Showing 841 - 860 results of 14,615 for search '(( significantly ((less decrease) OR (mean decrease)) ) OR ( significant increase decrease ))', query time: 0.45s Refine Results
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    Significant gene set results from EGSEA. by Katherine M. Peterson (19746455)

    Published 2024
    “…The table consists of columns for Gene Set Name, Rank, P-value, adjusted P-value, the general direction (increased or decreased) of the gene expression, and Sample Day.…”
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    Normalized significant family changes in abundance. by Karley K. Mahalak (3212670)

    Published 2025
    “…<p>A) <i>Erysipelotrichaceae</i> significantly increased with CCE treatment; B) <i>Bacteroidales_unclassified</i> significantly decreased with CCE treatment; C) <i>Desulfovibrionaceae</i> significantly decreased with CCE treatment; D) <i>Rikenellaceae</i> significantly decreased with CCE treatment; E) <i>Coriobacteriaceae</i> significantly decreased with CCE treatment; F) <i>Erysipelotrichaceae</i> significantly increased with TRE treatment.…”
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    Analysis of the significantly different metabolomic features. by Bhuripit Saraphol (20855573)

    Published 2025
    “…<b>(B)</b> Volcano plot highlighting the significantly different metabolomic features. The red dots represent the features with significantly increased intensity, and the purple dots represent the features with significantly decreased intensity. …”
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    Valve closing capability and hemolymph flow analysis. by Christian Meyer (6035)

    Published 2025
    “…(J) Analysis of hemolymph flow in the aorta. Mean pixel intensity of the dye package is significantly reduced upon valve malformation, indicating less hemolymph is pumped (Scheme illustrates dye package in the aorta and its area analyzed). …”
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    Fig 6 - by Teagan McMahon (20108036)

    Published 2024
    Subjects:
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    <b>Nest mass in forest tits </b><b><i>Paridae</i></b><b> </b><b>increases with elevation and decreasing body mass, promoting reproductive success</b> by Clara Wild (19246606)

    Published 2025
    “…We found that nest mass increased by ~ 60% along the elevational gradient, but the effect of canopy openness on nest mass was not significant, while nest mass decreased along the ranked species from the smallest <i>Periparus ater</i> to the medium-sized <i>Cyanistes caeruleus</i> and the largest <i>Parus major</i>. …”
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