [3].
Horse and donkey | Cattle/buffalo | Sheep and goat | Camel | Dog | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Maxillary | + | + | + | + | Recess |
Frontal | + | + | + | + | + |
Lacrimal | — | + | + | + | — |
Palatine | — | + | + | + | — |
Sphenoid | — | + | — | — | — |
Sphenopalatine | + | — | — | — | — |
The paranasal sinuses in a range of mammals.
+ Present. -Absent.
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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These difficulties lead to a disruption of social interaction, which might be one of the obstacles to speech-language intervention in these children. The text is based on an originally developed testing material aimed at selected pragmatic-oriented communication situations relating to everyday activities and real life. Based on a comparison of domestic and international resources in this area, as well as mediated and own empirical experience, our assessment approach is based on the conclusion that pragmatics can be understood in different contexts and perspectives. The text presents the results of a partial survey comparing the performance of children with ASD and children with typical development. The assessment focused on the children’s election of the correct picture of a pair of pictures that represent usual communication and social situations. The results of the research suggest fewer incorrect responses in children with ASD and in different areas compared with children with typical development. However, the results of a qualitative analysis indicate a necessity to expand the assessment of communication pragmatics by adding an individually specific qualitative analysis of children’s performance.",book:{id:"5957",slug:"advances-in-speech-language-pathology",title:"Advances in Speech-language Pathology",fullTitle:"Advances in Speech-language Pathology"},signatures:"Kateřina Vitásková and Lucie Kytnarová",authors:[{id:"203061",title:"Associate Prof.",name:"Kateřina",middleName:null,surname:"Vitásková",slug:"katerina-vitaskova",fullName:"Kateřina Vitásková"},{id:"212035",title:"MSc.",name:"Lucie",middleName:null,surname:"Kytnarová",slug:"lucie-kytnarova",fullName:"Lucie Kytnarová"}]}],mostDownloadedChaptersLast30Days:[{id:"73271",title:"Social Media and Its Effects on Beauty",slug:"social-media-and-its-effects-on-beauty",totalDownloads:3075,totalCrossrefCites:0,totalDimensionsCites:1,abstract:"Beauty is concerned with physical and mental health as both are intimately related. Short-term decisions to alter one’s body structure irrespective of genetic, environmental, occupational and nutritional needs can leave medium- and long-term effects. This chapter analyzes the role of social media and its effects on the standards of beauty. The researchers have summarized the literature on how social media plays a role in affecting beauty trends, body image and self-esteem concerns. There is support that social media affects individuals negatively, in pushing them to engage in life threatening beauty trends due to social compliance and acceptance in society. The aim was to review social networking sites’ impact on perception of standards of beauty and newer unrealistic trends gaining popularity that could alter opinions and also cause harm to individuals in the long run. This is an emerging area of research that is of high importance to the physical and mental health in the beauty, health and hospitality industry with the latter being manifested in depression, anxiety and fear of non-acceptability and being seen as a social gauche.",book:{id:"7811",slug:"beauty-cosmetic-science-cultural-issues-and-creative-developments",title:"Beauty",fullTitle:"Beauty - Cosmetic Science, Cultural Issues and Creative Developments"},signatures:"Mavis Henriques and Debasis Patnaik",authors:[{id:"320016",title:"Ph.D. Student",name:"Mavis",middleName:"Lilian",surname:"Henriques",slug:"mavis-henriques",fullName:"Mavis Henriques"},{id:"320978",title:"Dr.",name:"Debasis",middleName:null,surname:"Patnaik",slug:"debasis-patnaik",fullName:"Debasis Patnaik"}]},{id:"60564",title:"Ageing Process and Physiological Changes",slug:"ageing-process-and-physiological-changes",totalDownloads:6995,totalCrossrefCites:19,totalDimensionsCites:33,abstract:"Ageing is a natural process. Everyone must undergo this phase of life at his or her own time and pace. In the broader sense, ageing reflects all the changes taking place over the course of life. These changes start from birth—one grows, develops and attains maturity. To the young, ageing is exciting. Middle age is the time when people notice the age-related changes like greying of hair, wrinkled skin and a fair amount of physical decline. Even the healthiest, aesthetically fit cannot escape these changes. Slow and steady physical impairment and functional disability are noticed resulting in increased dependency in the period of old age. According to World Health Organization, ageing is a course of biological reality which starts at conception and ends with death. It has its own dynamics, much beyond human control. However, this process of ageing is also subject to the constructions by which each society makes sense of old age. In most of the developed countries, the age of 60 is considered equivalent to retirement age and it is said to be the beginning of old age. 