Showing 37,981 - 38,000 results of 63,267 for search '(( a ((((larger decrease) OR (mean decrease))) OR (linear decrease)) ) OR ( a large decrease ))', query time: 0.77s Refine Results
  1. 37981

    Proton Transfer and Structure-Specific Fluorescence in Hydrogen Bond-Rich Protein Structures by Dorothea Pinotsi (1305144)

    Published 2016
    “…Protein structures which form fibrils have recently been shown to absorb light at energies in the near UV range and to exhibit a structure-specific fluorescence in the visible range even in the absence of aromatic amino acids. …”
  2. 37982

    Proton Transfer and Structure-Specific Fluorescence in Hydrogen Bond-Rich Protein Structures by Dorothea Pinotsi (1305144)

    Published 2016
    “…Protein structures which form fibrils have recently been shown to absorb light at energies in the near UV range and to exhibit a structure-specific fluorescence in the visible range even in the absence of aromatic amino acids. …”
  3. 37983

    1,4-Naphthalenediyl-Bridged Molecular Gyrotops: Rotation of the Rotor and Fluorescence in Solution by Yohei Nishiyama (1507840)

    Published 2015
    “…The activation energies for rotation in solution were found to decrease with increasing size of the cage. Therefore, a rotational barrier can be designed by adjusting the length of the side chains in these molecular gyrotops. …”
  4. 37984

    Future patterns of range size changes across increasing levels of climate change in which species can move. by Scott R. Loarie (89657)

    Published 2008
    “…<p>(A - D) Percent geometric mean change in range size (Future/Present with colors stretched from a <-10% decrease to a >10% increase). …”
  5. 37985

    Morphological characteristics, training status and race time of the participants. by Juan Del Coso (312072)

    Published 2013
    “…</p><p>(*) Different from runners with a pronounced decrease in running pace, at <i>P</i><0.05.…”
  6. 37986

    Supplementary Material for: Effect of Fludrocortisone on Intradialytic Hypotension: An Open-Label, Randomized, Crossover Study by Vongchaiudomchoke T. (14225873)

    Published 2022
    “…<b><i>Results:</i></b> A total of 17 patients were recruited with a mean age of 61.7 ± 14.8 years. …”
  7. 37987

    <i>DDI1/2</i>-deficient effects on the rapamycin-responsive signaling to Nrf1 and proteasome. by Keli Liu (5937368)

    Published 2023
    “…The results were shown as fold changes (mean ± S.D. n = 3×3) with a significant decrease (*, <i>p</i><0.01) relative to control values. …”
  8. 37988

    Sensitivity of simulated pathogen diversity to host lifespan and environmental transmission. by Benjamin Roche (84064)

    Published 2014
    “…The <i>z</i>-axis corresponds to the mean antigenic diversity over the 40-y period. A decrease in environmental uptake rate (<i>x</i>-axis) dramatically reduces mean antigenic diversity (average of the number of strains) and switches the phylogenetic pattern from one that depicts broad coexistence to an immune escape profile. …”
  9. 37989

    Damage of the eGC in sepsis. by Anne Wiesinger (487509)

    Published 2013
    “…<div><p>LPS challenge <i>in </i><i>vivo</i> led to a decrease in eGC thickness (A) and stiffness (B). …”
  10. 37990

    Effects of CRH on steroidogenic gene expression in GD15 mouse testis. by Erin N. McDowell (125146)

    Published 2012
    “…Eight to twenty-one samples/group were exposed for 24 hours <i>in vitro</i> to varying concentrations of CRH and/or 10 µM of antagonist. mRNA levels were determined by Taqman-based qRT-PCR. Mean ±SD shown for all data. a indicates no significant change between treated samples and vehicle samples. b indicates a significant increase (p-value <0.05) between treated and vehicle samples. c indicates a significant decrease (p-value <0.05) between samples exposed only to 10 nM CRH and samples exposed to 10 nM CRH and 10 µM CRH antagonist. …”
  11. 37991

    Univariate time series forecasting properties of random forests by Hristos Tyralis (3795271)

    Published 2018
    “…A possible explanation of this result is that increasing the number of lagged variables decreases the length of the training set and simultaneously decreases the information exploited from the original time series during the model fitting phase. …”
  12. 37992

