Showing 1,741 - 1,760 results of 4,823 for search 'significant ((((gap decrease) OR (((greater decrease) OR (nn decrease))))) OR (mean decrease))', query time: 0.59s Refine Results
  1. 1741

    Ablation results on Nerf-Det [28]. by Gang Xu (219455)

    Published 2025
    “…Evaluation on the ScanNetV2 multi-view 3D object detection dataset demonstrates that ImVoxelGNet achieves a performance improvement of up to 2.2% in mean average precision (mAP). This improvement effectively demonstrates the efficacy of our method in significantly enhancing 3D object detection performance through improved geometric perception and comprehensive scene understanding. …”
  2. 1742

    Ablation results on noise. by Gang Xu (219455)

    Published 2025
    “…Evaluation on the ScanNetV2 multi-view 3D object detection dataset demonstrates that ImVoxelGNet achieves a performance improvement of up to 2.2% in mean average precision (mAP). This improvement effectively demonstrates the efficacy of our method in significantly enhancing 3D object detection performance through improved geometric perception and comprehensive scene understanding. …”
  3. 1743

    Active DNA Demethylation Mediated by <i>OsGADD45a2</i> Regulates Growth, Development, and Blast (Magnaporthe oryzea) Resistance in Rice by Ganghua Zhou (9283406)

    Published 2024
    “…Among these, Hap4 was associated with a significantly greater plant height than Hap1–3, possibly due to a functional alteration of <i>OsGADD45a2</i> linked to the SNP at position 2614993. …”
  4. 1744
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  6. 1746
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  8. 1748

    Diagnostic criteria for Alcoholic cardiomyopathy. by Fei Yan (128878)

    Published 2025
    “…</p><p><b>Results:</b> Globally, ACM burden showed significant declines from 1990 to 2021, with age-standardized rates decreasing by 22.5-37.1% across prevalence, mortality and disability measures. …”
  9. 1749
  10. 1750

    COVID19 effect on essential services. by Admas Abera (11821659)

    Published 2024
    “…The present study found that the mean number of patients treated for TB declined by 35 patients (β: -34.62; 95%CI: -50.29, -18.95) compared to the pre-COVID-19 era while the number of new patients enrolled for ART decreased by 71 patients (β: -70.62; 95%CI: -107.19, -34.05). …”
  11. 1751

    Elasticity of black-white male disparity 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.…”
  12. 1752

    by Subgroup. 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.…”
  13. 1753

    by Subgroup. 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.…”
  14. 1754

    by Subgroup. 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.…”
  15. 1755

    by Subgroup. 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.…”
  16. 1756

    by Subgroup. 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.…”
  17. 1757

    by subgroup. 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.…”
  18. 1758

    Transitions away from crime and arrest. 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.…”
  19. 1759

    Black-white male probability differences. 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.…”
  20. 1760

    Supplementary figures. 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.…”