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Traditional counseling involves a broad perspective that enhances learning for transformation and integration of sociocultural values that are peculiar to each human society. A cursory review of the literature suggests that the concept of traditional counseling is rooted in traditional systems of knowledge and sociocultural customs and practices, and it promotes a collective approach to problem identification, resolution, and management. The traditional counseling process centers on four aspects: traditional counselor, client, family, and community. The key elements that inform the theoretical framework of traditional counseling from an African perspective are: cultural context, collective belief system, and initiation rituals Traditional systems of knowledge deemed essential for each generation are passed on successively to the next generation by elderly people who do not only have the necessary wisdom and experience, but are also adorned with social competences and skills.",book:{id:"9136",slug:"counseling-and-therapy",title:"Counseling and Therapy",fullTitle:"Counseling and Therapy"},signatures:"Hector Chiboola",authors:[{id:"314172",title:"Prof.",name:"Hector",middleName:null,surname:"Chiboola",slug:"hector-chiboola",fullName:"Hector Chiboola"}]},{id:"55388",title:"Beauty, Body Image, and the Media",slug:"beauty-body-image-and-the-media",totalDownloads:7764,totalCrossrefCites:5,totalDimensionsCites:12,abstract:"This chapter analyses the role of the mass media in people’s perceptions of beauty. We summarize the research literature on the mass media, both traditional media and online social media, and how they appear to interact with psychological factors to impact appearance concerns and body image disturbances. There is a strong support for the idea that traditional forms of media (e.g. magazines and music videos) affect perceptions of beauty and appearance concerns by leading women to internalize a very slender body type as ideal or beautiful. Rather than simply being passive recipients of unrealistic beauty ideals communicated to them via the media, a great number of individuals actually seek out idealized images in the media. Finally, we review what is known about the role of social media in impacting society’s perception of beauty and notions of idealized physical forms. Social media are more interactive than traditional media and the effects of self‐presentation strategies on perceptions of beauty have just begun to be studied. This is an emerging area of research that is of high relevance to researchers and clinicians interested in body image and appearance concerns.",book:{id:"5925",slug:"perception-of-beauty",title:"Perception of Beauty",fullTitle:"Perception of Beauty"},signatures:"Jennifer S. Mills, Amy Shannon and Jacqueline Hogue",authors:[{id:"202110",title:"Dr.",name:"Jennifer S.",middleName:null,surname:"Mills",slug:"jennifer-s.-mills",fullName:"Jennifer S. Mills"}]}],onlineFirstChaptersFilter:{topicId:"21",limit:6,offset:0},onlineFirstChaptersCollection:[{id:"82771",title:"Making Sense of a Biochemistry Learning Process and Teacher’s Empathy: Computer-Supported Collaborative Learning Using Emoji Symbols",slug:"making-sense-of-a-biochemistry-learning-process-and-teacher-s-empathy-computer-supported-collaborati",totalDownloads:6,totalDimensionsCites:null,doi:"10.5772/intechopen.105927",abstract:"Teaching biochemistry concepts can be a challenging task, as it requires learners and teachers to integrate abstract concepts from chemistry and biology. Students struggle to grasp the molecular processes, as they find it difficult to visualize them. Incorporating Information Communication Technology (ICT) implementations during lessons is known to encourage learners’ involvement in a collaborative learning process and is especially effective when training preservice teachers (PSTs). In the current study, we describe an example in which the teacher plays an important role in creating the Computer-Supported Collaborative Learning (CSCL) in this environment to encourage peer learning while coping with complicated material. We believe that one of the important components in guiding such peer work is the teacher’s ability to sense each group’s progress and to employ empathy in the classroom as a tool for coping with the difficulty and challenge of acquiring new knowledge and for creating a productive dialog between groups that disagree. In this example, the process of Information Communication Technology (ICT) implementation encouraged the preservice teachers (PSTs) to create an alternative set of symbols, which eventually served as a “language” and help them understand the biochemical processes.",book:{id:"11443",title:"Empathy - Advanced Research and Applications",coverURL:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/books/images_new/11443.jpg"},signatures:"Dana Sachyani and Ilana Ronen"},{id:"83099",title:"Values-Flow in Contextual Psychotherapy: The ‘What’, ‘Why’, and ‘How’ of Sustainable Values-Based Behaviour",slug:"values-flow-in-contextual-psychotherapy-the-what-why-and-how-of-sustainable-values-based-behaviour",totalDownloads:6,totalDimensionsCites:0,doi:"10.5772/intechopen.106594",abstract:"Flow - enjoyed and fully absorbed engagement in meaningful and contextually bounded activities - is widely underutilised in psychotherapy and mental health settings. Two gold standard therapies, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) and Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (DBT), while powerful and effective in many ways, would benefit from systematic models that move from initiating positive change to sustaining meaningful change. This chapter introduces ‘Values-Flow’ – an approach aimed at building commitment and sustainable engagement in