Showing 1,901 - 1,920 results of 52,235 for search '(( a ((((mean decrease) OR (linear decrease))) OR (larger decrease)) ) OR ( a largest decrease ))', query time: 0.93s Refine Results
  1. 1901
  2. 1902
  3. 1903
  4. 1904
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  7. 1907

    Generalized linear model of indels. by Per Sjödin (254512)

    Published 2010
    “…Significance of explanatory variables in generalized linear models for counts of indels are reported. The effect is only reported as decreasing or increasing number of insertions (deletions). …”
  8. 1908
  9. 1909
  10. 1910
  11. 1911

    Data Sheet 1_In-patient expenditure between 2011 and 2021 for patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus: a hospital-based multicenter retrospective study in southwest China.docx by Yuxin He (714049)

    Published 2025
    “…Considering the overall average medical expenditure, diagnosis cost accounted for the largest proportion and was never <25% since 2011, showing a decreasing trend year by year. …”
  12. 1912
  13. 1913
  14. 1914
  15. 1915
  16. 1916
  17. 1917

    DataSheet_2_Climate factors drive plant distributions at higher taxonomic scales and larger spatial scales.docx by Erhan Huang (17772852)

    Published 2024
    “…Topographic factors had a relatively larger influence at higher taxonomic levels (i.e., family>genus>species), but with a relatively slow rise with the increase in spatial scale.…”
  18. 1918

    DataSheet_3_Climate factors drive plant distributions at higher taxonomic scales and larger spatial scales.docx by Erhan Huang (17772852)

    Published 2024
    “…Topographic factors had a relatively larger influence at higher taxonomic levels (i.e., family>genus>species), but with a relatively slow rise with the increase in spatial scale.…”
  19. 1919

    DataSheet_1_Climate factors drive plant distributions at higher taxonomic scales and larger spatial scales.docx by Erhan Huang (17772852)

    Published 2024
    “…Topographic factors had a relatively larger influence at higher taxonomic levels (i.e., family>genus>species), but with a relatively slow rise with the increase in spatial scale.…”
  20. 1920