    Frequency distributions of the <i>γ</i> values for the parameter sets that yield circadian oscillation. by Kazuhiro Maeda (182174)

    Published 2012
    “…<p>The frequency distributions of the quantitative balance between <i>X</i> and <i>Y</i> loops (<i>γ</i>) were simulated, while changing the kinetic symmetry (<i>ρ</i>): <i>ρ</i>≥99 (cross), <i>ρ</i> = 1 (circle), <i>ρ</i> = 0.1 (square), <i>ρ</i> = 0.01 (diamond). A decrease in <i>ρ</i> increases the kinetic symmetry. …”
  13. 37993

    Fig 3 - by Yu Feng (445691)

    Published 2024
    “…The exponent <i>a</i> decreases with <i>r</i><sub>1</sub> and converges to 0.5 in the large <i>r</i><sub>1</sub> limit. …”
  14. 37994

    Image_1_Declines and Resilience of Communities of Leaf Chewing Insects on Missouri Oaks Following Spring Frost and Summer Drought.JPEG by Robert J. Marquis (2903021)

    Published 2019
    “…Smaller-bodied species of leaf tying Lepidoptera took longer to recover than larger-bodied species following the drought. Overall, we found no evidence for a general decline in abundance, even a modest one, during the 20 years of study of faunas on oak trees in southeastern Missouri. …”
  15. 37995

    Image_1_Declines and Resilience of Communities of Leaf Chewing Insects on Missouri Oaks Following Spring Frost and Summer Drought.JPEG by Robert J. Marquis (2903021)

    Published 2019
    “…Smaller-bodied species of leaf tying Lepidoptera took longer to recover than larger-bodied species following the drought. Overall, we found no evidence for a general decline in abundance, even a modest one, during the 20 years of study of faunas on oak trees in southeastern Missouri. …”
  16. 37996

    Macroeconomic burden of NMHs for the whole South American region over the period 2020–2050 across various scenarios. by Maddalena Ferranna (9969446)

    Published 2023
    “…<p><i>Baseline scenario</i> = 3% discount rate, disease burden based on median estimates from the 2019 Global Burden of Diseases (GBD) [<a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0293144#pone.0293144.ref001" target="_blank">1</a>], morbidity affects labor force participation, and treatment costs decrease investments in physical capital proportionally to the saving rate. …”
  17. 37997

    Increased HIV Testing Will Modestly Reduce HIV Incidence among Gay Men in NSW and Would Be Acceptable if HIV Testing Becomes Convenient by Richard T. Gray (282417)

    Published 2013
    “…If testing levels decrease from current levels then we expect an increase in HIV infections with a sharply rising trend over time. …”
  18. 37998

    Testes Mass, but Not Sperm Length, Increases with Higher Levels of Polyandry in an Ancient Sex Model by David E. Vrech (552632)

    Published 2014
    “…<div><p>There is strong evidence that polyandrous taxa have evolved relatively larger testes than monogamous relatives. Sperm size may either increase or decrease across species with the risk or intensity of sperm competition. …”
  19. 37999

    table 1_Census-Block-Level Property Risk Estimation Due to Extreme Cold Temperature, Hail, Lightning, and Tornadoes in Louisiana, United States.docx by Rubayet Bin Mostafiz (9615689)

    Published 2020
    “…Our approach improves previous hazard risk assessments by 1) weighting risk by 2010 and 2050-projected population; 2) adjusting future hazard intensity based on recent climate model projections; and 3) producing results at the “microscale” census block, rather than previous county-wide or larger assessments. On a statewide basis, extreme cold temperature and tornado hazards incur by far the most risk of the four hazards. …”
  20. 38000

    table 1_Census-Block-Level Property Risk Estimation Due to Extreme Cold Temperature, Hail, Lightning, and Tornadoes in Louisiana, United States.docx by Rubayet Bin Mostafiz (9615689)

    Published 2020
    “…Our approach improves previous hazard risk assessments by 1) weighting risk by 2010 and 2050-projected population; 2) adjusting future hazard intensity based on recent climate model projections; and 3) producing results at the “microscale” census block, rather than previous county-wide or larger assessments. On a statewide basis, extreme cold temperature and tornado hazards incur by far the most risk of the four hazards. …”