psychotherapy and values-based behaviour in working adults struggling with sub-optimal functioning. We first introduce Values-Flow and describe how it may benefit psychotherapy skills practice in everyday life. Next, we discuss why Values-Flow is relevant and enhances the practice of ACT and DBT strategies, helping to sustain engagement and creative practice of values-based actions outside of sessions. We then describe the ‘Values-Flow’ framework, which incorporates VIVA (Virtue, Involve, Vital, Accepting) and ARIA (Attend, Reflect, Inform, Act) tools that develop commitment for values-based practice in daily life. We conclude with a case-example of how Values-Flow can build commitment and sustainable engagement in homework completion in psychotherapy.",book:{id:"11444",title:"Happiness - Biopsychosocial and Anthropological Perspectives",coverURL:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/books/images_new/11444.jpg"},signatures:"Cedomir Ignjatovic, Margaret L. Kern and Lindsay G. Oades"},{id:"83100",title:"Factors Affecting the Happiness of Korean University Students",slug:"factors-affecting-the-happiness-of-korean-university-students",totalDownloads:6,totalDimensionsCites:0,doi:"10.5772/intechopen.106296",abstract:"As of 2020, in Korea, as 72.5% of high-school graduates go on to college and college period has an impact on the social development of Korean youth, it is very important to increase the sense of happiness of college students. However, there are new terminologies to express the situation in which how young people in Korea feel the difficulties in their lives, such as “Hell Chosun, 88-Dollar-Generation, N-Give-up-Generation, and Spoon-Social-Rank.” This chapter summarizes the factors related to the happiness of college students in South Korea, such as depression, interpersonal relationships, and self-efficacy, to suggest educational programs to promote the happiness of young people in Korea.",book:{id:"11444",title:"Happiness - Biopsychosocial and Anthropological Perspectives",coverURL:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/books/images_new/11444.jpg"},signatures:"Soo-Koung Jun"},{id:"83107",title:"Helping BIPOC LGBTQIA+ Families Through Inclusive Therapy and Advocacy",slug:"helping-bipoc-lgbtqia-families-through-inclusive-therapy-and-advocacy",totalDownloads:3,totalDimensionsCites:0,doi:"10.5772/intechopen.106695",abstract:"Families are phenomenological and unique. All families are valuable, but historically, many family types have been underrepresented. Families with members who identify in the BIPOC LGBTQIA+ communities have historically been underrepresented and marginalized. Helping BIPOC LGBTQIA+ families involves both clinical work and advocacy. Advocacy for the professional identity of counseling, marriage and family therapy, and related helpers involves various aspects. These aspects include leadership theory and integration, importance of professional identity, the need to continue to infuse multiculturalism within the counseling and family therapy identities, and continued skills for counselors to learn inclusive advocacy. Skills and implications for advocacy as they relate to clients who intersect among the LGBTQAI+ and BIPOC communities, will be described.",book:{id:"11781",title:"Family Therapy - Recent Advances in Clinical and Crisis Settings",coverURL:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/books/images_new/11781.jpg"},signatures:"Lucy Parker-Barnes, Noel McKillip and Carolyn Powell"},{id:"83027",title:"Coping Strategies and Meta-Worry in Adolescents’ Adjustment during COVID-19 Pandemic",slug:"coping-strategies-and-meta-worry-in-adolescents-adjustment-during-covid-19-pandemic",totalDownloads:4,totalDimensionsCites:0,doi:"10.5772/intechopen.106258",abstract:"With the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, several limitations and stressful changes have been introduced in adolescent’s daily life. Particularly, Italian teenagers were the first among western populations to experience fears of infection, home confinement, and social restrictions due to a long lockdown period (10 weeks). This study explores the role of coping strategies (task-oriented, emotion-oriented, and avoidance coping) and meta-beliefs about worry as vulnerability factors associated with adolescents’ anxiety. A community sample of adolescents (N = 284, aged 16–18 y.o.) answered questionnaires assessing anxiety symptoms (RCMAS-2), meta-cognitive beliefs and processes about worry (MCQ-C), and coping strategies (CISS). Results show that 37% of participants report clinically elevated anxiety. Emotion-centered coping predicted higher anxiety, whereas task-centered coping resulted associated with decreased anxiety. Cognitive monitoring about their own worry contributes, but to a lesser extent, to higher levels of anxiety. The implications for the intervention are discussed, especially the need to enhance the coping skills of adolescents and mitigate the stress of the COVID-19 pandemic, which could last for a long time.",book:{id:"10671",title:"Adolescences",coverURL:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/books/images_new/10671.jpg"},signatures:"Loredana Benedetto, Ilenia Schipilliti and Massimo Ingrassia"},{id:"83023",title:"Gestational Tryptophan Fluctuation Underlying Ontogenetic Origin of Neuropsychiatric Disorders",slug:"gestational-tryptophan-fluctuation-underlying-ontogenetic-origin-of-neuropsychiatric-disorders",totalDownloads:5,totalDimensionsCites:0,doi:"10.5772/intechopen.106421",abstract:"Neuropsychiatry underlies personality