BACKGROUND: Human survival requires the ability to communicate. Today's students’ use of social media has opened up a slew of new possibilities; nevertheless, it is hard to say how many more may emerge in the future. As the years have gone by, the use of social networking sites has grown in popularity among teenagers. This research investigates both the ways in which social media draws in users and the ways in which it hooks users by revealing the gimmicky worlds that they inhabit. Depending more on social media than on oneself causes a tremendous problem. It is quite challenging to separate human beings from their many electronic devices in today's world. The use of devices gradually began to take over the world. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Qualitative research approaches were used in this research. The qualitative study's findings were gathered from a variety of secondary sources, including media articles, academic journal articles, and past theses. Throughout the course of this study, a discourse analysis method was employed, and several case studies were gathered from news articles and journals. RESULTS: According to the results of the research, addiction to the Internet has been defined as a decrease in an individual's ability to exercise self-control within the context of the social-cognitive framework. The research is based on true events that occurred in and around India. This research article focuses on the various positive and negative effects that social media may have on education and students. It is critical to figure out how to tackle this issue. CONCLUSION: One effective strategy is to restrict their access to social media. The bulk of the disadvantages may be mitigated by reducing the amount of time spent on social media sites. Keeping track of their academic progress and dealing with any problems early on can help them avoid the negative effects of social media on their education.
Graph embeddings play a significant role in the design and analysis of parallel algorithms. It is a mapping of the topological structure of a guest graph G into a host graph H, which is represented as a one-to-one mapping from the vertex set of the guest graph to the vertex set of the host graph. In multiprocessing systems, the interconnection networks enhance the efficient communication between the components in the system. Obtaining minimum wirelength in embedding problems is significant in the designing of networks and simulating one architecture by another. In this paper, we determine the wirelength of embedding 3-ary n-cubes into cylinders and certain trees.
The efficiency of a graph embedding problem when simulating one interconnection network in another interconnection network is characterized by the influential parameter of wirelength. Obtaining the minimum wirelength in an embedding problem determines the quality of that embedding. In this paper, we obtained the convex edge partition of 3-Ary n-Cubes and the minimized wirelength of the embeddings of both 3-Ary n-Cubes and circulant networks.
Language is used in our daily routine as a communicative tool. Language users engage in a wide range of activities within the context of their daily social life and interact in several ways to make their goals understandable to their peers. Style is defined as an individual method of expressing ideas while speaking the common language exceptionally well. An individual’s style dictates how one shapes one’s language use to fit his or her objective. In a language, there are a variety of designs that may be characterised as scientific, literary, historical, legal, religious, rite, and rhetorical. These designs supported the modalities of communication and, as a result, the realms of language use. These communicative idioms take on completely diverse meanings in various fields of study. Atwood is widely regarded as a writer who is easy to read. She is the most well-known writer in Canadian literature. Her unique way of thinking is shown in her book, The Handmaid’s Tale, through the writing process.
This research paper elucidates cross-species transplantation and its impacts on both fact and fiction. This study focuses on the bond between science and literature. In relation to this claim, researchers look into how modern scientific technology influenced Margaret Atwood's Oryx and Crake. The first novel in the MaddAddam Trilogy is Oryx and Crake. The novel is set on the North American East Coast. Through her novels, Atwood reflects the real-world elements in her fictive world and also warns the present generation about their future. It is present in its adventurous form, which depicts the downfall of the human race. Researchers have utilised the exploratory research method for this study. This article discusses the emergence of both fictional and factual creatures through the method of xenotransplantation, such as Pigoons, Rankunk, Wolvogs, Crakers, Bobkittens, and luminescent rabbits, and it also expresses the similarity between the Covid 19 virus and the JUVE virus. (Glover, 2009) The article "Human/Nature: Ecological philosophy in Margaret Atwood’s Oryx and Crake," written by Jayne Glover, states that, according to the researcher, the actions of Crake and his significant innovations contributed to the collapse of civilization in the world. “One time does it all.
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