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largest decrease » largest decreases (Expand Search), larger decrease (Expand Search), marked decrease (Expand Search)
linear decrease » linear increase (Expand Search)
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largest decrease » largest decreases (Expand Search), larger decrease (Expand Search), marked decrease (Expand Search)
linear decrease » linear increase (Expand Search)
laser decrease » larger decrease (Expand Search), water decreases (Expand Search), asdr decreased (Expand Search)
teer decrease » mean decrease (Expand Search), greater decrease (Expand Search)
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13281
Image2_Temperature dependence of dielectric properties of blood at 10 Hz–100 MHz.JPEG
Published 2022“…The temperature coefficient of the imaginary part was positive and bimodal from 6.31 kHz to 100 MHz, with peaks of 5.22%/°C and 4.14%/°C at 126 kHz and 39.8 MHz, respectively. Finally, a third-order function model was developed to describe the dielectric spectra at these temperatures, in which the resistivity parameter in each dispersion zone decreased linearly with temperature and each characteristic frequency increased linearly with temperature. …”
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13282
Image14_Temperature dependence of dielectric properties of blood at 10 Hz–100 MHz.TIF
Published 2022“…The temperature coefficient of the imaginary part was positive and bimodal from 6.31 kHz to 100 MHz, with peaks of 5.22%/°C and 4.14%/°C at 126 kHz and 39.8 MHz, respectively. Finally, a third-order function model was developed to describe the dielectric spectra at these temperatures, in which the resistivity parameter in each dispersion zone decreased linearly with temperature and each characteristic frequency increased linearly with temperature. …”
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13283
Image11_Temperature dependence of dielectric properties of blood at 10 Hz–100 MHz.TIF
Published 2022“…The temperature coefficient of the imaginary part was positive and bimodal from 6.31 kHz to 100 MHz, with peaks of 5.22%/°C and 4.14%/°C at 126 kHz and 39.8 MHz, respectively. Finally, a third-order function model was developed to describe the dielectric spectra at these temperatures, in which the resistivity parameter in each dispersion zone decreased linearly with temperature and each characteristic frequency increased linearly with temperature. …”
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13284
Image3_Temperature dependence of dielectric properties of blood at 10 Hz–100 MHz.JPEG
Published 2022“…The temperature coefficient of the imaginary part was positive and bimodal from 6.31 kHz to 100 MHz, with peaks of 5.22%/°C and 4.14%/°C at 126 kHz and 39.8 MHz, respectively. Finally, a third-order function model was developed to describe the dielectric spectra at these temperatures, in which the resistivity parameter in each dispersion zone decreased linearly with temperature and each characteristic frequency increased linearly with temperature. …”
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13285
DataSheet1_Temperature dependence of dielectric properties of blood at 10 Hz–100 MHz.docx
Published 2022“…The temperature coefficient of the imaginary part was positive and bimodal from 6.31 kHz to 100 MHz, with peaks of 5.22%/°C and 4.14%/°C at 126 kHz and 39.8 MHz, respectively. Finally, a third-order function model was developed to describe the dielectric spectra at these temperatures, in which the resistivity parameter in each dispersion zone decreased linearly with temperature and each characteristic frequency increased linearly with temperature. …”
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13286
Image5_Temperature dependence of dielectric properties of blood at 10 Hz–100 MHz.TIF
Published 2022“…The temperature coefficient of the imaginary part was positive and bimodal from 6.31 kHz to 100 MHz, with peaks of 5.22%/°C and 4.14%/°C at 126 kHz and 39.8 MHz, respectively. Finally, a third-order function model was developed to describe the dielectric spectra at these temperatures, in which the resistivity parameter in each dispersion zone decreased linearly with temperature and each characteristic frequency increased linearly with temperature. …”
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13287
Image8_Temperature dependence of dielectric properties of blood at 10 Hz–100 MHz.TIF
Published 2022“…The temperature coefficient of the imaginary part was positive and bimodal from 6.31 kHz to 100 MHz, with peaks of 5.22%/°C and 4.14%/°C at 126 kHz and 39.8 MHz, respectively. Finally, a third-order function model was developed to describe the dielectric spectra at these temperatures, in which the resistivity parameter in each dispersion zone decreased linearly with temperature and each characteristic frequency increased linearly with temperature. …”
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13288
Image1_Temperature dependence of dielectric properties of blood at 10 Hz–100 MHz.TIF
Published 2022“…The temperature coefficient of the imaginary part was positive and bimodal from 6.31 kHz to 100 MHz, with peaks of 5.22%/°C and 4.14%/°C at 126 kHz and 39.8 MHz, respectively. Finally, a third-order function model was developed to describe the dielectric spectra at these temperatures, in which the resistivity parameter in each dispersion zone decreased linearly with temperature and each characteristic frequency increased linearly with temperature. …”
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13289
Image6_Temperature dependence of dielectric properties of blood at 10 Hz–100 MHz.TIF
Published 2022“…The temperature coefficient of the imaginary part was positive and bimodal from 6.31 kHz to 100 MHz, with peaks of 5.22%/°C and 4.14%/°C at 126 kHz and 39.8 MHz, respectively. Finally, a third-order function model was developed to describe the dielectric spectra at these temperatures, in which the resistivity parameter in each dispersion zone decreased linearly with temperature and each characteristic frequency increased linearly with temperature. …”
