Showing 1 - 20 results of 5,125 for search '(( aggregation data decrease ) OR ( i ((values decrease) OR (larger decrease)) ))', query time: 0.46s Refine Results
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    The introduction of mutualisms into assembled communities increases their connectance and complexity while decreasing their richness. by Gui Araujo (22170819)

    Published 2025
    “…When they stop being introduced in further assembly events (i.e. introduced species do not carry any mutualistic interactions), their proportion slowly decreases with successive invasions. …”
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    Scheme of g-λ model with larger values λ. by Zhanfeng Fan (20390992)

    Published 2024
    “…And if the value of λ assumes larger values, the distortion in the shape of the transmitted wave is associated with the plastic deformation in the uncoupled rock mass. …”
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    Biases in larger populations. by Sander W. Keemink (21253563)

    Published 2025
    “…Threshold parameter <i>c</i> = − 0 . 1 for the rectified cosine tuning with 4 neurons, and width <i>w</i> was 1 for von Mises tuning. …”
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    Moran’s I value, Z value and P value of CCD-GFEE. by Dalai Ma (17847101)

    Published 2025
    “…Within them, the CCD of Chengdu is the highest, Chongqing has achieved the largest stage leap. (4) The global Moran’s I consistently remained positive and exhibited a tendency of initially rising and subsequently falling, indicating that the spatial aggregation effect of CCD-GFEE first increased and then decreased. (5) The CCD-GFEE driving factors are examined using the spatial econometric model, and it has been observed that the impact of population size and government intervention on CCD-GFEE is negative, while the impact of industrial structure, technological progress and economic level on the coupling and coordination of CCD-GFEE is positive. …”
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    Kendall’s based on the log wealth data aggregated for surnames. by Seorin Kim (21445723)

    Published 2025
    “…With the individual wealth dataset from [<a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0324266#pone.0324266.ref011" target="_blank">11</a>], the wealth values are aggregated for surnames. Here, to be able to have the same length of the data at each period, we only consider the surnames that have data points for all five periods, resulting in 88 surnames over the five periods, i.e., 440 observations. …”
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