development and social functioning. Borderline personality disorder exhibits high trait aggression and is associated with tryptophan hydroxylase polymorphisms. The acute tryptophan depletion reduces plasma and cerebrospinal fluid tryptophan availability and brain serotonin concentrations, leading to alterations in personality and trait-related behaviors. Tryptophan is essential for fatal neurodevelopment and immunomodulation in pregnancy. Gestational tryptophan fluctuation induced by maternal metabolic disorders or drug administrations may account for the maternal-fetal transmission determining neurogenesis and microbial development, consequentially shaping the long-standing patterns of thinking and behavior. However, it is not possible to assess the gestational tryptophan exposure effects on fetal brain and gastrointestinal system in humans for ethical reasons. The maternal–fetal microbe transmission in rodents during gestation, vaginal delivery, and breastfeeding is inevitable. Chicken embryo may be an alternative and evidence from the chicken embryo model reveals that gestational tryptophan fluctuation, i.e., exposed to excessive tryptophan or its metabolite, serotonin, attenuates aggressiveness and affects peer sociometric status. This chapter discusses the gestational tryptophan fluctuation as a risk factor of personality disorders in offspring and the prevention of personality disorders by dietary tryptophan control and medication therapy management during pregnancy.",book:{id:"11782",title:"Personality Traits - The Role in Psychopathology",coverURL:"https://cdn.intechopen.com/books/images_new/11782.jpg"},signatures:"Xiaohong Huang, Xiaohua Li and Heng-Wei Cheng"}],onlineFirstChaptersTotal:68},preDownload:{success:null,errors:{}},subscriptionForm:{success:null,errors:{}},aboutIntechopen:{},privacyPolicy:{},peerReviewing:{},howOpenAccessPublishingWithIntechopenWorks:{},sponsorshipBooks:{sponsorshipBooks:[],offset:8,limit:8,total:0},allSeries:{pteSeriesList:[{id:"14",title:"Artificial Intelligence",numberOfPublishedBooks:11,numberOfPublishedChapters:91,numberOfOpenTopics:6,numberOfUpcomingTopics:0,issn:"2633-1403",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.79920",isOpenForSubmission:!0},{id:"7",title:"Biomedical Engineering",numberOfPublishedBooks:12,numberOfPublishedChapters:108,numberOfOpenTopics:3,numberOfUpcomingTopics:0,issn:"2631-5343",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.71985",isOpenForSubmission:!0}],lsSeriesList:[{id:"11",title:"Biochemistry",numberOfPublishedBooks:33,numberOfPublishedChapters:333,numberOfOpenTopics:4,numberOfUpcomingTopics:0,issn:"2632-0983",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.72877",isOpenForSubmission:!0},{id:"25",title:"Environmental Sciences",numberOfPublishedBooks:1,numberOfPublishedChapters:19,numberOfOpenTopics:4,numberOfUpcomingTopics:0,issn:"2754-6713",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.100362",isOpenForSubmission:!0},{id:"10",title:"Physiology",numberOfPublishedBooks:14,numberOfPublishedChapters:145,numberOfOpenTopics:4,numberOfUpcomingTopics:0,issn:"2631-8261",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.72796",isOpenForSubmission:!0}],hsSeriesList:[{id:"3",title:"Dentistry",numberOfPublishedBooks:11,numberOfPublishedChapters:144,numberOfOpenTopics:2,numberOfUpcomingTopics:0,issn:"2631-6218",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.71199",isOpenForSubmission:!0},{id:"6",title:"Infectious Diseases",numberOfPublishedBooks:13,numberOfPublishedChapters:124,numberOfOpenTopics:4,numberOfUpcomingTopics:0,issn:"2631-6188",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.71852",isOpenForSubmission:!0},{id:"13",title:"Veterinary Medicine and Science",numberOfPublishedBooks:11,numberOfPublishedChapters:113,numberOfOpenTopics:3,numberOfUpcomingTopics:0,issn:"2632-0517",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.73681",isOpenForSubmission:!0}],sshSeriesList:[{id:"22",title:"Business, Management and Economics",numberOfPublishedBooks:1,numberOfPublishedChapters:23,numberOfOpenTopics:3,numberOfUpcomingTopics:0,issn:"2753-894X",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.100359",isOpenForSubmission:!0},{id:"23",title:"Education and Human Development",numberOfPublishedBooks:0,numberOfPublishedChapters:12,numberOfOpenTopics:1,numberOfUpcomingTopics:1,issn:null,doi:"10.5772/intechopen.100360",isOpenForSubmission:!0},{id:"24",title:"Sustainable Development",numberOfPublishedBooks:1,numberOfPublishedChapters:19,numberOfOpenTopics:5,numberOfUpcomingTopics:0,issn:"2753-6580",doi:"10.5772/intechopen.100361",isOpenForSubmission:!0}],testimonialsList:[{id:"13",text:"The collaboration with and support of the technical staff of IntechOpen is fantastic. 