Showing 6,581 - 6,600 results of 8,663 for search '(( a ((peer decrease) OR (teer decrease)) ) OR ( i ((largest decrease) OR (larger decrease)) ))', query time: 0.69s Refine Results
  1. 6581

    Data_Sheet_2_The Global Durum Wheat Panel (GDP): An International Platform to Identify and Exchange Beneficial Alleles.ZIP by Elisabetta Mazzucotelli (6575246)

    Published 2020
    “…Further, the breeding programs from Europe had the largest sets of unique alleles. LD was lower in the landraces (0.4 Mbp) than in modern germplasm (1.8 Mbp) at r<sup>2</sup> = 0.5. …”
  2. 6582

    Effect of large clustering strength on SSA activity. by Michael T. Schaub (331194)

    Published 2015
    “…The linear condition <i>λ</i><sub>max</sub> > 1 is a good indicator of the dynamics becoming dominated by one cell assembly.…”
  3. 6583

    Optimized leg forces vs leg displacements. by John R. Rebula (695008)

    Published 2015
    “…As the optimization cost includes a larger weighting <i>α</i> for force fluctuation, the optimal leg stiffness decreases for both walking and running.…”
  4. 6584

    An idealized view of the opportunity provided by a comparative and integrated oncology drug development path. by Ira Gordon (369869)

    Published 2013
    “…Data for transition rates and costs of Phase I, II, and III trials are based on published cost estimates <a href="http://www.plosmedicine.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pmed.1000161#pmed.1000161-DiMasi2" target="_blank">[3]</a> and reported clinical phase transition probabilities for investigational oncology compounds from the 20 largest firms (by pharmaceutical sales in 2005) from 1993 to 2002 <a href="http://www.plosmedicine.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pmed.1000161#pmed.1000161-DiMasi1" target="_blank">[2]</a>,<a href="http://www.plosmedicine.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pmed.1000161#pmed.1000161-Roberts1" target="_blank">[4]</a>. …”
  5. 6585

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

    Published 2014
    “…Arrowheads indicate representative neurons that were simultaneously recorded from CFA (orange) or from RFA (green). <b>C</b>) <i>Left</i>: larger Pull-type activity changes were found in the RFA-RS neurons than in the CFA-RS neurons across varying extended hold periods [1.0–1.6 s from the No-go (extension) cue to reward delivery]. …”
  6. 6586

    An Antagomir to MicroRNA Let7f Promotes Neuroprotection in an Ischemic Stroke Model by Amutha Selvamani (181096)

    Published 2012
    “…Plasma and brain insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) levels decrease with age. However, IGF-1 infusion following stroke, prevents estrogen neurotoxicity in middle-aged female rats. …”
  7. 6587

    Spatial principal components analysis of the distribution of pMAPK labeling in the LAd. by Hadley C. Bergstrom (233247)

    Published 2011
    “…The loading maps are ordered according to decreasing eigenvalues with the largest eigenvalue associated with component 1. …”
  8. 6588

    Dinucleotide A/T and G/C patterns. by Sheila M. Reynolds (245934)

    Published 2010
    “…The larger-scale trends of increasing GC-content and decreasing AT-content near the dyad are, however, similar between the two species.…”
  9. 6589

    Ecotoxicological modelling of cosmetics for aquatic organisms: A QSTR approach by K. Khan (4334833)

    Published 2017
    “…In case of <i>P. promelas</i> and <i>D. magna</i>, we found that the largest contribution to the toxicity was shown by hydrophobicity and van der Waals surface area, respectively. …”
  10. 6590

    Untitled Item by Hirotake Yokota (17708010)

    Published 2023
    “…</i></p><p dir="ltr">A significant negative correlation was found between LF/HF changes during tVNS and the NWR threshold change at Post 10 and Post 30, indicating that subjects whose LF/HF significantly decreased during tVNS, that is, those whose parasympathetic activity increased during tVNS stimulation, tended to have larger increases in NWR threshold at Post 10 and Post 30 (Post 10: Rho = -.623, p =.003; Post 30: Rho = -.727, p =.001). …”
  11. 6591

    Brain Networks Responsible for Sense of Agency: An EEG Study by Suk Yun Kang (783000)

    Published 2015
    “…</p><p>Results</p><p>In the alpha band, significant relative power changes and phase coherence of alpha band were associated with SA modulation. The relative power decrease over the central, bilateral parietal, and right temporal regions (C4, Pz, P3, P4, T6) became larger as participants more effectively controlled the virtual hand movements. …”
  12. 6592
  13. 6593

