Showing 147,381 - 147,400 results of 224,673 for search '(( 5 ((step decrease) OR (nn decrease)) ) OR ( 10 ((teer decrease) OR (a decrease)) ))', query time: 1.92s Refine Results
  1. 147381

    Figure S1, NSCLC cell lines analyzed and p53 status. by Michela Garofalo (276614)

    Published 2013
    “…Tables reporting the percentage of miR-34a, PDGFR-α and PDGFR-β expression observed in the 106 (PDGFR-α) and 107 (PDGFR-β) tumor samples analyzed (A case with 10% of the tumor cells + was scored as +). …”
  2. 147382

    ROI with increasing variance of multiplicative noise and resulting accuracy. by Enrico Lanza (15993785)

    Published 2024
    “…The length of the white bar represents 10 <i>μ</i>m. Panel B shows the resulting plot of the accuracy as a function of noise variance: it is initially relatively stable and then decreases for higher values of noise from about 0.70 to about 0.60.…”
  3. 147383
  4. 147384

    Effects of fSTR variants on RNA accessibility for MFE secondary structures. by Nick Kinney (8119937)

    Published 2025
    “…(c) Accessibility increases with allele length for non-reverse complementary repeats: <i>r = 0.017, p = 1.3e-10</i>. (d) Accessibility decreases with allele length for reverse complementary sequences: <i>r = −0.214, p = 0</i>.…”
  5. 147385

    PZQ-evoked bipolarity is Ca<sup>2+</sup>-dependent. by Taisaku Nogi (113790)

    Published 2009
    “…<p>(A) Effect of increasing medium Ca<sup>2+</sup> concentration ([Ca<sup>2+</sup>]<sub>out</sub>: left, Ca<sup>2+</sup> free (1 mM EGTA); right, 1 µM to 10 mM) on bipolarity evoked by PZQ (24 hr exposure). …”
  6. 147386

    Prognostic value of “stroma up” genes in different human tumors. by Marina Bacac (67529)

    Published 2013
    “…<div><p>(A) Unsupervised hierarchical clustering of breast cancer patients (columns) obtained using “stroma up” genes (rows) ordered according to decreasing z values (<a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0000032#pone.0000032.s008" target="_blank">Table S5</a>).…”
  7. 147387

    Effect of temperature on firing rate and total energy usage for the cortical model neuron in response to different intensities of DC input. by Yuguo Yu (172221)

    Published 2012
    “…The total sodium charge entering during one action potential decreases exponentially as a function of temperature for DC = 0.5, 1, 1.5 and 2×10<sup>−2</sup> pA/µm<sup>2</sup>, respectively. …”
  8. 147388

    Table 1_Revised Peck’s formula for estimating pipeline’s settlement under the coupling effect of tunnelling and vehicle load.xlsx by Shu Peng (642390)

    Published 2025
    “…The results reveal that the settlement of soil and pipeline caused by tunnelling decreases with decreasing burial depth; the dynamic settlement of the sewage pipe and ground surface is decreasing rapidly as the burial depth increases. …”
  9. 147389

    Cophylogenetic signal occurs between diverse gut fungal taxa and hominids (continued from Fig 3). by Emily P. Van Syoc (22169869)

    Published 2025
    “…<p><b>(A–E)</b> Neighbor-joining trees of fungal OTUs that display cophylogeny with hominid hosts, ordered by decreasing PACo R2. …”
  10. 147390

    Presentation_1_Oxalate Alters Cellular Bioenergetics, Redox Homeostasis, Antibacterial Response, and Immune Response in Macrophages.pptx by Parveen Kumar (428921)

    Published 2021
    “…In contrast, oxalate significantly decreased the mRNA levels and secretion of the anti-inflammatory cytokine, Interleukin-10 (IL-10). …”
  11. 147391

    Linear repression using auto-regulation. by Rutger Hermsen (195605)

    Published 2010
    “…<p>If in the simulations we selected for a linearly decreasing response function (a LIN gate), auto-activation emerged. …”
  12. 147392

    Expression of 95 pairs of TF paralogs in 23 non-redundant human tissues. by Larry N. Singh (76540)

    Published 2008
    “…The (RXRB-RXRB) pair in fact corresponds to two distinct (partially overlapping) Ensembl genes. See <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0002345#pone.0002345.s002" target="_blank">Data file 2</a> for Ensembl gene ids.…”
  13. 147393

    Temporal quantitative gene expression changes in discovery samples over gestational weeks 5–18. by Liis Uusküla (121629)

    Published 2012
    “…(A) 14 genes with significant change in transcription (ANOVA, FDR corrected <i>P</i><0.05, <i>n</i> = 10) and (B) additional 10 genes with known effect on pregnancy that showed mildly significant differential expression (FDR corrected <i>P</i><0.1) were selected for subsequent RT-qPCR analysis (<b><a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0049248#pone.0049248.s011" target="_blank">Table S2</a></b>). …”
  14. 147394

    Mycobacterial regulation of TLR-induced cytokines. by Nataliya Lutay (241210)

    Published 2014
    “…Blocking with TLR2 or addition of 19-kDa to the epithelial cells did not induce a significant change on epithelial IL-10 production compared to mycobacteria. …”
  15. 147395

    Effect of E protein on the recognition of prM protein by human anti-prM mAbs. by Wen-Yang Tsai (108058)

    Published 2012
    “…<p>(A) Binding specificity of 4 human anti-prM mAbs including 2 CR (DVB59.3 and DVB18.5) and 2 sCR (DVB65.5 and DVB32.4) mAbs was determined as in <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0052600#pone-0052600-g005" target="_blank">Figure 5</a>. …”
  16. 147396

    Immunofluorescence localization of SR in ipsilateral dorsal horn changes after formalin injection. by Ayako Tabata-Imai (617411)

    Published 2014
    “…<p>(A-C) In WT mice, SR (green) is predominantly distributed in lamina II of the dorsal horn before formalin injection (0 min), and its signal density decreases over time after the injection (A1-C1). …”
  17. 147397

    Moving Kinetics of Nanocars with Hydrophobic Wheels on Solid Surfaces at Ambient Conditions by Fang Chen (34476)

    Published 2016
    “…On freshly cleaned, hydroxylated glass surfaces, nanocars with hydrophobic adamantane wheels can diffuse with a relatively large diffusion coefficient of 7.6 × 10<sup>–16</sup> m<sup>2</sup>/s. …”
  18. 147398

    Moving Kinetics of Nanocars with Hydrophobic Wheels on Solid Surfaces at Ambient Conditions by Fang Chen (34476)

    Published 2016
    “…On freshly cleaned, hydroxylated glass surfaces, nanocars with hydrophobic adamantane wheels can diffuse with a relatively large diffusion coefficient of 7.6 × 10<sup>–16</sup> m<sup>2</sup>/s. …”
  19. 147399

    Moving Kinetics of Nanocars with Hydrophobic Wheels on Solid Surfaces at Ambient Conditions by Fang Chen (34476)

    Published 2016
    “…On freshly cleaned, hydroxylated glass surfaces, nanocars with hydrophobic adamantane wheels can diffuse with a relatively large diffusion coefficient of 7.6 × 10<sup>–16</sup> m<sup>2</sup>/s. …”
  20. 147400

    Moving Kinetics of Nanocars with Hydrophobic Wheels on Solid Surfaces at Ambient Conditions by Fang Chen (34476)

    Published 2016
    “…On freshly cleaned, hydroxylated glass surfaces, nanocars with hydrophobic adamantane wheels can diffuse with a relatively large diffusion coefficient of 7.6 × 10<sup>–16</sup> m<sup>2</sup>/s. …”