Showing 8,421 - 8,440 results of 30,907 for search '(( a ((((larger decrease) OR (teer decrease))) OR (linear decrease)) ) OR ( a large decrease ))', query time: 0.84s Refine Results
  1. 8421

    The memory capacity for a single sequence. by Nadav Ben-Shushan (4678807)

    Published 2017
    “…<p>(A) The memory capacity normalized by the network size as function of λ—the largest eigenvalue of the connectivity matrix <b>W</b> in absolute value. …”
  2. 8422

    Body position and motor imagery strategy effects on imagining gait in healthy adults: Results from a cross-sectional study by Olivier Beauchet (517863)

    Published 2018
    “…Allocentric MI strategy is associated with a significant decrease in iTUG (P = 0.037) only while adjusting for age. …”
  3. 8423

    Schematic representation of an influenza A virion. by Alice Carolyn McHardy (156861)

    Published 2013
    “…The genome of the influenza A virus is composed of eight individual RNA segments (conventionally ordered by decreasing length, bottom row), which each encode one or two proteins. …”
  4. 8424

    Robust Sequence Determinants of α‑Synuclein Toxicity in Yeast Implicate Membrane Binding by Robert W. Newberry (1296231)

    Published 2020
    “…We found that the conformation of α-synuclein previously shown to drive yeast toxicityan extended, membrane-bound helixis largely unaffected by these chemical perturbations, underscoring the importance of this conformational state as a driver of cellular toxicity. …”
  5. 8425

    Robust Sequence Determinants of α‑Synuclein Toxicity in Yeast Implicate Membrane Binding by Robert W. Newberry (1296231)

    Published 2020
    “…We found that the conformation of α-synuclein previously shown to drive yeast toxicityan extended, membrane-bound helixis largely unaffected by these chemical perturbations, underscoring the importance of this conformational state as a driver of cellular toxicity. …”
  6. 8426

    Robust Sequence Determinants of α‑Synuclein Toxicity in Yeast Implicate Membrane Binding by Robert W. Newberry (1296231)

    Published 2020
    “…We found that the conformation of α-synuclein previously shown to drive yeast toxicityan extended, membrane-bound helixis largely unaffected by these chemical perturbations, underscoring the importance of this conformational state as a driver of cellular toxicity. …”
  7. 8427

    Robust Sequence Determinants of α‑Synuclein Toxicity in Yeast Implicate Membrane Binding by Robert W. Newberry (1296231)

    Published 2020
    “…We found that the conformation of α-synuclein previously shown to drive yeast toxicityan extended, membrane-bound helixis largely unaffected by these chemical perturbations, underscoring the importance of this conformational state as a driver of cellular toxicity. …”
  8. 8428
  9. 8429
  10. 8430

    A Critical Quantity for Noise Attenuation in Feedback Systems by Liming Wang (114648)

    Published 2010
    “…Thus, the combination of fast activation and slow deactivation provides the best noise attenuation, and it can be attained in a single positive feedback loop system. An additional positive feedback loop often leads to a marked decrease in activation time, decrease or slight increase of deactivation time and allows larger kinetic rate variations for slow deactivation and fast activation. …”
  11. 8431

    Chloride flux at corneal wounds A. by Ana Carolina Vieira (238675)

    Published 2013
    “…</b> Unwounded cornea had a small chloride efflux. Wounding induced a large, sustained influx which increased with time. …”
  12. 8432

    Patient baseline characteristics. by Dan Yu (214174)

    Published 2023
    “…Adjusted increased risk of mortality was linearly related to the decreasing lymphocyte percentage (<i>P</i>-non-linearity = 0.942) and increasing RDW (<i>P</i>-non-linearity = 0.612), and per standard deviation (SD) of increment lymphocyte percentage and RDW was associated with the 26% (0.74, 0.64–0.84) decrement and 5% (1.05, 0.95–1.15) increment in hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) of mortality, respectively. …”
  13. 8433

    Regulatory Mechanisms of SNAP-25-Associated Insulin Release Revealed by Live-Cell Confocal and Single-Molecule Localization Imaging by Guanfang Zhao (11574644)

    Published 2022
    “…Additionally, we found that glucotoxicity also had an inhibitory effect on the colocalization between SNAP-25 and STX-1A, indicating a decrease of their interactions. …”
  14. 8434

    Effect of apical constriction on MF speed and cell packing. by George Courcoubetis (6277931)

    Published 2022
    “…<p><b>A)</b> The MF speed decreases as apical constriction increases. …”
  15. 8435

    Green Superlubricity Enabled by Only One Water Droplet on Plant Oil-Infused Surfaces by Kengo Manabe (1437730)

    Published 2021
    “…The increase in energy loss due to friction and the use of large amounts of lubricants to improve it are major challenges we face from a global environmental perspective. …”
  16. 8436

    Green Superlubricity Enabled by Only One Water Droplet on Plant Oil-Infused Surfaces by Kengo Manabe (1437730)

    Published 2021
    “…The increase in energy loss due to friction and the use of large amounts of lubricants to improve it are major challenges we face from a global environmental perspective. …”
  17. 8437

    Green Superlubricity Enabled by Only One Water Droplet on Plant Oil-Infused Surfaces by Kengo Manabe (1437730)

    Published 2021
    “…The increase in energy loss due to friction and the use of large amounts of lubricants to improve it are major challenges we face from a global environmental perspective. …”
  18. 8438

    Green Superlubricity Enabled by Only One Water Droplet on Plant Oil-Infused Surfaces by Kengo Manabe (1437730)

    Published 2021
    “…The increase in energy loss due to friction and the use of large amounts of lubricants to improve it are major challenges we face from a global environmental perspective. …”
  19. 8439

    Simulation of a Predator–PRESS Experiment. by Takehito Yoshida (273131)

    Published 2007
    “…(B) The separate abundances of the defended (black) and vulnerable (blue) prey genotypes. Decreased predator density gives an advantage to the vulnerable prey type, while increased predator density gives the advantage to the initially rare defended prey type, leading to a large change in total prey density. …”
  20. 8440

    Presynaptic inhibition in a recurrent network. by Laura Bella Naumann (9221252)

    Published 2020
    “…Release factor as a linear function of inhibitory neuron activity for different slopes <i>β</i> = 0.01, 0.03, …, 0.09. …”