Showing 60,361 - 60,380 results of 109,953 for search '(( 5 ((mean decrease) OR (a decrease)) ) OR ( a ((nn decrease) OR (point decrease)) ))', query time: 1.91s Refine Results
  1. 60361

    Nesfatin-1 signaling is involved in mechanisms of PS homeostasis. by Sonia Jego (292109)

    Published 2013
    “…Kinetics of SWS amounts during recovery remains unaffected (<b>A</b>). As shown in graph <b>C</b>, this suppressive effect is due to a decrease of both the mean cumulative number and the mean duration of the PS bouts, calculated over the first 6 h following treatment compared to control recovery in the same rats. …”
  2. 60362

    Coarse-grained model leads to collective behavior. by Giovanna De Palo (476510)

    Published 2017
    “…The peak in susceptibility becomes higher the larger the number of cells, and NN distances decrease accordingly. Profiles in the inset were smoothed with a moving average filter spanning ten points. …”
  3. 60363

    The relationship between permafrost probability (PF) and organic layer thickness (OLT) by Kristofer D Johnson (557206)

    Published 2013
    “…Furthermore, when soil organic carbon was estimated using a relationship with thickness, the average increase in carbon in OLTd soils was almost four times greater compared to the average decrease in carbon in OLTs soils across all soil types. …”
  4. 60364

    Factor of change of pO (ΔpO) segregated with respect to the initial median pO by Bernardino Clavo (3925)

    Published 2011
    “…The horizontal lines in the boxes represent the median and the * represents the mean of ΔpO for both groups of tumors at each measurement time-point. During ozone therapy, well-oxygenated tumors (baseline pO above the median) showed no change (ΔpO approximately 1) or even decrease after session #3 (ΔpO = 0.8). …”
  5. 60365

    Effects of Gu-4 on survival and expression profiles of TNF-α and IL-10 in septic mice. by TingTing Yan (5652595)

    Published 2013
    “…<p>A: Survival of septic mice induced by LPS stimulation (37.5 mg/kg <i>i.p.…”
  6. 60366

    Effect of subthalamic nucleus lesion on the severity of L-DOPA-induced dyskinesia. by Asier Aristieta (312325)

    Published 2013
    “…Time course of axial, limb and orolingual AIMs scored in <i>(</i><b><i>C</i></b><i>)</i> STN-lesion and <i>(</i><b><i>D</i></b><i>)</i> STN-sham animal groups. The results show a significant decrease in AIMs scores after STN lesion. …”
  7. 60367

    The Association of Tobacco Control Policies and the Risk of Acute Myocardial Infarction Using Hospital Admissions Data by Carmen Jan (521526)

    Published 2014
    “…</p><p>Conclusions</p><p>The implementation of a CSB and TTI in Panama were associated with a decrease in tobacco consumption and a reduction of the RR of AMI.…”
  8. 60368

    Heat maps of clusters showing significantly modulated power relative to baseline during wakefulness. by Roy Cox (519996)

    Published 2014
    “…Window from 5 - 14 Hz, and 50–300 ms. (B) Cluster showing extent of medium-latency alpha decrease. …”
  9. 60369

    Hemorrhagic shock with enteral tranexamic acid+glucose. by Angelina E. Altshuler (328350)

    Published 2014
    “…Scale bar equals 5 mm. Mean±SD.</p>…”
  10. 60370

    Attenuation of retinal AC migration and network formation in Matrigel under high glucose conditions. by Eui Seok Shin (151716)

    Published 2014
    “…(B) The quantitative assessment of the data. Data are the mean number of branch points from 5 high-power fields (×100) ± SEM. …”
  11. 60371

    Contraction of porous 70:30 col/PCL scaffolds containing seeded fibroblasts. by Paul P. Bonvallet (708039)

    Published 2015
    “…<p>Scaffold diameters were measured at each time interval to quantify contraction (plotted as percent decrease in scaffold diameter). Values represent means and standard deviation for five scaffolds per time point. …”
  12. 60372

    Net change between ‘before’ (2008–9) and ‘after’ (2014–15) by taxa for herbivores (protected from fishing) and other families (without fishery restriction). by Ivor D. Williams (331075)

