Search alternatives:
largest decrease » largest decreases (Expand Search), marked decrease (Expand Search)
larger decrease » marked decrease (Expand Search)
teer decrease » greater decrease (Expand Search)
mean decrease » a decrease (Expand Search)
largest decrease » largest decreases (Expand Search), marked decrease (Expand Search)
larger decrease » marked decrease (Expand Search)
teer decrease » greater decrease (Expand Search)
mean decrease » a decrease (Expand Search)
-
8801
-
8802
Data.Rda for How uncertain is the survival extrapolation? A study of the impact of different parametric survival models on extrapolated uncertainty about hazard functions, lifetime...
Published 2019“…<div>An R Rda-file containing the four hypothetical datasets used in the analysis (Flat, increasing, decreasing, unimodal). These are stored in a single data-frame, where the 400 rows correspond to observations. …”
-
8803
Physical and mechanical parameters of soils.
Published 2025“…Intriguingly, the stress response diverged between pipelines subjected to smaller and larger stacking loads, and the peak stress gradually attenuated as the pipeline’s diameter expanded. …”
-
8804
Supplementary data files.
Published 2025“…Intriguingly, the stress response diverged between pipelines subjected to smaller and larger stacking loads, and the peak stress gradually attenuated as the pipeline’s diameter expanded. …”
-
8805
Experimental design and sensor layout.
Published 2025“…Intriguingly, the stress response diverged between pipelines subjected to smaller and larger stacking loads, and the peak stress gradually attenuated as the pipeline’s diameter expanded. …”
-
8806
-
8807
-
8808
-
8809
-
8810
-
8811
-
8812
-
8813
-
8814
-
8815
-
8816
-
8817
-
8818
-
8819
-
8820
Comparison of the observed versus simulated mean <i>WAS</i> with models incorporating additional variants.
Published 2011“…The 3<sup>rd</sup> row shows a model where there is 1 additional low frequency variant with a large height decreasing effect (allele frequency = 0.005 and effect size (β) = −4). …”