Showing 1,781 - 1,800 results of 18,812 for search 'significantly ((((lower decrease) OR (((mean decrease) OR (a decrease))))) OR (greater decrease))', query time: 0.57s Refine Results
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    Table_1_Higher oxidative balance score is associated with lower female infertility: a cross-sectional study.DOCX by Xiong Lei (3847897)

    Published 2024
    “…When OBS was used as a categorical variable, female infertility decreased by 60% in the highest OBS group compared with the lowest OBS group (OR, 0.40; 95% CI, 0.21 to 0.74). …”
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    Example of sample data. by Xiying Wang (4859998)

    Published 2025
    “…In contrast, the EGA-BPNN model achieves a significantly lower mean absolute relative error of 0.41% for single-flow prediction, demonstrating superior prediction performance. …”
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    Structure of BPNN. by Xiying Wang (4859998)

    Published 2025
    “…In contrast, the EGA-BPNN model achieves a significantly lower mean absolute relative error of 0.41% for single-flow prediction, demonstrating superior prediction performance. …”
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    The workflow of EGA-BPNN. by Xiying Wang (4859998)

    Published 2025
    “…In contrast, the EGA-BPNN model achieves a significantly lower mean absolute relative error of 0.41% for single-flow prediction, demonstrating superior prediction performance. …”
  17. 1797

    S1 Data - by Xiying Wang (4859998)

    Published 2025
    “…In contrast, the EGA-BPNN model achieves a significantly lower mean absolute relative error of 0.41% for single-flow prediction, demonstrating superior prediction performance. …”
  18. 1798

    Algorithm flow of the GA-BPNN model. by Xiying Wang (4859998)

    Published 2025
    “…In contrast, the EGA-BPNN model achieves a significantly lower mean absolute relative error of 0.41% for single-flow prediction, demonstrating superior prediction performance. …”
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    Accuracy on the ERAM task. by Daisung Jang (16781451)

    Published 2024
    “…However, coefficients for estrogen were significant for both emotion recognition tasks. Higher within-person levels of estrogen predicted lower accuracy, whereas higher between-person estrogen levels predicted greater accuracy. …”
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