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He also obtained an MSc in Molecular and Genetic Medicine, and a Ph.D. in Clinical Immunology and Human Genetics from the University of Sheffield, UK. He also completed a short-term fellowship in Pediatric Clinical Immunology and Bone Marrow Transplantation at Newcastle General Hospital, England. Dr. Rezaei is a Full Professor of Immunology and Vice Dean of International Affairs and Research, at the School of Medicine, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, and the co-founder and head of the Research Center for Immunodeficiencies. He is also the founding president of the Universal Scientific Education and Research Network (USERN). Dr. Rezaei has directed more than 100 research projects and has designed and participated in several international collaborative projects. He is an editor, editorial assistant, or editorial board member of more than forty international journals. He has edited more than 50 international books, presented more than 500 lectures/posters in congresses/meetings, and published more than 1,100 scientific papers in international journals.",institutionString:"Tehran University of Medical Sciences",institution:{name:"Tehran University of Medical Sciences",country:{name:"Iran"}}},{id:"180733",title:"Dr.",name:"Jean",middleName:null,surname:"Engohang-Ndong",slug:"jean-engohang-ndong",fullName:"Jean Engohang-Ndong",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/180733/images/system/180733.png",biography:"Dr. Jean Engohang-Ndong was born and raised in Gabon. After obtaining his Associate Degree of Science at the University of Science and Technology of Masuku, Gabon, he continued his education in France where he obtained his BS, MS, and Ph.D. in Medical Microbiology. He worked as a post-doctoral fellow at the Public Health Research Institute (PHRI), Newark, NJ for four years before accepting a three-year faculty position at Brigham Young University-Hawaii. Dr. Engohang-Ndong is a tenured faculty member with the academic rank of Full Professor at Kent State University, Ohio, where he teaches a wide range of biological science courses and pursues his research in medical and environmental microbiology. Recently, he expanded his research interest to epidemiology and biostatistics of chronic diseases in Gabon.",institutionString:"Kent State University",institution:{name:"Kent State University",country:{name:"United States of America"}}},{id:"188773",title:"Prof.",name:"Emmanuel",middleName:null,surname:"Drouet",slug:"emmanuel-drouet",fullName:"Emmanuel Drouet",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/188773/images/system/188773.png",biography:"Emmanuel Drouet, PharmD, is a Professor of Virology at the Faculty of Pharmacy, the University Grenoble-Alpes, France. As a head scientist at the Institute of Structural Biology in Grenoble, Dr. Drouet’s research investigates persisting viruses in humans (RNA and DNA viruses) and the balance with our host immune system. He focuses on these viruses’ effects on humans (both their impact on pathology and their symbiotic relationships in humans). He has an excellent track record in the herpesvirus field, and his group is engaged in clinical research in the field of Epstein-Barr virus diseases. He is the editor of the online Encyclopedia of Environment and he coordinates the Universal Health Coverage education program for the BioHealth Computing Schools of the European Institute of Science.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Grenoble Alpes University",country:{name:"France"}}},{id:"131400",title:"Prof.",name:"Alfonso J.",middleName:null,surname:"Rodriguez-Morales",slug:"alfonso-j.-rodriguez-morales",fullName:"Alfonso J. Rodriguez-Morales",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/131400/images/system/131400.png",biography:"Dr. Rodriguez-Morales is an expert in tropical and emerging diseases, particularly zoonotic and vector-borne diseases (especially arboviral diseases). He is the president of the Travel Medicine Committee of the Pan-American Infectious Diseases Association (API), as well as the president of the Colombian Association of Infectious Diseases (ACIN). He is a member of the Committee on Tropical Medicine, Zoonoses, and Travel Medicine of ACIN. He is a vice-president of the Latin American Society for Travel Medicine (SLAMVI) and a Member of the Council of the International Society for Infectious Diseases (ISID). Since 2014, he has been recognized as a Senior Researcher, at the Ministry of Science of Colombia. He is a professor at the Faculty of Medicine of the Fundacion Universitaria Autonoma de las Americas, in Pereira, Risaralda, Colombia. He is an External Professor, Master in Research on Tropical Medicine and International Health, Universitat de Barcelona, Spain. He is also a professor at the Master in Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Universidad Científica del Sur, Lima, Peru. In 2021 he has been awarded the “Raul Isturiz Award” Medal of the API. Also, in 2021, he was awarded with the “Jose Felix Patiño” Asclepius Staff Medal of the Colombian Medical College, due to his scientific contributions to COVID-19 during the pandemic. He is currently the Editor in Chief of the journal Travel Medicine and Infectious Diseases. His Scopus H index is 47 (Google Scholar H index, 68).",institutionString:"Institución Universitaria Visión de las Américas, Colombia",institution:null},{id:"332819",title:"Dr.",name:"Chukwudi Michael",middleName:"Michael",surname:"Egbuche",slug:"chukwudi-michael-egbuche",fullName:"Chukwudi Michael Egbuche",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/332819/images/14624_n.jpg",biography:"I an Dr. Chukwudi Michael Egbuche. I am a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Parasitology and Entomology, Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Nnamdi Azikiwe University",country:{name:"Nigeria"}}},{id:"284232",title:"Mr.",name:"Nikunj",middleName:"U",surname:"Tandel",slug:"nikunj-tandel",fullName:"Nikunj Tandel",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/284232/images/8275_n.jpg",biography:'Mr. Nikunj Tandel has completed his Master\'s degree in Biotechnology from VIT University, India in the year of 2012. He is having 8 years of research experience especially in the field of malaria epidemiology, immunology, and nanoparticle-based drug delivery system against