Showing 2,721 - 2,740 results of 19,605 for search '(( significant increase decrease ) OR ( significant ((a decrease) OR (small decrease)) ))', query time: 0.58s Refine Results
  1. 2721

    S1 Data - by Richard Junior Zapata Dongo (17912565)

    Published 2025
    “…This interaction was further supported by a significant decrease of ALK phosphorylation in single and combination treatment with 300nM ABT-199. …”
  2. 2722
  3. 2723

    ERI Thresholds Between Adjacent Zones. by Mingyue Sun (4638535)

    Published 2025
    “…The thresholds of the ERI in the oasis zone-transition zone and the transition zone-desert zone were 0.08–0.085 and 0.111–0.118, respectively. (2) Socioeconomic factors, including infrastructure expansion, population density, and GDP, were dominant influences, contributing 64% to the ERI, whereas the influence of natural factors such as climate declined. (3) The low-ERI areas increased by 3.3% under government control, and the transition zones increased significantly, slowing the growth rate of the oasis zone. …”
  4. 2724

    Location of the study area. by Mingyue Sun (4638535)

    Published 2025
    “…The thresholds of the ERI in the oasis zone-transition zone and the transition zone-desert zone were 0.08–0.085 and 0.111–0.118, respectively. (2) Socioeconomic factors, including infrastructure expansion, population density, and GDP, were dominant influences, contributing 64% to the ERI, whereas the influence of natural factors such as climate declined. (3) The low-ERI areas increased by 3.3% under government control, and the transition zones increased significantly, slowing the growth rate of the oasis zone. …”
  5. 2725

    Random Forest structure with cross-validation. by Mingyue Sun (4638535)

    Published 2025
    “…The thresholds of the ERI in the oasis zone-transition zone and the transition zone-desert zone were 0.08–0.085 and 0.111–0.118, respectively. (2) Socioeconomic factors, including infrastructure expansion, population density, and GDP, were dominant influences, contributing 64% to the ERI, whereas the influence of natural factors such as climate declined. (3) The low-ERI areas increased by 3.3% under government control, and the transition zones increased significantly, slowing the growth rate of the oasis zone. …”
  6. 2726

    Land use change from 1990 to 2020. by Mingyue Sun (4638535)

    Published 2025
    “…The thresholds of the ERI in the oasis zone-transition zone and the transition zone-desert zone were 0.08–0.085 and 0.111–0.118, respectively. (2) Socioeconomic factors, including infrastructure expansion, population density, and GDP, were dominant influences, contributing 64% to the ERI, whereas the influence of natural factors such as climate declined. (3) The low-ERI areas increased by 3.3% under government control, and the transition zones increased significantly, slowing the growth rate of the oasis zone. …”
  7. 2727

    Geographic data. by Mingyue Sun (4638535)

    Published 2025
    “…The thresholds of the ERI in the oasis zone-transition zone and the transition zone-desert zone were 0.08–0.085 and 0.111–0.118, respectively. (2) Socioeconomic factors, including infrastructure expansion, population density, and GDP, were dominant influences, contributing 64% to the ERI, whereas the influence of natural factors such as climate declined. (3) The low-ERI areas increased by 3.3% under government control, and the transition zones increased significantly, slowing the growth rate of the oasis zone. …”
  8. 2728

    Classification accuracy. by Mingyue Sun (4638535)

    Published 2025
    “…The thresholds of the ERI in the oasis zone-transition zone and the transition zone-desert zone were 0.08–0.085 and 0.111–0.118, respectively. (2) Socioeconomic factors, including infrastructure expansion, population density, and GDP, were dominant influences, contributing 64% to the ERI, whereas the influence of natural factors such as climate declined. (3) The low-ERI areas increased by 3.3% under government control, and the transition zones increased significantly, slowing the growth rate of the oasis zone. …”
  9. 2729

    NPF-NPFR pathway in LNd-LPN feedback circuit fine-tune cooling induced locomotion increase. by Xin Yuan (174619)

    Published 2024
    “…Data (G, J, M, P) were analyzed with Welch’s one-way ANOVA (letters a, b denote significance, <i>P</i> < 0.05). Data (F, I, L, O) were quantified with paired <i>t</i> test. …”
  10. 2730
  11. 2731
  12. 2732
  13. 2733

    Fig 2 - by Maryann S. Watson (16879881)

    Published 2025
    Subjects:
  14. 2734

    Fig 6 - by Maryann S. Watson (16879881)

    Published 2025
    Subjects:
  15. 2735

    Fig 4 - by Maryann S. Watson (16879881)

    Published 2025
    Subjects:
  16. 2736
  17. 2737

    Fig 1 - by Maryann S. Watson (16879881)

    Published 2025
    Subjects:
  18. 2738

    Design of the D-trial. by Torsten Schober (20485754)

    Published 2024
    “…Empirical models for the relationships between the investigated plant traits and PD/DVP were created using linear regression analysis preceded by a lack-of-fit test. An increase in PD led to a linear decrease in inflorescence yield per plant (<i>p</i> = 0.02), whereas a positive linear relationship was found for inflorescence yield (<i>p</i> = 0.0001) and CBD yield (<i>p</i> = 0.0002) per m<sup>2</sup>. …”
  19. 2739

    Estimated mean values for light interception. by Torsten Schober (20485754)

    Published 2024
    “…Empirical models for the relationships between the investigated plant traits and PD/DVP were created using linear regression analysis preceded by a lack-of-fit test. An increase in PD led to a linear decrease in inflorescence yield per plant (<i>p</i> = 0.02), whereas a positive linear relationship was found for inflorescence yield (<i>p</i> = 0.0001) and CBD yield (<i>p</i> = 0.0002) per m<sup>2</sup>. …”
  20. 2740

    Raw data V-trial. by Torsten Schober (20485754)

    Published 2024
    “…Empirical models for the relationships between the investigated plant traits and PD/DVP were created using linear regression analysis preceded by a lack-of-fit test. An increase in PD led to a linear decrease in inflorescence yield per plant (<i>p</i> = 0.02), whereas a positive linear relationship was found for inflorescence yield (<i>p</i> = 0.0001) and CBD yield (<i>p</i> = 0.0002) per m<sup>2</sup>. …”