Showing 25,401 - 25,420 results of 41,669 for search '(( a point decrease ) OR ( 50 ((((nn decrease) OR (we decrease))) OR (a decrease)) ))', query time: 1.30s Refine Results
  1. 25401

    Age-Associated Lipidome Changes in Metaphase II Mouse Oocytes by Hyuck Jun Mok (600066)

    Published 2016
    “…To investigate if aged oocytes display an altered lipidome compared to young oocytes, we performed a global lipidomic analysis between oocytes from 4-week-old and 42 to 50-week-old mice. …”
  2. 25402
  3. 25403
  4. 25404

    File contains the zipped set of figures for this paper in PNG format. by Piotr Borkowski (15195012)

    Published 2023
    “…S4_14_Fig.png: Effects of similarity perturbation within a class of data. Upper line represents the maximal quotient and the lower line represents the minimal quotient of eigenvalues after and before perturbing the similarity matrix, as described in the text, depending on the maximal similarity decrease factor. …”
  5. 25405

    Concordant and discordant read coverage reveal extensive similarity between the tumor and control. by Cem Sievers (584576)

    Published 2014
    “…In contrast, heterozygous events contain both a wildtype allele and an acquired SV, and are therefore characterized by a decrease within the concordant coverage to 50% (III). …”
  6. 25406

    Electrophysiological response of Be2C cells in response to stimulation with morphine. by Marino Convertino (247429)

    Published 2015
    “…<b>B)</b> Morphine stimulation of Be2C cells transfected with the 6TM-mOR leads to a decrease in an outward current with a reversal potential near -80 mV, suggesting that K<sup>+</sup> conductance is reduced. …”
  7. 25407

    CPF alone prevented ability of adipogenic cocktail (DMI) towards differentiation of C<sub>3</sub>H<sub>10</sub>T½ cells to adipocytic lineage. by Harkirat Singh Sandhu (3836335)

    Published 2017
    “…Increasing concentrations of CPF (0.01, 0.1, 1, 10, 25, 50 and 100 μM) caused a gradual decrease in lipid vesicle accumulation of DMI-treated cells (e-k). …”
  8. 25408

    Double immunohistostaining of alpha-synuclein and TH. by Nian Xiong (218611)

    Published 2013
    “…The last graph of the three rows was obtained by the overlapping the first three graphs (Scale bars = 50 µm). Compared with the contralateral side of the ST models (A-D), a dose-dependent increase in alpha-synuclein expression in the lesioned brain and a decrease in the number of TH-positive neurons are shown in E–H (3-µg group) and I–L (12-µg group). …”
  9. 25409

    The proportion of homomeric GluR1 AMPA receptors in the post-synaptic sites is not altered following LTP induction. by Agnès Villers (316323)

    Published 2013
    “…<p>In these experiments, slices were treated with a 1-hour perfusion of NASPM (50 µM), an inhibitor of GluR2-lacking AMPA receptors. …”
  10. 25410

    Efflux of ethidium bromide. by Helen E. McNeil (8190873)

    Published 2019
    “…Data presented is the time taken for the fluorescence to decrease by 25% +/- SE. (Data for 10% and 50% drop can be seen in <a href="http://www.plospathogens.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.ppat.1008101#ppat.1008101.s011" target="_blank">S1 Table</a>). …”
  11. 25411

    Supplementary Material for: Impact of Simulated Hyperventilation and Periodic Breathing on Sympatho-Vagal Balance and Hemodynamics in Patients with and without Heart Failure by Spiesshoefer J. (7139138)

    Published 2019
    “…<b><i>Results:</i></b> In healthy subjects, voluntary hyperventilation led to a 50% decrease in the mean BRS slope and a 29% increase in CI compared to baseline values (<i>p</i> < 0.01 and <i>p</i> < 0.05). …”
  12. 25412

    The results of screening the accurate strategy on the 23S-like rRNA datasets. by Yixiao Zhai (10181153)

    Published 2024
    “…If the score from combining the remaining four initial alignments is higher, it’s classified as ’improved’; if it remains the same, it’s labeled ’constant’; if it decreases, it’s categorized as ’reduced’. Each histogram displays the proportions of "improved," "constant," and "reduced" cases, calculated from a total of 42 datasets (14*3) across all sub-datasets. …”
  13. 25413

    Single-driver controllability of brain networks. by Remy Ben Messaoud (20521877)

    Published 2025
    “…Each point corresponds to a different node (ROI) controlling the entire brain. …”
  14. 25414