    Published 2016
    “…<p>Data points represents the net proportional change in biomass from ‘before’ to ‘after’, and lines present the 95% quantile range (95%QR) of that change. 95%QR not overlapping zero is evidence of a significant difference between time periods, shown as a green square (biomass increase) or red square (biomass decrease). …”
  13. 60373

    Data Sheet 1_Spatiotemporal variability of turbulent fluxes in snow-covered mountain terrain.csv by Rainette Engbers (22611641)

    Published 2025
    “…Although these processes are subject to great spatial and temporal variability, especially in complex terrain, measurements of heat, moisture, and momentum fluxes are almost exclusively point observations. Numerical modeling offers a means to assess the spatial variability of fluxes and evaluate the representativeness of point observations. …”
  14. 60374

    Video 1_Spatiotemporal variability of turbulent fluxes in snow-covered mountain terrain.mp4 by Rainette Engbers (22611641)

    Published 2025
    “…Although these processes are subject to great spatial and temporal variability, especially in complex terrain, measurements of heat, moisture, and momentum fluxes are almost exclusively point observations. Numerical modeling offers a means to assess the spatial variability of fluxes and evaluate the representativeness of point observations. …”
  15. 60375

    Video 3_Spatiotemporal variability of turbulent fluxes in snow-covered mountain terrain.mp4 by Rainette Engbers (22611641)

    Published 2025
    “…Although these processes are subject to great spatial and temporal variability, especially in complex terrain, measurements of heat, moisture, and momentum fluxes are almost exclusively point observations. Numerical modeling offers a means to assess the spatial variability of fluxes and evaluate the representativeness of point observations. …”
  16. 60376

    Video 2_Spatiotemporal variability of turbulent fluxes in snow-covered mountain terrain.mp4 by Rainette Engbers (22611641)

    Published 2025
    “…Although these processes are subject to great spatial and temporal variability, especially in complex terrain, measurements of heat, moisture, and momentum fluxes are almost exclusively point observations. Numerical modeling offers a means to assess the spatial variability of fluxes and evaluate the representativeness of point observations. …”
  17. 60377

    Data Sheet 2_Spatiotemporal variability of turbulent fluxes in snow-covered mountain terrain.pdf by Rainette Engbers (22611641)

    Published 2025
    “…Although these processes are subject to great spatial and temporal variability, especially in complex terrain, measurements of heat, moisture, and momentum fluxes are almost exclusively point observations. Numerical modeling offers a means to assess the spatial variability of fluxes and evaluate the representativeness of point observations. …”
  18. 60378

    Data_Sheet_1_Beat-to-Beat Patterning of Sinus Rhythm Reveals Non-linear Rhythm in the Dog Compared to the Human.zip by N. Sydney Moïse (8349093)

    Published 2020
    “…In the dog, dynamic Poincaré plots showed linear rate changes as intervals prolonged until a point of divergence from the line of identity at a mean interval of 598.5 (95% CI: 583.5–613.5) ms (bifurcation interval). …”
  19. 60379

    Ovariectomy (OVX) induced decline in brain glucose uptake and BBB GLUT1<sub>55 Kda</sub> expression: prevention by 17β-estradiol. by Fan Ding (302565)

    Published 2013
    “…Quantitative analysis of brain glucose uptake demonstrated a significant decrease in OVX condition (**, p<0.01, bars represent mean value±SEM, n = 5–7), which was partially prevented by E2 treatment (50 µg/kg, SC) (*, p<0.05; bars represent mean value±SEM, n = 5–6). …”
  20. 60380

    Kinetics of aggregation study of CC, HR, CD and PrP<sub>106–126</sub> peptides through TEM and ThT fluorescence curves. by Silvia Vilches (442014)

    Published 2013
    “…The HR peptide contains higher amounts of amyloid fibrils (A, E, I) than CC at all points (B, F, J). Note the progressive decrease in number of spherical structures over time in the CD peptide (C, G, K) and the coexistence of spherical and protofibrillar structures in the PrP<sub>106–126</sub> peptide samples (D, H, L). …”