Search alternatives:
significant side » significant sex (Expand Search), significant burden (Expand Search), significant source (Expand Search)
side decrease » sizes decrease (Expand Search), fid decreased (Expand Search), step decrease (Expand Search)
teer decrease » mean decrease (Expand Search), greater decrease (Expand Search)
significant side » significant sex (Expand Search), significant burden (Expand Search), significant source (Expand Search)
side decrease » sizes decrease (Expand Search), fid decreased (Expand Search), step decrease (Expand Search)
teer decrease » mean decrease (Expand Search), greater decrease (Expand Search)
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501
Stepwise increments in stimulus amplitude alter the information content of post-EOD spike distributions.
Published 2024“…Upper (A) and lower (B) rows correspond to experiments in which the stimulus was decreased and increased, respectively. To test the hypothesis that, for each unit, the step change in stimulus amplitude adds information with respect to a control condition, individual one-sided sign-rank tests were applied (p-values are indicated in between the brackets). …”
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502
Data Sheet 1_Daily online adaptation enhances target coverage in prostate cancer radiotherapy: a retrospective analysis.pdf
Published 2025“…Interquartile ranges decreased across all metrics.</p>Conclusions<p>Adaptation significantly improved target dose metrics compared to non-adapted plans, without compromising organs-at-risk sparing. …”
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503
Figure 2 from Targeting PRMT1 Reduces Cancer Persistence and Tumor Relapse in <i>EGFR</i>- and <i>KRAS</i>-Mutant Lung Cancer
Published 2025“…Statistical comparisons between groups were based on the integrated confluence over time (area under curve; AUC), using one-sided Mann–Whitney tests. The significance of the results is indicated by symbols: *, <i>P</i> ≤ 0.05; **, <i>P</i> ≤ 0.01; ****, <i>P</i> ≤ 0.0001.…”
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504
Experiences communicating in noise with aphasia (Harmon et al., 2024)
Published 2024“…</p><p dir="ltr"><b>Results: </b>Quantitative findings showed that people with aphasia reported significantly greater perceived effort and stress than controls. …”