Showing 13,241 - 13,260 results of 18,309 for search '(( a ((larger decrease) OR (linear decrease)) ) OR ( a ((latent decrease) OR (largest decrease)) ))', query time: 0.50s Refine Results
  1. 13241

    Additional properties of Nutritional Compensation in <i>Neurospora crassa</i>. by Christina M. Kelliher (3383657)

    Published 2023
    “…Many traces showed a decrease in bioluminescence at approximately 100 hours, and this correlates with the fungal growth front reaching and surpassing the end of the device’s recording area (<b>A</b>) (see <a href="http://www.plosbiology.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pbio.3001961#pbio.3001961.s013" target="_blank">S1 Movie</a>). …”
  2. 13242

    CSB-LacI and eGFP-PGBD3 induce partial up-regulation of genes regulated by CSB-PGBD3. by Lucas T. Gray (132547)

    Published 2012
    “…Orange cells: increased expression; Blue cells: decreased expression; No color: expression change was less than 2-fold (1 signal log ratio); darker color indicates a larger change in expression.…”
  3. 13243

    Supplementary Material for: Health Technology Assessment of Computer-Assisted Pap Test Screening in Italy by Dalla Palma P. (4139419)

    Published 2013
    “…<b><i>Methods:</i></b> A working group was formed that included researchers from the largest centers already using instrumentation. …”
  4. 13244

    Experiment 1 model performance. by Omisa Jinsi (13367452)

    Published 2023
    “…<b>(A)</b> Validation set accuracy. Gray corresponds to models trained with <i>non-blurred</i> images, blue to models trained with images whose blur decreases linearly over the first 50 epochs (<i>linear-blur</i> condition), and green to models trained with images whose blur decreases according to a logarithmic function over the first 50 epochs (<i>nonlinear-blur</i> condition). …”
  5. 13245

    Tuning of Redox Potentials for the Design of Ruthenium Anticancer Drugs − an Electrochemical Study of [<i>trans</i>-RuCl<sub>4</sub>L(DM<i>S</i>O)]<sup>-</sup> and [<i>trans</i>-Ru... by Erwin Reisner (1298334)

    Published 2004
    “…The <i>E</i><sub>L</sub> parameter was estimated for indazole showing that this ligand behaves as a weaker net electron donor than imidazole or triazole. …”
  6. 13246

    Excess axonal wire originates from nature of bouton distribution, ‘bouton-free’ internodal length, and branching complexity. by Julian M. L. Budd (251785)

    Published 2010
    “…<p>(A) Whole arbor wire economy was negatively correlated with the proportion of boutons on first- and second-order branches (Spearman rank correlation, r<sub>s</sub> = −0.84, p<10<sup>−6</sup>, one-sided; linear regression (solid grey line), slope  = −109.21, intercept  = 183.35). …”
  7. 13247

    The scaling function is very similar across all major natural behavioral states and brain regions. by Tiago L. Ribeiro (236198)

    Published 2010
    “…(c) Scatter plot of the exponents of the DPL fit for all distributions in panel (a). Note that the dispersion is significantly larger for surrogated data.…”
  8. 13248

    Occipital Region of Interest (ROI) cortical visual evoked potentials (VEPs). by Julia Campbell (528863)

    Published 2014
    “…<p>A. Peak components P1, N1, and P2 amplitudes are significantly larger for the adult Hearing Loss (HL) group (red) in comparison to the adult Normal Hearing group (blue). …”
  9. 13249

    Longitudinal microbiome analysis of single donor fecal microbiota transplantation in patients with recurrent <i>Clostridium difficile</i> infection and/or ulcerative colitis by Michael Mintz (4811274)

    Published 2018
    “…<div><p>Background</p><p>Studies of colonoscopic fecal microbiota transplant (FMT) in patients with recurrent CDI, indicate that this is a very effective treatment for preventing further relapses. …”
  10. 13250

    Large amplitude changes in Pull-type activity for intentional and incidental pulls in RFA-RS neurons. by Akiko Saiki (571879)

