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greater decrease » greater increase (Expand Search), greater increases (Expand Search), rate decreased (Expand Search)
step decrease » sizes decrease (Expand Search), teer decrease (Expand Search), we decrease (Expand Search)
mean decrease » a decrease (Expand Search)
a greater » _ greater (Expand Search), far greater (Expand Search)
greater decrease » greater increase (Expand Search), greater increases (Expand Search), rate decreased (Expand Search)
step decrease » sizes decrease (Expand Search), teer decrease (Expand Search), we decrease (Expand Search)
mean decrease » a decrease (Expand Search)
a greater » _ greater (Expand Search), far greater (Expand Search)
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Receiver entropy decreased with greater recurrence and increased with greater feedback.
Published 2021“…<p>(A) Mean receiver entropy decreased with the number of recurrent edges and increased with the number of feedback edges in motifs. …”
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Normalized synergy increased with greater recurrence and decreased with greater feedback.
Published 2021“…Errorbars are 95% bootstrap confidence intervals around the mean.</p>…”
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Adjusted<sup>a</sup> mean decrease in days elapsed in the cascade of HCC care post-intervention.
Published 2022“…<p>Adjusted<a href="/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pdig.0000080#t004fn001" target="_blank"><sup>a</sup></a> mean decrease in days elapsed in the cascade of HCC care post-intervention.…”
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Spatial representation of mean annual soil loss increase/decrease derived with the different modeling centers (rows) and time steps (columns) with the SSP5-8.5.
Published 2023“…<p>Spatial representation of mean annual soil loss increase/decrease derived with the different modeling centers (rows) and time steps (columns) with the SSP5-8.5.…”
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Decrease in preferred walking speed with distance walked for subjects with amputation.
Published 2024“…<p>a) Subjects with amputation showed a decrease in average preferred walking speed for short distances. b) The rate of change in preferred walking speed with distance for the subjects with unilateral amputation is shown over a regime where both the subject-averaged data and the model fit are well-fit by linear trends (<i>R</i><sup>2</sup> value greater than 95%).…”
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