Showing 9,081 - 9,100 results of 226,405 for search '(( a ((((mean decrease) OR (a decrease))) OR (linear decrease)) ) OR ( a large decrease ))', query time: 1.34s Refine Results
  1. 9081
  2. 9082

    Individual changes in mean jump height during 10 repetitions of the Abalakov jump with the ingestion of caffeine or a placebo. by Carlos Puente (5117516)

    Published 2018
    “…Dashed lines represent individuals with a decrease in mean jump height with the ingestion of caffeine placebo.…”
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  6. 9086

    A different circuit showing FCD, the non-linear integral feedback loop (NLIFL), also exhibits a power law behavior. by Miri Adler (615809)

    Published 2014
    “…<p>a) The NLIFL mechanism. b) The amplitude of the response is a power law of the relative change in input signal. c) The power-law exponent increases linearly with <i>n</i>. d) The time-scales decrease faster with the fold change of the signal, , and with <i>n</i> than in the incoherent feed-forward loop case (<a href="http://www.ploscompbiol.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003781#pcbi-1003781-g003" target="_blank">Fig. 3b</a>).…”
  7. 9087

    Knockdown of NUSAP1 inhibits cell proliferation and invasion through downregulation of TOP2A in human glioblastoma by Yaotian Hu (12518616)

    Published 2022
    “…Analysis of RNA sequencing data from P3-cells with stable knockdown of NUSAP1 revealed topoisomerase 2A (TOP2A) as a possible molecule downregulated by the loss of NUSAP1. …”
  8. 9088

    Effects of abiotic environmental factors and land use on the diversity of carrion-visiting silphid beetles (Coleoptera: Silphidae): A large scale carrion study by Christian von Hoermann (389267)

    Published 2018
    “…The carrion community silphid diversity was negatively affected by an increase in mean ambient temperature in all three regions. Although management intensity in forests did not affect the overall abundance of Silphidae, the abundance of <i>Nicrophorus humator</i> decreased significantly with higher forest management intensity across all three regions. …”
  9. 9089

    Continuous Viscoelasticity Measurement of Cell Spheroids via Microfluidic Electrical Aspiration by Heyi Chen (19930197)

    Published 2024
    “…The use of a symmetric aspiration channel and the linear half-space model enable measurements of a large number of viscoelastic properties via a single measurement with higher accuracy. …”
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    The research process for the present study. by Feng Huang (62988)

    Published 2024
    “…Key findings include: (1) In temporal relationships, a 46.70% increase in GDP per capita implies a 0.38 increase in subjective well-being, while a 0.09 increase in the Gini coefficient means a 1.47 decrease in subjective well-being. (2) In spatial relationships, for every 46.70% increase in GDP per capita, subjective well-being rises by 0.51; however, this relationship is buffered by unfair distribution, and GDP per capita no longer significantly affects subjective well-being when the Gini index exceeds 0.609. …”
  13. 9093

    The main effects of PRGDP and Gi on SWB. by Feng Huang (62988)

    Published 2024
    “…Key findings include: (1) In temporal relationships, a 46.70% increase in GDP per capita implies a 0.38 increase in subjective well-being, while a 0.09 increase in the Gini coefficient means a 1.47 decrease in subjective well-being. (2) In spatial relationships, for every 46.70% increase in GDP per capita, subjective well-being rises by 0.51; however, this relationship is buffered by unfair distribution, and GDP per capita no longer significantly affects subjective well-being when the Gini index exceeds 0.609. …”
  14. 9094

    The interaction of PRGDP and Gi on SWB. by Feng Huang (62988)

    Published 2024
    “…Key findings include: (1) In temporal relationships, a 46.70% increase in GDP per capita implies a 0.38 increase in subjective well-being, while a 0.09 increase in the Gini coefficient means a 1.47 decrease in subjective well-being. (2) In spatial relationships, for every 46.70% increase in GDP per capita, subjective well-being rises by 0.51; however, this relationship is buffered by unfair distribution, and GDP per capita no longer significantly affects subjective well-being when the Gini index exceeds 0.609. …”
  15. 9095

    Descriptive statistics of variables. by Feng Huang (62988)

    Published 2024
    “…Key findings include: (1) In temporal relationships, a 46.70% increase in GDP per capita implies a 0.38 increase in subjective well-being, while a 0.09 increase in the Gini coefficient means a 1.47 decrease in subjective well-being. (2) In spatial relationships, for every 46.70% increase in GDP per capita, subjective well-being rises by 0.51; however, this relationship is buffered by unfair distribution, and GDP per capita no longer significantly affects subjective well-being when the Gini index exceeds 0.609. …”
  16. 9096

    Non-Steady-State Fickian Diffusion Models Decrease the Estimated Gel Layer Diffusion Coefficient Uncertainty for Diffusive Gradients in Thin-Films Passive Samplers by Samuel D. Hodges (16412358)

    Published 2023
    “…The SA assumes pseudo-steady-state flux, characterized by linear sink mass accumulation–time profiles with a typical threshold <i>R</i><sup>2</sup> ≥ 0.97. …”
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  18. 9098

    Supplementary Material for: Prestroke Physical Activity Is Associated with Good Functional Outcome and Arterial Recanalization after Stroke due to a Large Vessel Occlusion by Ricciardi A.C. (4145302)

    Published 2014
    “…<b><i>Background:</i></b> Although multiple studies and meta-analyses have consistently suggested that regular physical activity (PhA) is associated with a decreased stroke risk and recurrence, there is limited data on the possible preconditioning effect of prestroke PhA on stroke severity and prognosis. …”
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