Showing 49,361 - 49,380 results of 226,405 for search '(( a ((((laser decrease) OR (a decrease))) OR (linear decrease)) ) OR ( a largest decrease ))', query time: 1.62s Refine Results
  1. 49361
  2. 49362
  3. 49363

    Photosystem II Does Not Possess a Simple Excitation Energy Funnel: Time-Resolved Fluorescence Spectroscopy Meets Theory by Yutaka Shibata (1295478)

    Published 2015
    “…Furthermore, the refined site energies well reproduce the temperature dependence of the time-resolved fluorescence spectrum of PS II-CC, which is characterized by the emergence of a 695 nm fluorescence peak upon cooling down to 77 K and the decrease of its relative intensity upon further cooling below 77 K. …”
  4. 49364

    Photosystem II Does Not Possess a Simple Excitation Energy Funnel: Time-Resolved Fluorescence Spectroscopy Meets Theory by Yutaka Shibata (1295478)

    Published 2015
    “…Furthermore, the refined site energies well reproduce the temperature dependence of the time-resolved fluorescence spectrum of PS II-CC, which is characterized by the emergence of a 695 nm fluorescence peak upon cooling down to 77 K and the decrease of its relative intensity upon further cooling below 77 K. …”
  5. 49365
  6. 49366

    Code and data from: Demographic signals of population decline and time to extinction in a seasonal, density-dependent model by Joseph B. Burant (7353524)

    Published 2023
    “…</li><li><i>lossT </i>= 6-level factor (0, 2, 5, 10, 20, 25) indicating the rate of habitat loss as a percent decrease per generation. A value of zero (0) indicates no habitat loss applied (i.e., for controls).…”
  7. 49367

    Relationship between cluster extension and HCV RNA content. by Frederik Graw (175938)

    Published 2014
    “…Lines indicate the best fit of a model assuming a biphasic linear decrease of the intracellular HCV RNA content with increasing cluster extension (see <a href="http://www.ploscompbiol.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003934#pcbi-1003934-t004" target="_blank">Table 4</a>). …”
  8. 49368
  9. 49369

    HMM predictions and effects of cocaine on model behavior. by R. Becket Ebitz (7841318)

    Published 2019
    “…Note that the slight decrease in the probability of staying in exploration was likely due to practice (see <a href="http://www.ploscompbiol.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1007475#sec002" target="_blank">Results</a>). …”
  10. 49370
  11. 49371

    Female Employment Reduces Fertility in Rural Senegal by Goedele Van den Broeck (713527)

    Published 2015
    “…Evidence from high-income countries suggests that higher female employment rates lead to reduced fertility rates but evidence from developing countries at an early stage of demographic transition is largely absent. We concentrate on a rural area in northern Senegal where a recent boom in horticultural exports has been associated with a sudden increase in female off-farm employment. …”
  12. 49372
  13. 49373
  14. 49374

    Tonic exploration governs both flexibility and lapses by R. Becket Ebitz (7841318)

    Published 2019
    “…We reconcile these results with a state-switching model in which cocaine decreases exploration by deepening attractor basins corresponding to rule states. …”
  15. 49375
  16. 49376
  17. 49377
  18. 49378
  19. 49379

    Data_Sheet_2_Computational modeling of decision-making in substance abusers: testing Bechara’s hypotheses.CSV by Laurent Avila Chauvet (18705910)

    Published 2024
    “…The findings indicate that as the memory factor increases, along with high sensitivity to losses and low sensitivity to gains, agents prefer advantageous alternatives, particularly those with a lower frequency of punishments. Conversely, when sensitivity to gains increases and the memory factor decreases, agents prefer disadvantageous alternatives, especially those that result in larger losses. …”
  20. 49380

    Presentation_1_Computational modeling of decision-making in substance abusers: testing Bechara’s hypotheses.pdf by Laurent Avila Chauvet (18705910)

    Published 2024
    “…The findings indicate that as the memory factor increases, along with high sensitivity to losses and low sensitivity to gains, agents prefer advantageous alternatives, particularly those with a lower frequency of punishments. Conversely, when sensitivity to gains increases and the memory factor decreases, agents prefer disadvantageous alternatives, especially those that result in larger losses. …”