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13290
Image7_Temperature dependence of dielectric properties of blood at 10 Hz–100 MHz.TIF
Published 2022“…The temperature coefficient of the imaginary part was positive and bimodal from 6.31 kHz to 100 MHz, with peaks of 5.22%/°C and 4.14%/°C at 126 kHz and 39.8 MHz, respectively. Finally, a third-order function model was developed to describe the dielectric spectra at these temperatures, in which the resistivity parameter in each dispersion zone decreased linearly with temperature and each characteristic frequency increased linearly with temperature. …”
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13291
Image15_Temperature dependence of dielectric properties of blood at 10 Hz–100 MHz.TIF
Published 2022“…The temperature coefficient of the imaginary part was positive and bimodal from 6.31 kHz to 100 MHz, with peaks of 5.22%/°C and 4.14%/°C at 126 kHz and 39.8 MHz, respectively. Finally, a third-order function model was developed to describe the dielectric spectra at these temperatures, in which the resistivity parameter in each dispersion zone decreased linearly with temperature and each characteristic frequency increased linearly with temperature. …”
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13292
Image4_Temperature dependence of dielectric properties of blood at 10 Hz–100 MHz.JPEG
Published 2022“…The temperature coefficient of the imaginary part was positive and bimodal from 6.31 kHz to 100 MHz, with peaks of 5.22%/°C and 4.14%/°C at 126 kHz and 39.8 MHz, respectively. Finally, a third-order function model was developed to describe the dielectric spectra at these temperatures, in which the resistivity parameter in each dispersion zone decreased linearly with temperature and each characteristic frequency increased linearly with temperature. …”
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13293
Image13_Temperature dependence of dielectric properties of blood at 10 Hz–100 MHz.TIF
Published 2022“…The temperature coefficient of the imaginary part was positive and bimodal from 6.31 kHz to 100 MHz, with peaks of 5.22%/°C and 4.14%/°C at 126 kHz and 39.8 MHz, respectively. Finally, a third-order function model was developed to describe the dielectric spectra at these temperatures, in which the resistivity parameter in each dispersion zone decreased linearly with temperature and each characteristic frequency increased linearly with temperature. …”
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13294
Image9_Temperature dependence of dielectric properties of blood at 10 Hz–100 MHz.TIF
Published 2022“…The temperature coefficient of the imaginary part was positive and bimodal from 6.31 kHz to 100 MHz, with peaks of 5.22%/°C and 4.14%/°C at 126 kHz and 39.8 MHz, respectively. Finally, a third-order function model was developed to describe the dielectric spectra at these temperatures, in which the resistivity parameter in each dispersion zone decreased linearly with temperature and each characteristic frequency increased linearly with temperature. …”
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13295
Image12_Temperature dependence of dielectric properties of blood at 10 Hz–100 MHz.TIF
Published 2022“…The temperature coefficient of the imaginary part was positive and bimodal from 6.31 kHz to 100 MHz, with peaks of 5.22%/°C and 4.14%/°C at 126 kHz and 39.8 MHz, respectively. Finally, a third-order function model was developed to describe the dielectric spectra at these temperatures, in which the resistivity parameter in each dispersion zone decreased linearly with temperature and each characteristic frequency increased linearly with temperature. …”
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13296
<i>AUC</i><sub><i>best</i></sub>, <i>AUC</i><sub><i>adj</i></sub> and <i>O</i> versus number of features (<i>k</i>) included in the model.
Published 2018“…(b) <i>AUC</i><sub><i>adj</i></sub> − <i>k</i> curves show that as the number of features included in the model increased, the <i>AUC</i><sub><i>adj</i></sub> increased to reach a maximum value, plateaued in some cases, then decreased in models with a high number of features. …”
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13297
Dynamics of the granule cells in response to sinusoidally oscillating MF signals at 0.5 Hz.
Published 2013“…The reproducibility increases towards 0.9 at the beginning of a cycle, and then linearly decreases towards 0.8, suggesting that the spike patterns of granule cells are highly reproducible across cycles.…”
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13298
Resolution in crystallographic structures is positively correlated with sequence-structure communication fidelity.
Published 2008“…<p>(A) Linearity between channel capacity <i>C</i> and sequence-structure fidelity <i>q<sub>e</sub><sup>−</sup></i> for thirteen nested sets of structures with increasing crystallographic resolution (Supporting Information <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0003110#pone.0003110.s002" target="_blank">Table S2</a>). …”
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13299
Self-regulating pen-needle-based micronozzle for printing array of nanoliter droplets under fluorinated liquid
Published 2024“…Droplet volume decreased hyperbolically with robot speed (<i>w</i>) as <i>V</i> = 1613 <i>w</i><sup>−1</sup> + 14.3 (nL, mm/s), while the number of droplets produced per minute (<i>N</i>) increased linearly with speed as <i>N</i> = 2.0 <i>w</i> + 28.5. …”
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13300
The quasi-active channel conductance distribution affects the cell field sensitivity depending of the local conductance at the considered location.
Published 2018“…We consider 3 different QA conductance distributions: uniform and linearly increasing/decreasing with distances from the soma. …”