Showing 41 - 60 results of 56,987 for search '(( i ((values decrease) OR (((largest decrease) OR (larger decrease)))) ) OR ( i large increased ))', query time: 1.32s Refine Results
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    Costs and Benefits of Popular <i>P</i>‑Value Correction Methods in Three Models of Quantitative Omic Experiments by Steven R. Shuken (14500192)

    Published 2023
    “…Overall, permutation had better FDR and sensitivity than BH. We show how increasing sample size, decreasing variability, or increasing effect size can enable the detection of all true changes while still correcting <i>p</i>-values, and we present basic guidelines for omic experimental design. …”
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    Geographical distribution of large cities and small cities. by Saul Estrin (8629173)

    Published 2024
    “…The Figure reveals two patterns: 1) the maximum level of innovation is higher in large cities (2.53) than in small cities (2.02); 2) among large cities in <b>a</b>, innovation levels in general decrease with nightlight density. …”
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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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    Ribosomal subunit pathways are decreased in <i>Resf1</i> knockdown cells. by Megan R. Majocha (18529925)

    Published 2024
    “…<p>(A) GO Pathway analysis snapshots of various ribosomal subunit pathways that are decreased in 6DT1 <i>Resf1</i> KD cells. (B) The GO Cytosolic Ribosome pathway had many (C) small and large ribosomal proteins decreased in <i>Resf1</i> KD cells. …”
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    Large and Pressure-Dependent <i>c-</i>Axis Piezoresistivity of Highly Oriented Pyrolytic Graphite near Zero Pressure by Bingjie Wang (767714)

    Published 2024
    “…The <i>c-</i>axis piezoresistivity of microscale highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG) is found to show a large value of 5.68 × 10<sup>–5</sup> kPa<sup>–1</sup> near zero pressure and decreases by 2 orders of magnitude to the established value of ∼10<sup>–7</sup> kPa<sup>–1</sup> when the pressure increases to 200 MPa. …”
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