Showing 28,101 - 28,120 results of 48,433 for search '(( a ((mean decrease) OR (linear decrease)) ) OR ( a ((latent decrease) OR (largest decrease)) ))', query time: 0.99s Refine Results
  1. 28101

    OUTPATIENT ANALYTIC ASSESSMENT OF ANOREXIA NERVOSA — THE IMPORTANCE OF VENOUS BLOOD GASES by Sofia Alexandra Pereira Pires (6800096)

    Published 2020
    “…Respiratory acidosis was present in 91% in t1, 100% in t2 and 94% in t3. There was a significant decrease between t2 and t3 in mean pCO2 (57.2 versus 53.6 mmHg; p=0.009) and mean HCO3 (30.0 versus 28.8 mEq/L; p=0.023). …”
  2. 28102

    Contribution of JNK subtype to ATRA-induced neuronal reprogramming. by Rei Nakano (820735)

    Published 2020
    “…JNK1, 2 or 3 siRNA transfection resulted in a significant decrease in the expression of JNK1, 2, or 3 protein, respectively, but not scramble siRNA transfection (C). …”
  3. 28103

    Uncorrected and corrected for simulated data showing the same trend as the experimental results. by Daniel R. Burnham (144728)

    Published 2014
    “…<p>A decrease in measured persistence length as a function of decreasing contour length, when taking the DNA extension as the arithmetic mean of the microsphere position data (blue diamonds). …”
  4. 28104

    Influence of Seed Voxel Coordinates as Covariates on the Group Level. by Johannes Bedenbender (336335)

    Published 2013
    “…<p>Reduction of genotype effects after entering seed-voxel localization as covariate on the second level. Left: A linear decrease in regional activation is found with number rs1006737 risk alleles in the right DLPFC (blue). …”
  5. 28105

    Effects of plant diversity on key metabolites resulting from GC-TOF-MS data. by Christian Scherling (242550)

    Published 2010
    “…For abbreviation see <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0012569#pone-0012569-t001" target="_blank">Table 1</a>. …”
  6. 28106

    Contribution of higher-order interactions. by Ashish B. George (6160148)

    Published 2023
    “…First order fitting models are linear, second—quadratic, etc. The decrease in unexplained variance was approximately exponential. …”
  7. 28107

    Contrasting Propagation of Natural Calls of Two Anuran Species from the South American Temperate Forest by Mario Penna (470396)

    Published 2015
    “…<i>emiliopugini</i> are affected by temporal degradation as a linear decrease in amplitude modulation depth of their pulsed structure. …”
  8. 28108

    Significant influences of forest features on absolute treatment effects (inside the fence–outside the fence), i.e. the difference. by Deborah Schäfer (6940535)

    Published 2019
    “…<p>Positive values indicate increased response variables in fenced plots, negative values indicate decreased response values in fenced plots. We see (a) difference of species richness of herbs against relative conifer cover (b) difference of species richness of herbs against mean DBH of the 50 largest trees (c) difference of cover of herbs (all herbs estimated together) against relative conifer cover (d) difference of diversity of herbs (exp(H)) against initial cover of herbs (summed cover of individual species measured independent of treatment plots in spring and summer, resulting in values ranging from 0.1–266) (e) difference of evenness of shrubs against canopy cover.…”
  9. 28109

    DataSheet1_Multiobjective optimization of dimension and position of elliptical crush initiator on crashworthiness performance of square tube using response surface methodology.docx by M. Hafid (17106100)

    Published 2023
    “…The optimal crush initiator effect resulted in a 10.12% decrease in the peak force, 13.67% increase in the crush force efficiency, and 2.23% increase in the mean crushing force. …”
  10. 28110

    STAD-2 uptake is largely independent of the PSAC. by Briana R. Flaherty (744995)