    Transcriptome and physiology analysis reveal key players of the shade-tolerant species <i>Panax notoginseng</i> in photosynthetic performance under both high and low light regimes by Jin-Yan Zhang (9037088)

    Published 2022
    “…</p> <p><b>Abbreviations:</b><i>A</i><sub>net,</sub> net assimilation rate; LCP, light compensation point; PQ, plastoquinone pool; LSP, light saturation point; PPFD, photosynthetic photon flux density; <i>C</i><sub>i</sub>, internal leaf CO<sub>2</sub> concentration; <i>A</i><sub>max</sub>, maximum net photosynthesis rate; CE, carboxylation efficiency; <i>J</i><sub>max</sub>, maximum electron transfer rate; <i>V</i><sub>cmax</sub>, maximum carboxylation efficiency; <i>R</i><sub>d</sub>, dark respiration rate; <i>F</i><sub>v</sub>/<i>F</i><sub>m</sub>, maximum quantum yield of photosystem II; Φ<sub>PSII</sub>, PSII photochemical quantum yield; qP, photochemical quenching; <i>F</i><sub>v</sub>′/<i>F</i><sub>m</sub>′, photochemical efficiency of PSII in the light; NPQ, non-photochemical quenching; <i>Φ</i><sub>f.d</sub>, fluorescence quenching dissipation; <i>Φ</i><sub>NPQ</sub>, non-photochemical quenching dissipation; (V + A+Z), the xanthophyll cycle pigment pool; L, lutein; N, neoxanthin; β-Car, β-Carotene; SOD, superoxide dismutase; CAT, catalase; POD, peroxidase; APX, ascorbate peroxidase; MDHAR, monodehydroascorbate reductase; DHAR, dehydroascorbate reductase</p>…”
  15. 25415

    Data_Sheet_1_Resistant Soil Microbial Communities Show Signs of Increasing Phosphorus Limitation in Two Temperate Forests After Long-Term Nitrogen Addition.PDF by Stefan J. Forstner (8540784)

    Published 2020
    “…By using C:N stoichiometry, we further show that microbial communities responded in part non-homeostatically to decreasing resource C:N, in addition to a likely increase in their carbon use efficiency and a decrease in nitrogen use efficiency. …”
  16. 25416

    Data_Sheet_4_Resistant Soil Microbial Communities Show Signs of Increasing Phosphorus Limitation in Two Temperate Forests After Long-Term Nitrogen Addition.PDF by Stefan J. Forstner (8540784)

    Published 2020
    “…By using C:N stoichiometry, we further show that microbial communities responded in part non-homeostatically to decreasing resource C:N, in addition to a likely increase in their carbon use efficiency and a decrease in nitrogen use efficiency. …”
  17. 25417

    Image_2_Resistant Soil Microbial Communities Show Signs of Increasing Phosphorus Limitation in Two Temperate Forests After Long-Term Nitrogen Addition.TIFF by Stefan J. Forstner (8540784)

    Published 2020
    “…By using C:N stoichiometry, we further show that microbial communities responded in part non-homeostatically to decreasing resource C:N, in addition to a likely increase in their carbon use efficiency and a decrease in nitrogen use efficiency. …”
  18. 25418

    Data_Sheet_3_Resistant Soil Microbial Communities Show Signs of Increasing Phosphorus Limitation in Two Temperate Forests After Long-Term Nitrogen Addition.PDF by Stefan J. Forstner (8540784)

    Published 2020
    “…By using C:N stoichiometry, we further show that microbial communities responded in part non-homeostatically to decreasing resource C:N, in addition to a likely increase in their carbon use efficiency and a decrease in nitrogen use efficiency. …”
  19. 25419

    Image_1_Resistant Soil Microbial Communities Show Signs of Increasing Phosphorus Limitation in Two Temperate Forests After Long-Term Nitrogen Addition.TIFF by Stefan J. Forstner (8540784)

    Published 2020
    “…By using C:N stoichiometry, we further show that microbial communities responded in part non-homeostatically to decreasing resource C:N, in addition to a likely increase in their carbon use efficiency and a decrease in nitrogen use efficiency. …”
  20. 25420

    Data_Sheet_2_Resistant Soil Microbial Communities Show Signs of Increasing Phosphorus Limitation in Two Temperate Forests After Long-Term Nitrogen Addition.PDF by Stefan J. Forstner (8540784)

    Published 2020
    “…By using C:N stoichiometry, we further show that microbial communities responded in part non-homeostatically to decreasing resource C:N, in addition to a likely increase in their carbon use efficiency and a decrease in nitrogen use efficiency. …”