Showing 1 - 20 results of 150,168 for search '(( significant one based ) OR ( significant ((main decrease) OR (mean decrease)) ))', query time: 2.76s Refine Results
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    Significance analysis data. by Lei Zhu (16642)

    Published 2025
    “…The results indicate that: (1) The manifestation of mining pressure in gangue backfill mining is influenced by factors such as mining height and backfill collapse ratio; (2) Under the support of coal gangue, the concentrated stress in the coal seam significantly decreases, forming an arched shape according to the mining stages; (3) The range of plastic failure in the coal seam remains relatively stable under gangue backfill mining, with the plastic zone of the roof plate exhibiting a strip-like distribution; (4) Both range analysis and variance analysis revealed that the sensitivity ranking is backfill collapse ratio > mining height > elastic modulus. …”
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    Mean values of participants’ heart rate. by Ezel Üsten (16548547)

    Published 2023
    “…Additionally, a motivational decrease was observed for the high motivation group due to the interruption. …”
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    Mean values of participants’ heart rate. by Ezel Üsten (16548547)

    Published 2023
    “…Additionally, a motivational decrease was observed for the high motivation group due to the interruption. …”
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    Main characteristics of included papers. by Giacomo Stroffolini (11716410)

    Published 2023
    “…Meta-analysis of studies based on fecal testing demonstrated a significant reduction of <i>S</i>. …”
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    The main effects of PRGDP and Gi on SWB. by Feng Huang (62988)

    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. …”
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