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large increases » marked increases (Expand Search), age increased (Expand Search)
stem decrease » step decrease (Expand Search), sizes decrease (Expand Search), teer decrease (Expand Search)
we decrease » _ decrease (Expand Search), a decrease (Expand Search), nn decrease (Expand Search)
b large » _ large (Expand Search), _ larger (Expand Search)
a large » _ large (Expand Search)
large increases » marked increases (Expand Search), age increased (Expand Search)
stem decrease » step decrease (Expand Search), sizes decrease (Expand Search), teer decrease (Expand Search)
we decrease » _ decrease (Expand Search), a decrease (Expand Search), nn decrease (Expand Search)
b large » _ large (Expand Search), _ larger (Expand Search)
a large » _ large (Expand Search)
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Geographical distribution of large cities and small cities.
Published 2024“…Panel <b>a</b> plots 36 cities in our sample that are defined as “large” cities and <b>b</b> plots 128 “small” cities with <5 million population. …”
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The introduction of mutualisms into assembled communities increases their connectance and complexity while decreasing their richness.
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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Neural timescales increase with cognitive demands.
Published 2025“…<b>(C)</b> Example of autocorrelation functions for each condition calculated on response-locked data. We hypothesized pop-out condition would show shorter timescales than the search condition. …”
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<b>Human disturbance alters the foraging and spatiotemporal activity of a large carnivore</b>
Published 2025“…Responses to human disturbance were generally consistent across sites, with pumas adjusting their temporal, spatial, and foraging axes to decrease encounters with humans. Our results suggest that human-disturbed landscapes across regions alter the primary niche axes of pumas to construct a new realized niche in human landscapes, which may have important consequences for their ecological interactions and the functional role of this large carnivore.…”
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