Showing 3,641 - 3,660 results of 10,571 for search '(( significant decrease decrease ) OR ( significant effects decrease ))~', query time: 0.28s Refine Results
  1. 3641

    Funnel plot for VSS score. by Xiaojuan Yang (794374)

    Published 2025
    “…The treatment ranking revealed that massage therapy demonstrated the most significant efficacy in reducing Vancouver Scar Scale score (surface under the cumulative ranking curve [SUCRA] = 89.0%), CO<sub>2</sub> laser therapy exhibited the highest efficacy in decreasing scar thickness (SUCRA = 96.8%), and extracorporeal shock wave therapy + routine treatment showed the most significant efficacy in reducing Visual Analogue Scale score (SUCRA = 58.6%).…”
  2. 3642

    Characteristics of the included trials (n = 17). by Xiaojuan Yang (794374)

    Published 2025
    “…The treatment ranking revealed that massage therapy demonstrated the most significant efficacy in reducing Vancouver Scar Scale score (surface under the cumulative ranking curve [SUCRA] = 89.0%), CO<sub>2</sub> laser therapy exhibited the highest efficacy in decreasing scar thickness (SUCRA = 96.8%), and extracorporeal shock wave therapy + routine treatment showed the most significant efficacy in reducing Visual Analogue Scale score (SUCRA = 58.6%).…”
  3. 3643

    Risk of bias graph. by Xiaojuan Yang (794374)

    Published 2025
    “…The treatment ranking revealed that massage therapy demonstrated the most significant efficacy in reducing Vancouver Scar Scale score (surface under the cumulative ranking curve [SUCRA] = 89.0%), CO<sub>2</sub> laser therapy exhibited the highest efficacy in decreasing scar thickness (SUCRA = 96.8%), and extracorporeal shock wave therapy + routine treatment showed the most significant efficacy in reducing Visual Analogue Scale score (SUCRA = 58.6%).…”
  4. 3644

    Network plot for VAS score. by Xiaojuan Yang (794374)

    Published 2025
    “…The treatment ranking revealed that massage therapy demonstrated the most significant efficacy in reducing Vancouver Scar Scale score (surface under the cumulative ranking curve [SUCRA] = 89.0%), CO<sub>2</sub> laser therapy exhibited the highest efficacy in decreasing scar thickness (SUCRA = 96.8%), and extracorporeal shock wave therapy + routine treatment showed the most significant efficacy in reducing Visual Analogue Scale score (SUCRA = 58.6%).…”
  5. 3645

    Funnel plot for VAS score. by Xiaojuan Yang (794374)

    Published 2025
    “…The treatment ranking revealed that massage therapy demonstrated the most significant efficacy in reducing Vancouver Scar Scale score (surface under the cumulative ranking curve [SUCRA] = 89.0%), CO<sub>2</sub> laser therapy exhibited the highest efficacy in decreasing scar thickness (SUCRA = 96.8%), and extracorporeal shock wave therapy + routine treatment showed the most significant efficacy in reducing Visual Analogue Scale score (SUCRA = 58.6%).…”
  6. 3646
  7. 3647

    Literature comparison. by Saravanan Manoharan (21273304)

    Published 2025
    “…To reduce labeling effort, we apply a Query by Committee-based active learning technique, significantly decreasing the required labeling effort by one-sixth. …”
  8. 3648

    Flow chart of proposed system. by Saravanan Manoharan (21273304)

    Published 2025
    “…To reduce labeling effort, we apply a Query by Committee-based active learning technique, significantly decreasing the required labeling effort by one-sixth. …”
  9. 3649

    Literature review. by Saravanan Manoharan (21273304)

    Published 2025
    “…To reduce labeling effort, we apply a Query by Committee-based active learning technique, significantly decreasing the required labeling effort by one-sixth. …”
  10. 3650

    IMU data and video synchronization. by Saravanan Manoharan (21273304)

    Published 2025
    “…To reduce labeling effort, we apply a Query by Committee-based active learning technique, significantly decreasing the required labeling effort by one-sixth. …”
  11. 3651

