Showing 341 - 360 results of 8,318 for search '(( a ((teer decrease) OR (nn decrease)) ) OR ( i ((largest decrease) OR (larger decrease)) ))', query time: 0.49s Refine Results
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    Concept of heat-dissipation time as a fundamental constraint to the realised travel speeds of animals. by Alexander Dyer (15314519)

    Published 2023
    “…(<b>c</b>) The fraction of the total time budget, relative to body mass, that is allocated towards locomotion (blue) or heat-dissipation (red): (1) time is exclusively allocated towards locomotion (<i>metabolic model</i>); (2) all species allocate a constant (i.e., body mass–independent) fraction towards heat-dissipation (<i>constant heat-dissipation model</i>); (3) larger animals allocate a larger fraction towards heat-dissipation (<i>allometric heat-dissipation model</i>). …”
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    Figure highlights deleterious effects of ceiling effects on commonly used effect size <i>d<sub>p</sub></i> using both Henry et al. [14] data set and much larger data set included i... by Bob Uttl (53434)

    Published 2013
    “…Panel B demonstrates this deleterious effect of ceiling effects on <i>d<sub>p</sub></i> using much larger data set identified for the current study. …”
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    GLB1 increases expression in HGPIN and a subset of PCa and correlates with decreased proliferation and increased expression of HP1γ. by Jennifer Wagner (523883)

    Published 2015
    “…<p>Gene expression was measured using the Vectra platform in a larger tissue array. In all tissue types, nuclei stained more strongly for GLB1 than the cytoplasm (p<0.0001). …”
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    S1 File - by Zsófia Tróznai (19923854)

    Published 2024
    “…Body size, body composition, and maturity had a significant, but of moderate power, effect on the selection. Larger body height increased the likelihood of selection by about 12%, larger muscle mass by 12% to 25%, larger bone age by 350–400%, while larger percent body fat decreased selection chances by 7%. …”
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    Allelic loss of <i>Cdh11</i> led to faster growing tumors due to decreased cell death. by Mellone N. Marchong (249928)

    Published 2010
    “…A significant difference in growth rate between groups was observed (p = 0.003), with a 3-fold increase between <i>Cdh11</i><sup>-/-</sup> and wild type mice. After controlling for larger retinas (<a href="http://www.plosgenetics.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pgen.1000923#pgen-1000923-g006" target="_blank">Figure 6B</a>), growth rate remained significantly larger in <i>Cdh11</i><sup>-/-</sup> mice (data not shown). …”
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