Showing 121 - 140 results of 68,435 for search '(( significantly larger decrease ) OR ( significant ((decrease ros) OR (decrease i)) ))', query time: 3.92s Refine Results
  1. 121

    Fig 7 - by Henning Carstens (13132801)

    Published 2022
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    Spatial information of excitatory neurons in APP/PS1 mice are decreased in dCA1 and vCA1. by Udaysankar Chockanathan (18510288)

    Published 2024
    “…The spatial information in dCA1 was significantly larger than circularly shuffled spike trains with similar mean firing rates for C57BL/6 mice (mean ± std: empirical = 0.134 ± 0.050, shuffled = 0.123 ± 0.035, p < 0.005, two-sided Wilcoxon rank-sum test, n<sub>empirical</sub> = 229 units from 5 recording sessions, n<sub>shuffled</sub> = 22900 simulated units from 5 recording sessions), but not for APP/PS1 mice (mean ± std: empirical = 0.132 ± 0.054, shuffled = 0.124 ± .054, p = 0.13, two-sided Wilcoxon rank-sum test, n<sub>empirical</sub> = 124 units from 4 recording sessions, n<sub>shuffled</sub> = 12400 simulated units from 4 recording sessions). …”
  5. 125

    Western blot analysis of MPK-1 levels in <i>isp-1</i> and <i>nuo-6</i> mutants. by Maximilian Kramer-Drauberg (8981141)

    Published 2020
    “…MPK-1b level was significantly decreased in <i>nuo-6</i> and <i>nuo-6; let-60gf</i> compared to wild-type. …”
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    Fig 1 - by Byung Chul Kang (1905025)

    Published 2023
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  9. 129

    Data_Sheet_1_Phenotypic Clumping Decreases With Flock Richness in Mixed-Species Bird Flocks.csv by Priti Bangal (9979259)

    Published 2021
    “…We found that sites with smaller flocks had higher values of phenotypic clumping for body size and sites with larger flocks were less phenotypically clumped. This relationship was weakly negative for foraging behavior and not statistically significant for taxonomic relatedness. …”
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    Data_Sheet_1_Overground Walking Decreases Alpha Activity and Entrains Eye Movements in Humans.pdf by Liyu Cao (786645)

    Published 2020
    “…While the blink rate increased with increasing walking speed independent of light or darkness, saccade rate was only significantly linked to walking speed in the light. Pupil size, on the other hand, was larger during darkness than during light, but only showed a modulation by walking in darkness. …”
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    S1 Data - by Seungyoon Paik (14659575)

    Published 2023
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    S1 Fig - by R. J. S. D. Heine (17889199)

    Published 2024
    Subjects: