Search alternatives:
larger decrease » marked decrease (Expand Search)
linear decrease » linear increase (Expand Search)
large increased » large increases (Expand Search), larger increases (Expand Search), age increased (Expand Search)
teer decrease » mean decrease (Expand Search), greater decrease (Expand Search)
a large » _ large (Expand Search)
larger decrease » marked decrease (Expand Search)
linear decrease » linear increase (Expand Search)
large increased » large increases (Expand Search), larger increases (Expand Search), age increased (Expand Search)
teer decrease » mean decrease (Expand Search), greater decrease (Expand Search)
a large » _ large (Expand Search)
-
41
-
42
-
43
Biases in larger populations.
Published 2025“…(<b>B</b>) Minimum and maximum bias in a long 1D array with rectified cosine tuning. Bias expressed in terms of the distance between neurons in a linear population of equally spaced neurons. …”
-
44
-
45
-
46
Negative Pressure Engineering with Large Cage Cations in 2D Halide Perovskites Causes Lattice Softening
Published 2020“…These structural changes with enlarged A cations result in significant decreases in photoluminescence intensity and lifetime, consistent with a more pronounced nonradiative decay. …”
-
47
Negative Pressure Engineering with Large Cage Cations in 2D Halide Perovskites Causes Lattice Softening
Published 2020“…These structural changes with enlarged A cations result in significant decreases in photoluminescence intensity and lifetime, consistent with a more pronounced nonradiative decay. …”
-
48
Increasing network size does not guarantee convergence to a balanced state.
Published 2023“…The spiking activity of the spiking LIF network (colored lines) is captured by the SSN model (black lines). As <i>N</i> increases we observe a broadening of the bistability window and a decreasing firing rate, see inset. …”
-
49
-
50
-
51
-
52
-
53
In superadditive networks, more enhancers decrease noise and fidelity.
Published 2023“…<p>(A) Superadditivity is implemented in our model by linearly increasing <i>k</i><sub>on</sub> rates and linearly decreasing <i>k</i><sub>off</sub> rates. …”
-
54
-
55
-
56
-
57
-
58
-
59
-
60