    Published 2014
    “…Note that RFA-RS neurons showed a larger s.d. value during incidental pulls than CFA-RS neurons, and also that no change was observed in response to the No-go cue presentation. …”
  11. 13251

    Meta-Analysis - Geese - DN Adli by Danung Nur Adli (10055480)

    Published 2021
    “…However, the blood parameters, probiotics decreased triglycerides (p < 0.001) and concomitantly decreased albumin (p < 0.01) in geese. …”
  12. 13252

    Data_Sheet_1_Impact of Crystal Structure and Particles Shape on the Photoluminescence Intensity of CdSe/CdS Core/Shell Nanocrystals.PDF by Lukas Ludescher (3708583)

    Published 2019
    “…The smallest CdSe cores exhibit a pure hexagonal wurtzite crystal structure, whereas the larger ones also possess a cubic zincblende phase fraction. …”
  13. 13253

    Proteomic and phosphoproteomic time course over sexual differentiation. by Melvin Bérard (7907558)

    Published 2024
    “…<p>(<b>A</b>) Experimental design. <i>h+</i> and <i>h- cycΔ5 fus1</i><sup><i>opto</i></sup> cells were either plated at a 1:1 ratio on the same MSL-N plate (mating samples) or onto separate MSL-N plates (starvation samples) and mixed only at the time of sample collection, every 45 min from time of plating. …”
  14. 13254

    Tradeoffs in network learning and memory. by Ann M. Hermundstad (215324)

    Published 2011
    “…(d) Increasing increases achieved during the first session but decreases and achieved during the second session. These results are qualitatively similar given larger networks (<a href="http://www.ploscompbiol.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002063#pcbi.1002063.s002" target="_blank">Figure S2</a>) and different sets of original points (<a href="http://www.ploscompbiol.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002063#pcbi.1002063.s004" target="_blank">Figure S4</a>).…”
  15. 13255

    Induced fluorescence of testis cells analyzed by flow cytometry. by Alexander Froschauer (765700)

    Published 2015
    “…(C) Treatment with 1 μM Shield-1 causes a strong induction of fluorescence in the largest cells that comprise the stem cell fraction. …”
  16. 13256

    Soil stress analysis at different depths after agricultural vehicle operation by enhui sun (14724082)

    Published 2023
    “…The larger the soil pore ratio, the smaller the allowable bearing capacity of the soil, and when the soil pore ratio is reduced to a certain extent, the stress strain change of the test soil tends to be stable.…”
  17. 13257

    After-suppression depends on local network properties. by Michael Avery (2865419)

    Published 2018
    “…B) We found that the decay to baseline was faster when excitatory and inhibitory time constants increased (upper right) and slower when excitatory and inhibitory time constants decreased (lower left). C) The magnitude of suppression was also greater for larger excitatory and inhibitory time constants (upper right) compared to small excitatory and inhibitory time constants (lower left).…”
  18. 13258

    Soil stress analysis at different depths after agricultural vehicle operation.docx by enhui sun (14724082)

    Published 2023
    “…The larger the soil pore ratio, the smaller the allowable bearing capacity of the soil, and when the soil pore ratio is reduced to a certain extent, the stress strain change of the test soil tends to be stable.…”
  19. 13259

    The effect of dendritic distribution of CaL on PIC patterns and firing types. by Yi Cheng (317041)

    Published 2025
    “…Increasing the dendritic length increased the I<sub>onset</sub> and reduced I<sub>offset</sub> non-linearly with a decrease in ΔI. <b>E.</b> The relationship between the amplitude of a-PIC & d-PIC and percentage of dendrite length. …”
  20. 13260

    The effect of the generation time on the sex-averaged yearly rate of replication-driven mutations. by Ziyue Gao (845550)

    Published 2016
    “…Depending on the age of puberty (<i>P</i>), generation time (<i>G</i>), and the per cell division mutation rates, a linear fit to the number of mutations after puberty (dotted purple line) could have a zero, positive, or negative intercept at age zero, and the slope of this linear fit represents the yearly mutation rate after puberty. …”