    Published 2015
    “…Treatment of late-stage iRBC with STAD-2 in the presence of furosemide demonstrated a visible, yet insignificant, decrease in STAD-2 uptake only when iRBC were pre-treated with furosemide (two-tailed t test, p = 0.0557, n = 3, mean ± S.E.). …”
  11. 28111

    NWB2023_Who funds Nordic research? by Ross W. K. Potter (17093254)

    Published 2023
    “…Outside the EU, funding from US government health bodies (e.g., National Institute of Health - NIH) is prominent but has decreased (12% to 9.5%). Funding from UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) has also declined (10.5% to 7.5%) over the period, possibly a consequence of Brexit. …”
  12. 28112

    Management assumptions for the different productivity pathways by H Valin (557174)

    Published 2013
    “…However, the outcome is sensitive to the technological path and which factor benefits from productivity gains: sustainable land intensification would increase GHG savings by one-third when compared with a fertilizer intensive pathway. Reaching higher yield through total factor productivity gains would be more efficient on the food supply side but halve emissions savings due to a strong rebound effect on the demand side. …”
  13. 28113

    Evaluation of phytotoxic, cytotoxic, and genotoxic potential of hemodialysis effluent by Daniel Arsand (15430240)

    Published 2023
    “…It was observed that the pure hemodialysis effluent and dialysate had a toxic effect on all analyzed seeds. Although the diluted effluent did not cause phytotoxicity in lettuce and cucumber, cytogenotoxicity tests showed a decrease in mitotic index and appearance of chromosomal aberrations in onion cells, indicating toxicity at a cellular and genetic level. …”
  14. 28114

    Integration of lipid ratios with multi-omic datasets to explore ether lipid metabolism in obesity. by Yvette L. Schooneveldt (22138892)

    Published 2025
    “…Coloured text depicts potential changes in enzymatic activity (green: increase; red: decrease), identified through linear regression analysis, adjusting for age and sex, of 82 lipid ratios and waist circumference in the AusDiab cohort (<i>n</i> = 10,399). …”
  15. 28115

    Pairwise cell statistics in low and high rate synaptic input regimes. by Ashok Litwin-Kumar (135071)

    Published 2011
    “…For comparison, the lack of correlation shaping for a purely linear neural transfer is indicated. (E) RMS coherence () between spike trains showing a decrease in low-frequency coherence and increase in high frequency coherence in the high state. …”
  16. 28116

    Strength of T cell signaling regulates HIV-1 replication and establishment of latency by Matthew Gagne (6725924)

    Published 2019
    “…<div><p>A major barrier to curing HIV-1 is the long-lived latent reservoir that supports re-emergence of HIV-1 upon treatment interruption. …”
  17. 28117

    Time series analysis of the Florida ornamental invertebrate fishery between 1994 and 2007. by Andrew Rhyne (255735)

    Published 2009
    “…</p><p>The percent change per year is recorded as a mean ±95% confidence interval. The interpretation of these results is noted as if the change is significant or not (S or NS), if the trend is increasing or decreasing (only when significant), and if there is high variation between yearly landings (Var), or if the trends are consistent (Con).…”
  18. 28118

    GFP mRNA and protein suppression in THP-1 cells. by Breanne Landry (138815)

    Published 2012
    “…<p>(<b>A</b>) Decrease in GFP mRNA levels, and (<b>B</b>) decrease in GFP protein levels (i: based on mean GFP fluorescence and ii: based on GFP-positive cell population). …”
  19. 28119

    Spleen denervation prior to intestinal manipulation partially restores normal cell trafficking in the spleen. by Léa M. M. Costes (596086)

    Published 2014
    “…<p>(A). Spleen denervation (Sx) partially prevents the decrease in the number of splenocytes 24 h after IM. …”
  20. 28120

    Leaf discoloration and injury severity of saintpaulia. by Noriaki Kadohama (382080)

    Published 2013
    “…<p>(A) Leaf color change of saintpaulia before (left) and 24 hours after (right) a rapid temperature decrease from 25°C to 5°C. …”