Showing 30,681 - 30,686 results of 30,686 for search '(( 50 ((mg decrease) OR (((mean decrease) OR (a decrease)))) ) OR ( 2 step decrease ))', query time: 0.87s Refine Results
  1. 30681

    Image_4_Effects of transient, persistent, and resurgent sodium currents on excitability and spike regularity in vestibular ganglion neurons.pdf by Selina Baeza-Loya (20276955)

    Published 2024
    “…<p>Vestibular afferent neurons occur as two populations with differences in spike timing regularity that are independent of rate. …”
  2. 30682

    Table_6_Effects of transient, persistent, and resurgent sodium currents on excitability and spike regularity in vestibular ganglion neurons.pdf by Selina Baeza-Loya (20276955)

    Published 2024
    “…<p>Vestibular afferent neurons occur as two populations with differences in spike timing regularity that are independent of rate. …”
  3. 30683

    Image_5_Effects of transient, persistent, and resurgent sodium currents on excitability and spike regularity in vestibular ganglion neurons.pdf by Selina Baeza-Loya (20276955)

    Published 2024
    “…<p>Vestibular afferent neurons occur as two populations with differences in spike timing regularity that are independent of rate. …”
  4. 30684

    Table_4_Effects of transient, persistent, and resurgent sodium currents on excitability and spike regularity in vestibular ganglion neurons.pdf by Selina Baeza-Loya (20276955)

    Published 2024
    “…<p>Vestibular afferent neurons occur as two populations with differences in spike timing regularity that are independent of rate. …”
  5. 30685

    Experimental Gastric Carcinogenesis in <i>Cebus apella</i> Nonhuman Primates by Joana de Fátima Ferreira Borges da Costa (212759)

    Published 2011
    “…<div><p>The evolution of gastric carcinogenesis remains largely unknown. We established two gastric carcinogenesis models in New-World nonhuman primates. …”
  6. 30686

    Sensitivity analysis of the results of Fig 3, for the high school contact network, w.r.t. graph of persistent contacts. by Simon Mauras (11337066)

    Published 2021
    “…Part (b) is a construction of what we call a <i>best friends</i> graph, constructed in the following two steps: First, each person lists their neighbor by order of decreasing number of contacts, stopping as soon as they reach 25% or their total number of contacts. …”