Showing 21 - 40 results of 25,345 for search '(( significant proportion increased ) OR ( significant ((gap decrease) OR (mean decrease)) ))', query time: 2.77s Refine Results
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    Fig 4 - by Katayoon Montazeri (18389243)

    Published 2024
    Subjects:
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    Marginal means – Pooled across scenarios. by Mehdi Mourali (10170245)

    Published 2025
    “…When are individuals more likely to support equal treatment algorithms (ETAs), characterized by higher predictive accuracy, and when do they prefer equal impact algorithms (EIAs) that reduce performance gaps between groups? A randomized conjoint experiment and a follow-up choice experiment revealed that support for the EIAs decreased sharply as their accuracy gap grew, although impact parity was prioritized more when ETAs produced large outcome discrepancies. …”
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    Mean height (cm), mean specific leaf area (SLA; cm<sup>2</sup> g<sup>-1</sup>), mean seed mass (g), and proportion of stoloniferous species boxplots. by Brandon S. Schamp (8141316)

    Published 2022
    “…Mean seed mass did not differ between treatments or years. The proportion of stoloniferous/rhizomatous species increased from 2010 to 2011 by 19.3% and from 2010 to 2012 by 14.8%, but did not differ between 2011 and 2012.…”
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    Elasticities of equilibrium proportion in X. by David McMillon (546087)

    Published 2025
    “…Finally, we discuss the implications of the model for a broader policy debate on crime control and for competing explanations of the Black-White gap in criminal involvement. We find, among other conclusions, that marginal independent increases in first-time arrest rates (but not arrest rates for repeat offenders) increase long-run crime for all subgroups; that long-run crime levels for Black men are most sensitive to initial flows into crime and arrest and to rehabilitation; and that among people with no arrest history, Black women are significantly more likely than other subgroups to desist the following year.…”
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    Derivatives of equilibrium proportion in X. by David McMillon (546087)

    Published 2025
    “…Finally, we discuss the implications of the model for a broader policy debate on crime control and for competing explanations of the Black-White gap in criminal involvement. We find, among other conclusions, that marginal independent increases in first-time arrest rates (but not arrest rates for repeat offenders) increase long-run crime for all subgroups; that long-run crime levels for Black men are most sensitive to initial flows into crime and arrest and to rehabilitation; and that among people with no arrest history, Black women are significantly more likely than other subgroups to desist the following year.…”