Showing 1,961 - 1,980 results of 14,940 for search '(( significant increase decrease ) OR ( significant ((we decrease) OR (greatest decrease)) ))', query time: 0.65s Refine Results
  1. 1961
  2. 1962
  3. 1963
  4. 1964
  5. 1965
  6. 1966

    Bar charts showing the numbers of significantly differentially expressed genes for the different contrasts. by Gillian P. McHugo (8965919)

    Published 2025
    “…</sub> ≤ 0.05) with increased and decreased expression, respectively. The position on the horizontal indicates the number of days post-infection (dpi) and the colour of the bars represents the tissue. …”
  7. 1967
  8. 1968

    Number of visits per clinic type, 2013-2015. by Jacob Dreiher (14856863)

    Published 2025
    “…During PE, statistically significant longer waiting times were found for surgery (+1.0 day) and imaging (+1.1 days), while a 2.4 days decrease was noted in pediatrics, controlled for age, sex, ethnicity and the daily number of visits. …”
  9. 1969

    Multi-State Redox and Light-Driven Switching of Pseudorotaxanation and Cation Shuttling by Robert Hein (4849108)

    Published 2025
    “…Specifically, the neutral switches can be quantitatively converted between <i>anti-</i> and <i>syn-</i>folded receptor geometries by irradiation, leading to the discovery of a significant increase or decrease in cation binding affinity, which was exploited to shuttle the pseudorotaxane-forming dibenzylammonium guest between the switchable crown ethers of slightly different sizes. …”
  10. 1970
  11. 1971
  12. 1972
  13. 1973
  14. 1974
  15. 1975
  16. 1976
  17. 1977
  18. 1978
  19. 1979
  20. 1980

    Flowchart of the study protocol. by Min Wang (21070)

    Published 2024
    “…Moreover, contrasting with a decrease in the control group, TC group demonstrated significance increased theta oscillatory power in C3, C4, F4, P3, T7, and T8, and a significant negative correlations were observed between state anxiety and F4-θ (r = -0.31, p = 0.04), T7-θ (r = -0.43, p = 0.01), and T8-θ (r = -0.30, p = 0.05).…”