Showing 21 - 40 results of 36,926 for search '(((( ((c large) OR (a large)) decrease ) OR ( c rate increased ))) OR ( c larger decrease ))', query time: 0.48s Refine Results
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    Prestroke Glucose Control and Functional Outcome in Patients With Acute Large Vessel Occlusive Stroke and Diabetes After Thrombectomy by Jun Young Chang (3716227)

    Published 2021
    “…Higher HbA1c levels at admission were significantly associated with decreased odds of favorable functional outcomes at a threshold of 7.0%–7.1%. …”
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    Norm ISWSVR: A Data Integration and Normalization Approach for Large-Scale Metabolomics by Xian Ding (421647)

    Published 2022
    “…More importantly, Norm ISWSVR also allows a low frequency of QCs, which could significantly decrease the burden of a large-scale experiment. …”
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    Differences in entropy between C57BL/6 and APP/PS1 mice are preserved after controlling for firing rate differences. by Udaysankar Chockanathan (18510288)

    Published 2024
    “…(D) When restricted to vCA1 populations with matched mean firing rates, APP/PS1 mice had significantly increased entropy relative to C57BL/6 controls (mean ± std: C57BL/6 = 344 ± 80 bits/s, APP/PS1 = 358 ± 81 bits/s, p < 10<sup>−6</sup>, two-sided Wilcoxon sign-rank test, n<sub>C57BL/6</sub> = 4000 samples from 6 recording sessions, n<sub>APP/PS1</sub> = 4000 samples from 8 recording sessions).…”
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    The introduction of mutualisms into assembled communities increases their connectance and complexity while decreasing their richness. by Gui Araujo (22170819)

    Published 2025
    “…When they stop being introduced in further assembly events (i.e. introduced species do not carry any mutualistic interactions), their proportion slowly decreases with successive invasions. (B) Even though higher proportions of mutualism promote higher richness, introducing this type of interaction into already assembled large communities promotes a sudden drop in richness, while stopping mutualism promotes a slight boost in richness increase. …”
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    Increasing the number of commonly represented features decreases the assignment error rate, but increases the level of redundancy between the representations. by W. Jeffrey Johnston (8463480)

    Published 2023
    “…<b>D</b> The overall assignment error rate also decreases by orders of magnitude as the dimensionality of the commonly represented feature space increases, while holding <i>D</i><sub><i>XY</i></sub> constant. …”