Showing 1,861 - 1,880 results of 29,803 for search '(( 5 ((step decrease) OR (teer decrease)) ) OR ( 50 ((mean decrease) OR (a decrease)) ))', query time: 1.13s Refine Results
  1. 1861

    Structural and Co-conformational Effects of Alkyne-Derived Subunits in Charged Donor−Acceptor [2]Catenanes by Ognjen Š. Miljanić (2485972)

    Published 2007
    “…The barriers for the three processes were found to be successively 14.4, 14.5−17.5, and 13.1−15.8 kcal mol<sup>-1</sup>. Within the limitations of the small dataset investigated, emergent trends in the barrier heights can be recognized:  the values decrease with the increasing size of the π-electron-donating macrocycle and tend to be lower in the sterically less encumbered series of [2]catenanes containing the 1,3-butadiyne moiety.…”
  2. 1862

    Structural and Co-conformational Effects of Alkyne-Derived Subunits in Charged Donor−Acceptor [2]Catenanes by Ognjen Š. Miljanić (2485972)

    Published 2007
    “…The barriers for the three processes were found to be successively 14.4, 14.5−17.5, and 13.1−15.8 kcal mol<sup>-1</sup>. Within the limitations of the small dataset investigated, emergent trends in the barrier heights can be recognized:  the values decrease with the increasing size of the π-electron-donating macrocycle and tend to be lower in the sterically less encumbered series of [2]catenanes containing the 1,3-butadiyne moiety.…”
  3. 1863

    Structural and Co-conformational Effects of Alkyne-Derived Subunits in Charged Donor−Acceptor [2]Catenanes by Ognjen Š. Miljanić (2485972)

    Published 2007
    “…The barriers for the three processes were found to be successively 14.4, 14.5−17.5, and 13.1−15.8 kcal mol<sup>-1</sup>. Within the limitations of the small dataset investigated, emergent trends in the barrier heights can be recognized:  the values decrease with the increasing size of the π-electron-donating macrocycle and tend to be lower in the sterically less encumbered series of [2]catenanes containing the 1,3-butadiyne moiety.…”
  4. 1864

    Structural and Co-conformational Effects of Alkyne-Derived Subunits in Charged Donor−Acceptor [2]Catenanes by Ognjen Š. Miljanić (2485972)

    Published 2007
    “…The barriers for the three processes were found to be successively 14.4, 14.5−17.5, and 13.1−15.8 kcal mol<sup>-1</sup>. Within the limitations of the small dataset investigated, emergent trends in the barrier heights can be recognized:  the values decrease with the increasing size of the π-electron-donating macrocycle and tend to be lower in the sterically less encumbered series of [2]catenanes containing the 1,3-butadiyne moiety.…”
  5. 1865
  6. 1866
  7. 1867
  8. 1868
  9. 1869
  10. 1870

    Glutamate exposure reduces MAP-2 immunostaining and induces changes in synaptic markers and cell adhesion molecule NCAM in the absence of neuronal death. by María Fernanda Podestá (639243)

    Published 2014
    “…PSA-NCAM immunoreactive area drastically decreased. Results are expressed as mean values (±SEM) of 20-30 neurons or 10 microscope fields (280,000 µm<sup>2</sup>/FOV) per experimental condition. …”
  11. 1871
  12. 1872
  13. 1873

    Exposure to trips and slips with increasing unpredictability while walking can improve balance recovery responses with minimum predictive gait alterations - Fig 5 by Yoshiro Okubo (589967)

    Published 2018
    “…This indicate that the proportions of the lowering strategy in response to trips decreased (T1: 90% to T12: 10%) and the elevating-contact (T1: 0% to T12: 50%) and elevating-cross (T1: 10% to T12: 40%) strategies increased. …”
  14. 1874
  15. 1875
  16. 1876
  17. 1877
  18. 1878

    Table_1_Decreased Risk in the Pancreatic Cancer With History of Hay Fever: A Meta-Analysis.doc by Guannan Wang (2209297)

    Published 2020
    “…</p><p>Results: We included 8 population-based case–control studies involving 10,454 participants from 1986 to 2014. A history of hay fever was associated with a decreased risk of pancreatic cancer (OR, 0.57; 95% CI, 0.50–0.64, P < 0.00001) through fixed effect model.…”
  19. 1879
  20. 1880