Showing 161 - 180 results of 17,904 for search '(( significant broader decrease ) OR ( significant ((gap decrease) OR (a decrease)) ))', query time: 0.45s Refine Results
  1. 161

    HFD decreases intermediate-term memory. by Tong Yue (6033305)

    Published 2025
    “…<p>(A) The survival rate of 10d <i>Canton-S</i> fed with ND or HFD was observed for 7 days. …”
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    Dynamic Covalent Chemistry Enabled Closed-Loop Recycling of Thermally Modified Polymer Membrane by Ching Yoong Loh (17863097)

    Published 2025
    “…Thermal and mechanical characterizations confirmed the great stability of the membranes, with the Diels–Alder reaction enabling depolymerization and reformation of the network without causing significant degradation. Additionally, the RFMs were recycled the third time, maintaining the fluxes (752 to 823 LMH) from the previous generation with a slight decrease in separation efficiency in dichloromethane-water emulsion separation (98.3 to 97%). …”
  8. 168

    Dynamic Covalent Chemistry Enabled Closed-Loop Recycling of Thermally Modified Polymer Membrane by Ching Yoong Loh (17863097)

    Published 2025
    “…Thermal and mechanical characterizations confirmed the great stability of the membranes, with the Diels–Alder reaction enabling depolymerization and reformation of the network without causing significant degradation. Additionally, the RFMs were recycled the third time, maintaining the fluxes (752 to 823 LMH) from the previous generation with a slight decrease in separation efficiency in dichloromethane-water emulsion separation (98.3 to 97%). …”
  9. 169

    Dynamic Covalent Chemistry Enabled Closed-Loop Recycling of Thermally Modified Polymer Membrane by Ching Yoong Loh (17863097)

    Published 2025
    “…Thermal and mechanical characterizations confirmed the great stability of the membranes, with the Diels–Alder reaction enabling depolymerization and reformation of the network without causing significant degradation. Additionally, the RFMs were recycled the third time, maintaining the fluxes (752 to 823 LMH) from the previous generation with a slight decrease in separation efficiency in dichloromethane-water emulsion separation (98.3 to 97%). …”
  10. 170

    Dynamic Covalent Chemistry Enabled Closed-Loop Recycling of Thermally Modified Polymer Membrane by Ching Yoong Loh (17863097)

    Published 2025
    “…Thermal and mechanical characterizations confirmed the great stability of the membranes, with the Diels–Alder reaction enabling depolymerization and reformation of the network without causing significant degradation. Additionally, the RFMs were recycled the third time, maintaining the fluxes (752 to 823 LMH) from the previous generation with a slight decrease in separation efficiency in dichloromethane-water emulsion separation (98.3 to 97%). …”
  11. 171

    Dynamic Covalent Chemistry Enabled Closed-Loop Recycling of Thermally Modified Polymer Membrane by Ching Yoong Loh (17863097)

    Published 2025
    “…Thermal and mechanical characterizations confirmed the great stability of the membranes, with the Diels–Alder reaction enabling depolymerization and reformation of the network without causing significant degradation. Additionally, the RFMs were recycled the third time, maintaining the fluxes (752 to 823 LMH) from the previous generation with a slight decrease in separation efficiency in dichloromethane-water emulsion separation (98.3 to 97%). …”
  12. 172
  13. 173

    Analysis of the significantly different metabolomic features. by Bhuripit Saraphol (20855573)

    Published 2025
    “…<b>(B)</b> Volcano plot highlighting the significantly different metabolomic features. The red dots represent the features with significantly increased intensity, and the purple dots represent the features with significantly decreased intensity. …”
  14. 174

    Broader frequency tuning in auditory cortex of <i>Fmr1</i> KO rats despite unaltered subcortical tuning properties. by D. Walker Gauthier (21637726)

    Published 2025
    “…**<i>p</i> < 0.01, ***<i>p</i> < 0.0001, ns = not significant. Data and code underlying this figure can be found at <a href="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15559344" target="_blank">http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15559344</a>. …”
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    Effect of Molecular Structure on the B3LYP-Computed HOMO–LUMO Gap: A Structure −Property Relationship Using Atomic Signatures by Ahmed Mohamed (628889)

    Published 2025
    “…The use of atomic Signatures as molecular descriptors successfully inferred correlations between different structural motifs and <i>E</i><sub>gap</sub>. The atomic fragments containing π-bonds in various aromatic compounds were found to be the most significant atomic Signatures, explaining nearly 50% of the variance in the data, with regression coefficients that decreased <i>E</i><sub>gap</sub>. …”
  18. 178

    A summary of the included study characteristics. by Zahra Tajik (20752452)

    Published 2025
    “…There is no significant difference one month after NSPT in diabetic patients (SMD: -5.83, 95%CI: -15.5, 3.83, p = 0.237, I-square, 97.4%, random effects model, n = 2), but three (SMD: -2.44, 95%CI: -3.37, -1.15, p = 0.001, I-square, 75.9%, random effects model, n = 3) and six months (SMD: -2.41, 95%CI: -3.81, -1.01, p = 0.001, I-square, 78.7%, random effects model, n = 2) after the treatment, a significant decrease is observed in the mean GCF visfatin level. …”
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    Predictive Significance of Glycosyltransferase-Related lncRNAs in Endometrial Cancer: A Comprehensive Analysis and Experimental Validation by Xiaoyu Shen (4715430)

    Published 2025
    “…And the low-risk cohort exhibited increased immune infiltration and decreased tumor purity. Additionally, significant differences in tumor mutation profiles were observed, with the tumor mutation burden (TMB) being higher in the low-risk cohort, suggesting a potentially better response to immunotherapy. …”