Showing 6,461 - 6,480 results of 18,438 for search 'significantly ((((largest decrease) OR (mean decrease))) OR (((we decrease) OR (a decrease))))', query time: 0.59s Refine Results
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    PRMT5 regulates alternative splicing landscape under hypoxia. by Srinivas Abhishek Mutnuru (22513457)

    Published 2025
    “…<p><b>A)</b> Pie chart showing distribution of different types of significant AS events (FDR < 0.05) in shCTRL vs. shPRMT5 MDA-MB-231 cells under hypoxia. …”
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    Data of AFR(%) of axial surface for each group. by Long Li (6555)

    Published 2025
    “…In the adhesive retention strength experiment, prostheses and abutments were bonded using permanent resin cement; retention strength was measured using a universal testing machine. Data were analyzed using one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) or Welch’s ANOVA, followed by Tukey’s honestly significant difference test.…”
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    Predicting Dinitrogen Activation and Coupling with Carbon Dioxide and Other Small Molecules by Methyleneborane: A Combined DFT and Machine Learning Study by Feiying You (22119041)

    Published 2025
    “…The capture of carbon dioxide is extremely important due to the increasingly severe greenhouse effect, and the conversion of dinitrogen into high-value N–C compounds is of great significance. Here, we predict through density functional theory calculations that the coupling of dinitrogen with carbon dioxide by methyleneborane becomes favorable both thermodynamically and kinetically. …”
  18. 6478

    Comparison with Existing Studies. by Na Zhao (112953)

    Published 2025
    “…The results indicate that: (1) the presence of pores prolongs both the time to failure and the onset of the AE burst stage, with longer durations observed at higher pore dip angles; (2) AE signal amplitude and frequency vary significantly across different loading stages, and the b-value exhibits an “increase–fluctuation–decrease” trend, with the decreasing stage serving as a precursor to rock instability; (3) pore dip angle strongly influences crack propagation types: dip angles of 0°–30° favor axial cracks and through-going wing cracks, 45°–75° angles tend to induce co-planar and wing crack connectivity, while 90° angles cause crack deviation, hindering through-going failure; (4) intact rock fails in a tensile–shear mixed mode, whereas the number of shear cracks in rocks with pores initially increases and then decreases with dip angle, reaching a maximum at 45°, resulting in shear-dominated failure. …”
  19. 6479

    Specimen Preparation and Experimental Setup. by Na Zhao (112953)

    Published 2025
    “…The results indicate that: (1) the presence of pores prolongs both the time to failure and the onset of the AE burst stage, with longer durations observed at higher pore dip angles; (2) AE signal amplitude and frequency vary significantly across different loading stages, and the b-value exhibits an “increase–fluctuation–decrease” trend, with the decreasing stage serving as a precursor to rock instability; (3) pore dip angle strongly influences crack propagation types: dip angles of 0°–30° favor axial cracks and through-going wing cracks, 45°–75° angles tend to induce co-planar and wing crack connectivity, while 90° angles cause crack deviation, hindering through-going failure; (4) intact rock fails in a tensile–shear mixed mode, whereas the number of shear cracks in rocks with pores initially increases and then decreases with dip angle, reaching a maximum at 45°, resulting in shear-dominated failure. …”
  20. 6480

    UCS texts data. by Na Zhao (112953)

    Published 2025
    “…The results indicate that: (1) the presence of pores prolongs both the time to failure and the onset of the AE burst stage, with longer durations observed at higher pore dip angles; (2) AE signal amplitude and frequency vary significantly across different loading stages, and the b-value exhibits an “increase–fluctuation–decrease” trend, with the decreasing stage serving as a precursor to rock instability; (3) pore dip angle strongly influences crack propagation types: dip angles of 0°–30° favor axial cracks and through-going wing cracks, 45°–75° angles tend to induce co-planar and wing crack connectivity, while 90° angles cause crack deviation, hindering through-going failure; (4) intact rock fails in a tensile–shear mixed mode, whereas the number of shear cracks in rocks with pores initially increases and then decreases with dip angle, reaching a maximum at 45°, resulting in shear-dominated failure. …”