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marked decrease » marked increase (Expand Search)
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al decrease » _ decrease (Expand Search), nn decrease (Expand Search), a decreased (Expand Search)
a decrease » _ decrease (Expand Search), _ decreased (Expand Search), _ decreases (Expand Search)
marked decrease » marked increase (Expand Search)
large decrease » larger decrease (Expand Search), large increases (Expand Search), large degree (Expand Search)
al decrease » _ decrease (Expand Search), nn decrease (Expand Search), a decreased (Expand Search)
a decrease » _ decrease (Expand Search), _ decreased (Expand Search), _ decreases (Expand Search)
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Repetitive stress induces a decrease in sound-evoked activity.
Published 2025“…<p>(a) Left: noise-evoked activity rates at different noise intensities for chronically tracked PPys cells in baseline and repeated stress conditions (<i>N</i> = 5 mice, <i>n</i> = 285 neurons, mean ± SE). …”
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Relationship between contrast, noise, and CNR.
Published 2025“…In the JS-10 phantom, the DL remained stable under all conditions. The RC decreased when the Gaussian filter was large and the SI product was small. …”
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Effects of contralateral noise on CAEP (Lee et al., 2025)
Published 2025“…The presentation of contralateral noise had a significant effect on P1 and N1 latencies, both of which decreased. …”
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Experiences communicating in noise with aphasia (Harmon et al., 2024)
Published 2024“…<p dir="ltr"><b>Purpose: </b>The aim of this study was to explore the subjective experiences of people with aphasia when communicating in the presence of various types of background noise. We hypothesized that (a) people with aphasia would report greater perceived effort and stress than controls when talking in noise, (b) perceived effort and stress would be greater in noise than silence, and (c) people with aphasia would describe more negative reactions to communicating in noise than controls.…”
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Acoustics of breath noises in human speech (Werner et al., 2024)
Published 2024“…This work aims to characterize the spectral properties of human inhalation noises in a large speaker sample and explore their potential similarities with speech sounds. …”
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