Showing 1 - 20 results of 5,233 for search '(( a linear decrease ) OR ((( _ largest decrease ) OR ( via ((a decrease) OR (teer decrease)) ))))', query time: 0.69s Refine Results
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    The results of linear mixed model. by Soheila Qanbari (20455173)

    Published 2024
    “…The tDCS group demonstrated a significant decrease in AMT of MF and TrA/IO muscles (P < 0.05) and an increase in N80 amplitude (P = 0.027), with no significant changes in the control group. …”
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    <b>When more isn’t better: Sperm competition decreases fertilization success and motile sperm in two sea urchin species</b> by Luisa Kumpitsch (20874095)

    Published 2025
    “…<p dir="ltr">Abstract of the paper "<b>When more isn’t better: Sperm competition decreases fertilization success and motile sperm in two sea urchin species":</b></p><p dir="ltr">Fertilization is a fundamental process where sperm-egg fusion is essential to maintain life of most metazoans. …”
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    A Locally Linear Dynamic Strategy for Manifold Learning. by Weifan Wang (4669081)

    Published 2025
    “…For 10-30% noise, where the Hebbian network employs a local linear transform, learning selectively increases signal direction alignment (blue) while simultaneously decreasing noise direction alignment (orange). …”
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    Image 1_Using sodium glycodeoxycholate to develop a temporary infant-like gut barrier model, in vitro.pdf by Francesca Bietto (21511316)

    Published 2025
    “…The treatment also reduced the key tight junction protein, occludin, at the cell membrane, and increased acidic mucins and extracellular alkaline phosphatase activity. Additionally, GDC decreased cAMP, suggesting its mechanism of action was via activation of a G-protein coupled receptor. …”
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    Table 1_Using sodium glycodeoxycholate to develop a temporary infant-like gut barrier model, in vitro.docx by Francesca Bietto (21511316)

    Published 2025
    “…The treatment also reduced the key tight junction protein, occludin, at the cell membrane, and increased acidic mucins and extracellular alkaline phosphatase activity. Additionally, GDC decreased cAMP, suggesting its mechanism of action was via activation of a G-protein coupled receptor. …”
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    Image 5_Using sodium glycodeoxycholate to develop a temporary infant-like gut barrier model, in vitro.pdf by Francesca Bietto (21511316)

    Published 2025
    “…The treatment also reduced the key tight junction protein, occludin, at the cell membrane, and increased acidic mucins and extracellular alkaline phosphatase activity. Additionally, GDC decreased cAMP, suggesting its mechanism of action was via activation of a G-protein coupled receptor. …”
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    Image 4_Using sodium glycodeoxycholate to develop a temporary infant-like gut barrier model, in vitro.pdf by Francesca Bietto (21511316)

    Published 2025
    “…The treatment also reduced the key tight junction protein, occludin, at the cell membrane, and increased acidic mucins and extracellular alkaline phosphatase activity. Additionally, GDC decreased cAMP, suggesting its mechanism of action was via activation of a G-protein coupled receptor. …”
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    Image 2_Using sodium glycodeoxycholate to develop a temporary infant-like gut barrier model, in vitro.pdf by Francesca Bietto (21511316)

    Published 2025
    “…The treatment also reduced the key tight junction protein, occludin, at the cell membrane, and increased acidic mucins and extracellular alkaline phosphatase activity. Additionally, GDC decreased cAMP, suggesting its mechanism of action was via activation of a G-protein coupled receptor. …”
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    Image 3_Using sodium glycodeoxycholate to develop a temporary infant-like gut barrier model, in vitro.pdf by Francesca Bietto (21511316)

    Published 2025
    “…The treatment also reduced the key tight junction protein, occludin, at the cell membrane, and increased acidic mucins and extracellular alkaline phosphatase activity. Additionally, GDC decreased cAMP, suggesting its mechanism of action was via activation of a G-protein coupled receptor. …”
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    Strain-Insensitive, Crosstalk-Suppressed, Ultrawide-Linearity Iontronic Tactile Skin from a Synergistic Segment-Embedded Strategy by Yanchao Zhao (5129174)

    Published 2025
    “…However, skin-attachable sensor arrays still suffer from strain interference and signal crosstalk under stretching or bending, particularly on curved or deformable surfaces. Here, we present a stretchable tactile array that is both strain-insensitive and crosstalk-suppressed, achieved via a hierarchically segmented design that mitigates lateral and vertical deformations synergistically. …”