the infectious diseases, autoimmune disorders and cancer. He has worked for the NIH funded-International Center of Excellence in Malaria Research project "Center for the study of complex malaria in India (CSCMi)" in collaboration with New York University. The preliminary objectives of the study are to understand and develop the evidence-based tools and interventions for the control and prevention of malaria in different sites of the INDIA. Alongside, with the help of next-generation genomics study, the team has studied the antimalarial drug resistance in India. Further, he has extended his research in the development of Humanized mice for the study of liver-stage malaria and identification of molecular marker(s) for the Artemisinin resistance. At present, his research focuses on understanding the role of B cells in the activation of CD8+ T cells in malaria. Received the CSIR-SRF (Senior Research Fellow) award-2018, FIMSA (Federation of Immunological Societies of Asia-Oceania) Travel Bursary award to attend the IUIS-IIS-FIMSA Immunology course-2019',institutionString:"Nirma University",institution:{name:"Nirma University",country:{name:"India"}}},{id:"334383",title:"Ph.D.",name:"Simone",middleName:"Ulrich",surname:"Ulrich Picoli",slug:"simone-ulrich-picoli",fullName:"Simone Ulrich Picoli",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/334383/images/15919_n.jpg",biography:"Graduated in Pharmacy from Universidade Luterana do Brasil (1999), Master in Agricultural and Environmental Microbiology from Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul (2002), Specialization in Clinical Microbiology from Universidade de São Paulo, USP (2007) and PhD in Sciences in Gastroenterology and Hepatology (2012). She is currently an Adjunct Professor at Feevale University in Medicine and Biomedicine courses and a permanent professor of the Academic Master\\'s Degree in Virology. She has experience in the field of Microbiology, with an emphasis on Bacteriology, working mainly on the following topics: bacteriophages, bacterial resistance, clinical microbiology and food microbiology.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Universidade Feevale",country:{name:"Brazil"}}},{id:"229220",title:"Dr.",name:"Amjad",middleName:"Islam",surname:"Aqib",slug:"amjad-aqib",fullName:"Amjad Aqib",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/229220/images/system/229220.png",biography:"Dr. Amjad Islam Aqib obtained a DVM and MSc (Hons) from University of Agriculture Faisalabad (UAF), Pakistan, and a PhD from the University of Veterinary and Animal Sciences Lahore, Pakistan. Dr. Aqib joined the Department of Clinical Medicine and Surgery at UAF for one year as an assistant professor where he developed a research laboratory designated for pathogenic bacteria. Since 2018, he has been Assistant Professor/Officer in-charge, Department of Medicine, Manager Research Operations and Development-ORIC, and President One Health Club at Cholistan University of Veterinary and Animal Sciences, Bahawalpur, Pakistan. He has nearly 100 publications to his credit. His research interests include epidemiological patterns and molecular analysis of antimicrobial resistance and modulation and vaccine development against animal pathogens of public health concern.",institutionString:"Cholistan University of Veterinary and Animal Sciences",institution:{name:"University of Agriculture Faisalabad",country:{name:"Pakistan"}}},{id:"333753",title:"Dr.",name:"Rais",middleName:null,surname:"Ahmed",slug:"rais-ahmed",fullName:"Rais Ahmed",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/333753/images/20168_n.jpg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"University of Agriculture Faisalabad",country:{name:"Pakistan"}}},{id:"62900",title:"Prof.",name:"Fethi",middleName:null,surname:"Derbel",slug:"fethi-derbel",fullName:"Fethi Derbel",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/62900/images/system/62900.jpeg",biography:"Professor Fethi Derbel was born in 1960 in Tunisia. He received his medical degree from the Sousse Faculty of Medicine at Sousse, University of Sousse, Tunisia. He completed his surgical residency in General Surgery at the University Hospital Farhat Hached of Sousse and was a member of the Unit of Liver Transplantation in the University of Rennes, France. He then worked in the Department of Surgery at the Sahloul University Hospital in Sousse. Professor Derbel is presently working at the Clinique les Oliviers, Sousse, Tunisia. His hospital activities are mostly concerned with laparoscopic, colorectal, pancreatic, hepatobiliary, and gastric surgery. He is also very interested in hernia surgery and performs ventral hernia repairs and inguinal hernia repairs. He has been a member of the GREPA and Tunisian Hernia Society (THS). During his residency, he managed patients suffering from diabetic foot, and he was very interested in this pathology. For this reason, he decided to coordinate a book project dealing with the diabetic foot. Professor Derbel has published many articles in journals and collaborates intensively with IntechOpen Access Publisher as an editor.",institutionString:"Clinique les Oliviers",institution:null},{id:"300144",title:"Dr.",name:"Meriem",middleName:null,surname:"Braiki",slug:"meriem-braiki",fullName:"Meriem Braiki",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/300144/images/system/300144.jpg",biography:"Dr. Meriem Braiki is a specialist in pediatric surgeon from Tunisia. She was born in 1985. She received her medical degree from the University of Medicine at Sousse, Tunisia. She achieved her surgical residency training periods in Pediatric Surgery departments at University Hospitals in Monastir, Tunis and France.