Showing 121 - 140 results of 41,910 for search '(( ((a large) OR (via large)) decrease ) OR ((( a largest decrease ) OR ( i large increases ))))', query time: 1.23s Refine Results
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    Supplementary Material for: Effects of White Matter Hyperintensities on 90-Day Functional Outcome after Large Vessel and Non-Large Vessel Stroke by Griessenauer C.J. (8965901)

    Published 2020
    “…<b><i>Material and Methods:</i></b> We reviewed acute ischemic stroke patients admitted between 2009 and 2017 at a large healthcare system in the USA. …”
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    Species richness (<i>SR</i>, upper panels) and Shannon’s entropy (<i>SE</i>, lower panels) vs. the rate in which new species are trying to invade the community, <i>νN</i>. by Immanuel Meyer (12306666)

    Published 2022
    “…When the number of temporal niches is large, as in the <i>Q</i> = 30 case in panels (c) and (f), an increase of <i>νN</i> leads to an increase in the number of species, their different response buffers the effect of environmental variations and the results converge to the predictions of the neutral model (cyan dashed line). …”
  12. 132

    Image_1_A large-scale forward genetic screen for maize mutants with altered lignocellulosic properties.tiff by Shaogan Wang (14727736)

    Published 2023
    “…Saccharification yield, i.e. the amount of lignocellulosic glucose (Glc) released by means of enzymatic hydrolysis, is increased in two of the mutants and decreased in the remaining six. …”
  13. 133

    Table_1_A large-scale forward genetic screen for maize mutants with altered lignocellulosic properties.docx by Shaogan Wang (14727736)

    Published 2023
    “…Saccharification yield, i.e. the amount of lignocellulosic glucose (Glc) released by means of enzymatic hydrolysis, is increased in two of the mutants and decreased in the remaining six. …”
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    <b>Human disturbance alters the foraging and spatiotemporal activity of a large carnivore</b> by Gonzalo Barceló (10117075)

    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.…”