Showing 541 - 560 results of 49,780 for search '(( 50 ((a decrease) OR (we decrease)) ) OR ( a ((fold decrease) OR (point decrease)) ))', query time: 1.17s Refine Results
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    DataSheet1_Decreasing viscosity and increasing accessible load by replacing classical diluents with a hydrotrope in liquid–liquid extraction.docx by Asmae El Maangar (19690522)

    Published 2025
    “…We show that using hydrotropes as a diluent decreases the viscosity of solutions by more than a factor of ten, even under high load by extracted cations. …”
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    Frictional Effects on RNA Folding: Speed Limit and Kramers Turnover by Naoto Hori (767562)

    Published 2018
    “…In the high-friction regime (η ≳ 10<sup>–5</sup> Pa·s), for both HP and PK, <i>k</i><sub>F</sub> values decrease as 1/η, whereas in the low friction regime, <i>k</i><sub>F</sub> values increase as η increases, leading to a maximum folding rate at a moderate viscosity (∼10<sup>–6</sup> Pa·s), which is the Kramers turnover. …”
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    5-fold cross-validation comparison results. by Chunming Wen (17616274)

    Published 2025
    “…The computational cost decreased from 11.6 GFlops to 6.6 GFlops.</p></div>…”
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    The 10 most highly regulated genes in sputum and blood from microarray analysis; a positive fold change  =  increase in frequent exacerbators compared to zero exacerbators, a negative fold change  =  decrease in frequent exacerbators compared to zero exacerbators. by Dave Singh (114223)

    Published 2014
    “…</p><p>The 10 most highly regulated genes in sputum and blood from microarray analysis; a positive fold change  =  increase in frequent exacerbators compared to zero exacerbators, a negative fold change  =  decrease in frequent exacerbators compared to zero exacerbators.…”
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    A Yoga Strengthening Program Designed to Minimize the Knee Adduction Moment for Women with Knee Osteoarthritis: A Proof-Of-Principle Cohort Study by Elora C. Brenneman (795723)

    Published 2015
    “…A secondary objective was to determine whether the program could improve mobility and fitness, and decrease peak KAM during gait. …”
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