Search alternatives:
significant inverse » significant adverse (Expand Search), significant increase (Expand Search), significant interest (Expand Search)
inverse increased » coverage increased (Expand Search), levels increased (Expand Search), confers increased (Expand Search)
main decrease » gain decreased (Expand Search), small decrease (Expand Search), point decrease (Expand Search)
mean decrease » a decrease (Expand Search)
significant inverse » significant adverse (Expand Search), significant increase (Expand Search), significant interest (Expand Search)
inverse increased » coverage increased (Expand Search), levels increased (Expand Search), confers increased (Expand Search)
main decrease » gain decreased (Expand Search), small decrease (Expand Search), point decrease (Expand Search)
mean decrease » a decrease (Expand Search)
-
1
Inverse exponential curves fitted within the regression analyses of the main parameters of interest.
Published 2022Subjects: -
2
-
3
-
4
-
5
-
6
Mean values of participants’ heart rate.
Published 2023“…Additionally, a motivational decrease was observed for the high motivation group due to the interruption. …”
-
7
Mean values of participants’ heart rate.
Published 2023“…Additionally, a motivational decrease was observed for the high motivation group due to the interruption. …”
-
8
Fold changes were calculated as mean condition B/mean condition A, after mTIC normalization.
Published 2021Subjects: -
9
-
10
Spatial distribution of rainfall using Inverse Distance Weighted Interpolation (IDWI).
Published 2024Subjects: -
11
-
12
-
13
The main effects of PRGDP and Gi on SWB.
Published 2024“…Key findings include: (1) In temporal relationships, a 46.70% increase in GDP per capita implies a 0.38 increase in subjective well-being, while a 0.09 increase in the Gini coefficient means a 1.47 decrease in subjective well-being. (2) In spatial relationships, for every 46.70% increase in GDP per capita, subjective well-being rises by 0.51; however, this relationship is buffered by unfair distribution, and GDP per capita no longer significantly affects subjective well-being when the Gini index exceeds 0.609. …”
-
14
-
15
-
16
-
17
-
18
-
19
-
20