    Confusion matrix-punch classification. by Saravanan Manoharan (21273304)

    Published 2025
    “…To reduce labeling effort, we apply a Query by Committee-based active learning technique, significantly decreasing the required labeling effort by one-sixth. …”
  12. 3652
  13. 3653
  14. 3654

    Addressing Imbalanced Classification Problems in Drug Discovery and Development Using Random Forest, Support Vector Machine, AutoGluon-Tabular, and H2O AutoML by Ayush Garg (21090944)

    Published 2025
    “…The important findings of our studies are as follows: (i) there is no effect of threshold optimization on ranking metrics such as AUC and AUPR, but AUC and AUPR get affected by class-weighting and SMOTTomek; (ii) for ML methods RF and SVM, significant percentage improvement up to 375, 33.33, and 450 over all the data sets can be achieved, respectively, for F1 score, MCC, and balanced accuracy, which are suitable for performance evaluation of imbalanced data sets; (iii) for AutoML libraries AutoGluon-Tabular and H2O AutoML, significant percentage improvement up to 383.33, 37.25, and 533.33 over all the data sets can be achieved, respectively, for F1 score, MCC, and balanced accuracy; (iv) the general pattern of percentage improvement in balanced accuracy is that the percentage improvement increases when the class ratio is systematically decreased from 0.5 to 0.1; in the case of F1 score and MCC, maximum improvement is achieved at the class ratio of 0.3; (v) for both ML and AutoML with balancing, it is observed that any individual class-balancing technique does not outperform all other methods on a significantly higher number of data sets based on F1 score; (vi) the three external balancing techniques combined outperformed the internal balancing methods of the ML and AutoML; (vii) AutoML tools perform as good as the ML models and in some cases perform even better for handling imbalanced classification when applied with imbalance handling techniques. …”
  15. 3655

    Main results and moderating effects. by Hao Wang (39217)

    Published 2025
    “…This study employs fixed-effects models for a panel data. The findings reveal that minimum wage increases are significantly associated with a reduction in both strategic CSR and responsive CSR. …”
  16. 3656

    Discovery of Dual-Acting Biofilm Inhibitors against Pseudomonas aeruginosa by the Coupling of 3‑Hydroxypyridin-4(1<i>H</i>)‑ones with <i>N</i>‑Phenylamide QS Inhibitors by Hao-Zhong Long (19685972)

    Published 2025
    “…More importantly, <b>19l</b> demonstrated significant antibacterial synergistic effects in the mice wound infection model, enhancing the antibacterial activity of ciprofloxacin and tobramycin by 1000-fold and 200-fold, respectively. …”
  17. 3657

    Final dataset. by Keiko Ochiai (21453423)

    Published 2025
    “…While a significant association between these attributes was observed, a comprehensive path analysis revealed that each attribute independently correlated with higher SDQ scores, suggesting that child maltreatment leads to these difficulties through accelerated aging and decreased eye contact. …”
  18. 3658

    Demographic Characteristics of Participants. by Keiko Ochiai (21453423)

    Published 2025
    “…While a significant association between these attributes was observed, a comprehensive path analysis revealed that each attribute independently correlated with higher SDQ scores, suggesting that child maltreatment leads to these difficulties through accelerated aging and decreased eye contact. …”
  19. 3659

    Fig 3 - by Micha Keller (11312748)

    Published 2025
    “…For MFHA durations, CVH exhibits significant concomitant ‘shifting’ of ANS activity between IM- and LF-band during CVH intervention: LF-band duration increases by the amount that IM-band decreases. …”
  20. 3660

    Illustrative diagram of the three crash types. by Chun-Chieh Chao (2681722)

    Published 2025
    “…</p><p>Results</p><p>Significant risk factors for overtaking crashes included heavy goods vehicles (HGVs) as crash partners (AOR = 1.30, 95% CI 1.27–1.33), and elderly crash partners (AOR = 2.01, 95% CI = 1.94–2.09), and decreased risk in rural area with speed limits of 20–30 miles per hour (AOR = 0.45, 95% CI = 0.43–0.47). …”