Showing 1 - 20 results of 117,697 for search '(((( ct largest decrease ) OR ( 1 levels increased ))) OR ( ((i larger) OR (via large)) decrease ))', query time: 2.36s Refine Results
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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. …”
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    NHERF1 protein levels increase with increased cell density. by Camille M. Drews (4721175)

    Published 2019
    “…<p>(<b>A</b>) Protein levels of endogenous NHERF1 increase with cell confluency. …”
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    Metabolites with increasing levels during the development. by Martin Sládek (130663)

    Published 2025
    “…<p>Temporal profiles of polar metabolites and lipids with SCN levels significantly increasing from E19 to P28. Rhythmicity was determined by eJTK; full or dashed lines depict the profiles that either did or did not pass the significance threshold (FDR-adjusted <i>P</i> < 0.05), respectively.…”
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    Chance of relapse was increased with increasing Gleason Score, PSA level and age. by Stephanie E. A. Burnell (7164608)

    Published 2019
    “…There was a positive correlation between increasing Gleason score and relapsing patients. (D) Relapse was significantly more likely with a higher DMT1 score (p = 0.037, independent samples, two-tailed t-test) and (E) An increased number of relapse cases occur with a higher DMT1 score. …”
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    Obese ZSF1 male rats exhibited increased BW, glucose, insulin, cholesterol, and triglyceride levels and decreased adiponectin and increased GDF15 levels. by Marina Stolina (9248633)

    Published 2020
    “…<p>Obese ZSF1 male rats at the age of 20 weeks exhibited increased body weight (A), elevated blood glucose (B), insulin (C), cholesterol (D), and triglyceride levels (E), decreased adiponectin (F), and increased growth differentiation factor 15 (GDF15) (G). …”