\r\nShe is currently working at the Pediatric surgery department, Sidi Bouzid Hospital, Tunisia. Her hospital activities are mostly concerned with laparoscopic, parietal, urological and digestive surgery. She has published several articles in diffrent journals.",institutionString:"Sidi Bouzid Regional Hospital",institution:null},{id:"229481",title:"Dr.",name:"Erika M.",middleName:"Martins",surname:"de Carvalho",slug:"erika-m.-de-carvalho",fullName:"Erika M. de Carvalho",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/229481/images/6397_n.jpg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Oswaldo Cruz Foundation",country:{name:"Brazil"}}},{id:"186537",title:"Prof.",name:"Tonay",middleName:null,surname:"Inceboz",slug:"tonay-inceboz",fullName:"Tonay Inceboz",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/186537/images/system/186537.jfif",biography:"I was graduated from Ege University of Medical Faculty (Turkey) in 1988 and completed his Med. PhD degree in Medical Parasitology at the same university. I became an Associate Professor in 2008 and Professor in 2014. I am currently working as a Professor at the Department of Medical Parasitology at Dokuz Eylul University, Izmir, Turkey.\n\nI have given many lectures, presentations in different academic meetings. I have more than 60 articles in peer-reviewed journals, 18 book chapters, 1 book editorship.\n\nMy research interests are Echinococcus granulosus, Echinococcus multilocularis (diagnosis, life cycle, in vitro and in vivo cultivation), and Trichomonas vaginalis (diagnosis, PCR, and in vitro cultivation).",institutionString:"Dokuz Eylül University",institution:{name:"Dokuz Eylül University",country:{name:"Turkey"}}},{id:"71812",title:"Prof.",name:"Hanem Fathy",middleName:"Fathy",surname:"Khater",slug:"hanem-fathy-khater",fullName:"Hanem Fathy Khater",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/71812/images/1167_n.jpg",biography:"Prof. Khater is a Professor of Parasitology at Benha University, Egypt. She studied for her doctoral degree, at the Department of Entomology, College of Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources, University of Missouri, Columbia, USA. She has completed her Ph.D. degrees in Parasitology in Egypt, from where she got the award for “the best scientific Ph.D. dissertation”. She worked at the School of Biological Sciences, Bristol, England, the UK in controlling insects of medical and veterinary importance as a grant from Newton Mosharafa, the British Council. Her research is focused on searching of pesticides against mosquitoes, house flies, lice, green bottle fly, camel nasal botfly, soft and hard ticks, mites, and the diamondback moth as well as control of several parasites using safe and natural materials to avoid drug resistances and environmental contamination.",institutionString:null,institution:{name:"Banha University",country:{name:"Egypt"}}},{id:"99780",title:"Prof.",name:"Omolade",middleName:"Olayinka",surname:"Okwa",slug:"omolade-okwa",fullName:"Omolade Okwa",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/99780/images/system/99780.jpg",biography:"Omolade Olayinka Okwa is presently a Professor of Parasitology at Lagos State University, Nigeria. She has a PhD in Parasitology (1997), an MSc in Cellular Parasitology (1992), and a BSc (Hons) Zoology (1990) all from the University of Ibadan, Nigeria. She teaches parasitology at the undergraduate and postgraduate levels. She was a recipient of a Commonwealth fellowship supported by British Council tenable at the Centre for Entomology and Parasitology (CAEP), Keele University, United Kingdom between 2004 and 2005. She was awarded an Honorary Visiting Research Fellow at the same university from 2005 to 2007. \nShe has been an external examiner to the Department of Veterinary Microbiology and Parasitology, University of Ibadan, MSc programme between 2010 and 2012. She is a member of the Nigerian Society of Experimental Biology (NISEB), Parasitology and Public Health Society of Nigeria (PPSN), Science Association of Nigeria (SAN), Zoological Society of Nigeria (ZSN), and is Vice Chairperson of the Organisation of Women in Science (OWSG), LASU chapter. She served as Head of Department of Zoology and Environmental Biology, Lagos State University from 2007 to 2010 and 2014 to 2016. She is a reviewer for several local and international journals such as Unilag Journal of Science, Libyan Journal of Medicine, Journal of Medicine and Medical Sciences, and Annual Research and Review in Science. \nShe has authored 45 scientific research publications in local and international journals, 8 scientific reviews, 4 books, and 3 book chapters, which includes the books “Malaria Parasites” and “Malaria” which are IntechOpen access publications.",institutionString:"Lagos State University",institution:{name:"Lagos State University",country:{name:"Nigeria"}}},{id:"273100",title:"Dr.",name:"Vijay",middleName:null,surname:"Gayam",slug:"vijay-gayam",fullName:"Vijay Gayam",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/273100/images/system/273100.jpeg",biography:"Dr. Vijay Bhaskar Reddy Gayam is currently practicing as an internist at Interfaith Medical Center in Brooklyn, New York, USA. He is also a Clinical Assistant Professor at the SUNY Downstate University Hospital and Adjunct Professor of Medicine at the American University of Antigua. He is a holder of an M.B.B.S. degree bestowed to him by