Showing 881 - 900 results of 4,762 for search '(( significant decrease decrease ) OR ( significantly observed decrease ))~', query time: 0.30s Refine Results
  1. 881

    Passive sensing data. by Thierry Jean (20691795)

    Published 2025
    “…Results also showed that metrics that do not account for imbalance (mean absolute error, accuracy) systematically overestimated performance, XGBoost models performed on par with or better than LSTM models, and a significant yet very small decrease in performance was observed as the forecast horizon expanded. …”
  2. 882

    Surveys. by Thierry Jean (20691795)

    Published 2025
    “…Results also showed that metrics that do not account for imbalance (mean absolute error, accuracy) systematically overestimated performance, XGBoost models performed on par with or better than LSTM models, and a significant yet very small decrease in performance was observed as the forecast horizon expanded. …”
  3. 883

    The statistical data of the partial graph. by Si Yu Zhao (19544793)

    Published 2024
    “…Behavioral tests of both mutant and control strains revealed that the <i>rho-l</i><sup><i>△807</i></sup> mutant mosquitoes had a significant decrease in their ability to search for preferred oviposition sites that correlated with a reduced ability to recognize long-wavelength red light. …”
  4. 884

    Experimental Design Flowchart. by Si Yu Zhao (19544793)

    Published 2024
    “…Behavioral tests of both mutant and control strains revealed that the <i>rho-l</i><sup><i>△807</i></sup> mutant mosquitoes had a significant decrease in their ability to search for preferred oviposition sites that correlated with a reduced ability to recognize long-wavelength red light. …”
  5. 885
  6. 886

    Comparison with Existing Studies. by Na Zhao (112953)

    Published 2025
    “…The results indicate that: (1) the presence of pores prolongs both the time to failure and the onset of the AE burst stage, with longer durations observed at higher pore dip angles; (2) AE signal amplitude and frequency vary significantly across different loading stages, and the b-value exhibits an “increase–fluctuation–decrease” trend, with the decreasing stage serving as a precursor to rock instability; (3) pore dip angle strongly influences crack propagation types: dip angles of 0°–30° favor axial cracks and through-going wing cracks, 45°–75° angles tend to induce co-planar and wing crack connectivity, while 90° angles cause crack deviation, hindering through-going failure; (4) intact rock fails in a tensile–shear mixed mode, whereas the number of shear cracks in rocks with pores initially increases and then decreases with dip angle, reaching a maximum at 45°, resulting in shear-dominated failure. …”
  7. 887

    Specimen Preparation and Experimental Setup. by Na Zhao (112953)

    Published 2025
    “…The results indicate that: (1) the presence of pores prolongs both the time to failure and the onset of the AE burst stage, with longer durations observed at higher pore dip angles; (2) AE signal amplitude and frequency vary significantly across different loading stages, and the b-value exhibits an “increase–fluctuation–decrease” trend, with the decreasing stage serving as a precursor to rock instability; (3) pore dip angle strongly influences crack propagation types: dip angles of 0°–30° favor axial cracks and through-going wing cracks, 45°–75° angles tend to induce co-planar and wing crack connectivity, while 90° angles cause crack deviation, hindering through-going failure; (4) intact rock fails in a tensile–shear mixed mode, whereas the number of shear cracks in rocks with pores initially increases and then decreases with dip angle, reaching a maximum at 45°, resulting in shear-dominated failure. …”
  8. 888

    UCS texts data. by Na Zhao (112953)

    Published 2025
    “…The results indicate that: (1) the presence of pores prolongs both the time to failure and the onset of the AE burst stage, with longer durations observed at higher pore dip angles; (2) AE signal amplitude and frequency vary significantly across different loading stages, and the b-value exhibits an “increase–fluctuation–decrease” trend, with the decreasing stage serving as a precursor to rock instability; (3) pore dip angle strongly influences crack propagation types: dip angles of 0°–30° favor axial cracks and through-going wing cracks, 45°–75° angles tend to induce co-planar and wing crack connectivity, while 90° angles cause crack deviation, hindering through-going failure; (4) intact rock fails in a tensile–shear mixed mode, whereas the number of shear cracks in rocks with pores initially increases and then decreases with dip angle, reaching a maximum at 45°, resulting in shear-dominated failure. …”
  9. 889
  10. 890

    Demographic data of female participants (n = 30). by Vanessa Wellauer (18408477)

    Published 2025
    “…Skin temperature was higher in the HWI group compared to CON at postInt and throughout 30 min follow-up (all p < 0.001). No significant differences in recovery markers were observed between CWI and HWI groups, although HWI led to slightly higher creatine kinase levels (24 h and 72 h) and greater muscle swelling (24 h) compared to CON. …”
  11. 891

    Raw data used for statistical analysis. by Vanessa Wellauer (18408477)

    Published 2025
    “…Skin temperature was higher in the HWI group compared to CON at postInt and throughout 30 min follow-up (all p < 0.001). No significant differences in recovery markers were observed between CWI and HWI groups, although HWI led to slightly higher creatine kinase levels (24 h and 72 h) and greater muscle swelling (24 h) compared to CON. …”
  12. 892

    CONSORT flowchart of participants. by Vanessa Wellauer (18408477)

    Published 2025
    “…Skin temperature was higher in the HWI group compared to CON at postInt and throughout 30 min follow-up (all p < 0.001). No significant differences in recovery markers were observed between CWI and HWI groups, although HWI led to slightly higher creatine kinase levels (24 h and 72 h) and greater muscle swelling (24 h) compared to CON. …”
  13. 893

    Tuning the Upper Critical Solution Temperature of the Polystyrene-Terpineol System toward a Low-Temperature Membrane Formation by Sulaiman Dhameri (22048528)

    Published 2025
    “…The study found that the hydrogen bond propensity and miscibility of the additives significantly affected the UCST. A change of over 35 °C was observed when the additive concentration varied from 0 to 15 wt %, and the transition temperature increased or decreased depending on the additive solvent strength. …”
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