    Table_1_Circadian dysregulation induces alterations of visceral sensitivity and the gut microbiota in Light/Dark phase shift mice.DOCX by Lilin Hu (9539321)

    Published 2022
    “…</p>Results<p>We found that light/dark phase shift increased visceral sensitivity and disrupted intestinal barrier function, caused low-grade intestinal inflammation. Moreover, we found decreased microbial species richness and diversity and a shift in microbial community with a decreased proportion of Firmicutes and an elevated abundance of Proteobacteria at the phylum level. …”
  14. 6594

    Image_1_Circadian dysregulation induces alterations of visceral sensitivity and the gut microbiota in Light/Dark phase shift mice.TIFF by Lilin Hu (9539321)

    Published 2022
    “…</p>Results<p>We found that light/dark phase shift increased visceral sensitivity and disrupted intestinal barrier function, caused low-grade intestinal inflammation. Moreover, we found decreased microbial species richness and diversity and a shift in microbial community with a decreased proportion of Firmicutes and an elevated abundance of Proteobacteria at the phylum level. …”
  15. 6595

    Image_2_Circadian dysregulation induces alterations of visceral sensitivity and the gut microbiota in Light/Dark phase shift mice.TIFF by Lilin Hu (9539321)

    Published 2022
    “…</p>Results<p>We found that light/dark phase shift increased visceral sensitivity and disrupted intestinal barrier function, caused low-grade intestinal inflammation. Moreover, we found decreased microbial species richness and diversity and a shift in microbial community with a decreased proportion of Firmicutes and an elevated abundance of Proteobacteria at the phylum level. …”
  16. 6596

    Changes in phosphorylation of ion channels, pumps, and aquaporins. by Yashoda Kandel (6392810)

    Published 2022
    “…Tables contain the Uniprot IDs for each protein as well as the fold-change in phosphorylation of each residue between unfed and either 1hr PBM or 24hr PBM mosquitoes. Green arrows represent an increase of at least 1.5-fold in phosphorylation at the specified residue between unfed and PBM mosquitoes, and red arrows represent a decrease of at least 1.5-fold in phosphorylation at the specified residue between unfed and PBM mosquitoes. …”
  17. 6597

    Role of diffusion and the close-to-distant encounter ratio in search efficiency. by Frederic Bartumeus (166105)

    Published 2014
    “…Note that, regardless , Lévy reorientation strategies show the largest search efficiency compared to the other reorientation strategies, though truncation decreases the efficiency when reaching the symmetric limit .…”
  18. 6598

    Frequency-dependent phase shift between BP and BFV oscillations in the Aaslid-Tiecks model. by Kun Hu (119408)

    Published 2012
    “…Results in B and C showed that BFV-BP phase shift decreased with increasing frequency and that phase shift is larger for larger ARI at all tested frequencies (0.02–0.38 Hz).…”
  19. 6599

    P3b Reflects Periodicity in Linguistic Sequences by Sascha Otterbein (112528)

    Published 2012
    “…Recent studies have shown that periodicity of a tonal sequence results in a decreased peak latency and a larger amplitude of the P3b compared with temporally random, i.e., aperiodic sequences. …”
  20. 6600

    Comparison of Age-Related Changes between GM-Volume, Cortical Thickness, Cortical Surface Area and Gyrification. by Daniel Klein (509727)

    Published 2014
    “…Cortical thickness reductions showed the largest age-dependent effects in frontal, temporal and parietal regions (left hemisphere (effect sizes, Cohen's d): superior-frontal cortex: d = 2.27, rostral-middle frontal cortex: 1.84, pericalcarine: d = 1.29, middle-temporal gyrus: d = 1.01; right hemisphere: precentral cortex: d = 1.07, cuneus: d = 1.07, inferior temporal cortex: d = 1.15, superior frontal gyrus: d = 0.56) which overlapped with decreased GM-volume (left hemisphere (effect sizes, Cohen's d): superior-frontal: d = 0.78, superior-temporal: 1.46, lingual gyrus: d = 0.48, post-central gyrus: d = 0.81; right hemisphere: pars orbitalis: d = 0.59, inferior parietal: d = 1.39, paracentral gyrus: d = 0.82, superior frontal: d = 1.12). …”