Osmania Medical College and received his M.D. at Interfaith Medical Center. His career goals thus far have heavily focused on direct patient care, medical education, and clinical research. He currently serves in two leadership capacities; Assistant Program Director of Medicine at Interfaith Medical Center and as a Councilor for the American\r\nFederation for Medical Research. As a true academician and researcher, he has more than 50 papers indexed in international peer-reviewed journals. He has also presented numerous papers in multiple national and international scientific conferences. His areas of research interest include general internal medicine, gastroenterology and hepatology. He serves as an editor, editorial board member and reviewer for multiple international journals. His research on Hepatitis C has been very successful and has led to multiple research awards, including the 'Equity in Prevention and Treatment Award” from the New York Department of Health Viral Hepatitis Symposium (2018) and the 'Presidential Poster Award” awarded to him by the American College of Gastroenterology (2018). He was also awarded 'Outstanding Clinician in General Medicine” by Venus International Foundation for his extensive research expertise and services, perform over and above the standard expected in the advancement of healthcare, patient safety and quality of care.",institutionString:"Interfaith Medical Center",institution:{name:"Interfaith Medical Center",country:{name:"United States of America"}}},{id:"93517",title:"Dr.",name:"Clement",middleName:"Adebajo",surname:"Meseko",slug:"clement-meseko",fullName:"Clement Meseko",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/93517/images/system/93517.jpg",biography:"Dr. Clement Meseko obtained DVM and PhD degree in Veterinary Medicine and Virology respectively. He has worked for over 20 years in both private and public sectors including the academia, contributing to knowledge and control of infectious disease. Through the application of epidemiological skill, classical and molecular virological skills, he investigates viruses of economic and public health importance for the mitigation of the negative impact on people, animal and the environment in the context of Onehealth. \r\nDr. Meseko’s field experience on animal and zoonotic diseases and pathogen dynamics at the human-animal interface over the years shaped his carrier in research and scientific inquiries. He has been part of the investigation of Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza incursions in sub Saharan Africa and monitors swine Influenza (Pandemic influenza Virus) agro-ecology and potential for interspecies transmission. He has authored and reviewed a number of journal articles and book chapters.",institutionString:"National Veterinary Research Institute",institution:{name:"National Veterinary Research Institute",country:{name:"Nigeria"}}},{id:"158026",title:"Prof.",name:"Shailendra K.",middleName:null,surname:"Saxena",slug:"shailendra-k.-saxena",fullName:"Shailendra K. Saxena",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/intech-files/0030O00002bRET3QAO/Profile_Picture_2022-05-10T10:10:26.jpeg",biography:"Professor Dr. Shailendra K. Saxena is a vice dean and professor at King George's Medical University, Lucknow, India. His research interests involve understanding the molecular mechanisms of host defense during human viral infections and developing new predictive, preventive, and therapeutic strategies for them using Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV), HIV, and emerging viruses as a model via stem cell and cell culture technologies. His research work has been published in various high-impact factor journals (Science, PNAS, Nature Medicine) with a high number of citations. He has received many awards and honors in India and abroad including various Young Scientist Awards, BBSRC India Partnering Award, and Dr. JC Bose National Award of Department of Biotechnology, Min. of Science and Technology, Govt. of India. Dr. Saxena is a fellow of various international societies/academies including the Royal College of Pathologists, United Kingdom; Royal Society of Medicine, London; Royal Society of Biology, United Kingdom; Royal Society of Chemistry, London; and Academy of Translational Medicine Professionals, Austria. He was named a Global Leader in Science by The Scientist. He is also an international opinion leader/expert in vaccination for Japanese encephalitis by IPIC (UK).",institutionString:"King George's Medical University",institution:{name:"King George's Medical University",country:{name:"India"}}},{id:"94928",title:"Dr.",name:"Takuo",middleName:null,surname:"Mizukami",slug:"takuo-mizukami",fullName:"Takuo Mizukami",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/94928/images/6402_n.jpg",biography:null,institutionString:null,institution:{name:"National Institute of Infectious Diseases",country:{name:"Japan"}}},{id:"233433",title:"Dr.",name:"Yulia",middleName:null,surname:"Desheva",slug:"yulia-desheva",fullName:"Yulia Desheva",position:null,profilePictureURL:"https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/users/233433/images/system/233433.png",biography:"Dr. Yulia Desheva is a leading researcher at the Institute of Experimental Medicine, St. Petersburg, Russia. She is a professor in the Stomatology Faculty, St. Petersburg State University. She has expertise in the development and evaluation of a wide range of live mucosal vaccines against influenza and bacterial complications. 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