Showing 3,521 - 3,540 results of 8,845 for search 'significantly ((((mean decrease) OR (we decrease))) OR (greatest decrease))', query time: 0.55s Refine Results
  1. 3521

    Image_4_Effects of tree species identity on soil microbial communities in Juglans nigra and Quercus rubra plantations.TIFF by Juan P. Frene (12227753)

    Published 2024
    “…Conversely, Q. rubra tends to decrease these indices. Significant disparities in microbial composition between the two tree species were evident, with J. nigra exhibiting enrichment in certain taxa such as Nitrospira, Geobacter, and Bacillus while Q. rubra showed enrichment in others like Acidobacteriota and ectomycorrhizal fungi. …”
  2. 3522

    Image_1_Effects of tree species identity on soil microbial communities in Juglans nigra and Quercus rubra plantations.PDF by Juan P. Frene (12227753)

    Published 2024
    “…Conversely, Q. rubra tends to decrease these indices. Significant disparities in microbial composition between the two tree species were evident, with J. nigra exhibiting enrichment in certain taxa such as Nitrospira, Geobacter, and Bacillus while Q. rubra showed enrichment in others like Acidobacteriota and ectomycorrhizal fungi. …”
  3. 3523

    Image_5_Effects of tree species identity on soil microbial communities in Juglans nigra and Quercus rubra plantations.TIFF by Juan P. Frene (12227753)

    Published 2024
    “…Conversely, Q. rubra tends to decrease these indices. Significant disparities in microbial composition between the two tree species were evident, with J. nigra exhibiting enrichment in certain taxa such as Nitrospira, Geobacter, and Bacillus while Q. rubra showed enrichment in others like Acidobacteriota and ectomycorrhizal fungi. …”
  4. 3524

    Image_2_Effects of tree species identity on soil microbial communities in Juglans nigra and Quercus rubra plantations.TIFF by Juan P. Frene (12227753)

    Published 2024
    “…Conversely, Q. rubra tends to decrease these indices. Significant disparities in microbial composition between the two tree species were evident, with J. nigra exhibiting enrichment in certain taxa such as Nitrospira, Geobacter, and Bacillus while Q. rubra showed enrichment in others like Acidobacteriota and ectomycorrhizal fungi. …”
  5. 3525

    Data_Sheet_1_Effects of tree species identity on soil microbial communities in Juglans nigra and Quercus rubra plantations.xlsx by Juan P. Frene (12227753)

    Published 2024
    “…Conversely, Q. rubra tends to decrease these indices. Significant disparities in microbial composition between the two tree species were evident, with J. nigra exhibiting enrichment in certain taxa such as Nitrospira, Geobacter, and Bacillus while Q. rubra showed enrichment in others like Acidobacteriota and ectomycorrhizal fungi. …”
  6. 3526

    Image_3_Effects of tree species identity on soil microbial communities in Juglans nigra and Quercus rubra plantations.TIFF by Juan P. Frene (12227753)

    Published 2024
    “…Conversely, Q. rubra tends to decrease these indices. Significant disparities in microbial composition between the two tree species were evident, with J. nigra exhibiting enrichment in certain taxa such as Nitrospira, Geobacter, and Bacillus while Q. rubra showed enrichment in others like Acidobacteriota and ectomycorrhizal fungi. …”
  7. 3527

    Bouquin et al. - High variability in the reproducibility of key hemodynamic responses to head-up tilt by Heidi Bouquin (17563521)

    Published 2024
    “…<p dir="ltr">Increased blood pressure upon standing is considered a cardiovascular risk factor. We investigated the reproducibility of changes in aortic blood pressure, heart rate, stroke volume, cardiac output, and systemic vascular resistance during three passive head-up tilts (HUT) in 223 participants without cardiovascular medications (mean age 46 years, BMI 28 kg/m2, 54% male). …”
  8. 3528

    High variability in the reproducibility of key hemodynamic responses to head-up tilt by Heidi Bouquin (17563521)

    Published 2024
    “…<p dir="ltr">Increased blood pressure upon standing is considered a cardiovascular risk factor. We investigated the reproducibility of changes in aortic blood pressure, heart rate, stroke volume, cardiac output, and systemic vascular resistance during three passive head-up tilts (HUT) in 223 participants without cardiovascular medications (mean age 46 years, BMI 28 kg/m2, 54% male). …”
  9. 3529

    Bouquin et al. - High variability in the reproducibility of key hemodynamic responses to head-up tilt by Heidi Bouquin (17563521)

    Published 2024
    “…<p dir="ltr">Increased blood pressure upon standing is considered a cardiovascular risk factor. We investigated the reproducibility of changes in aortic blood pressure, heart rate, stroke volume, cardiac output, and systemic vascular resistance during three passive head-up tilts (HUT) in 223 participants without cardiovascular medications (mean age 46 years, BMI 28 kg/m2, 54% male). …”
  10. 3530

    Bouquin et al. - High variability in the reproducibility of key hemodynamic responses to head-up tilt by Heidi Bouquin (17563521)

    Published 2024
    “…<p dir="ltr">Increased blood pressure upon standing is considered a cardiovascular risk factor. We investigated the reproducibility of changes in aortic blood pressure, heart rate, stroke volume, cardiac output, and systemic vascular resistance during three passive head-up tilts (HUT) in 223 participants without cardiovascular medications (mean age 46 years, BMI 28 kg/m2, 54% male). …”
  11. 3531

    Repetitive stress induces a reduction in sound-evoked activity that develops as the stressor becomes chronic. by Ghattas Bisharat (20706928)

    Published 2025
    “…(b) Change in activity across sessions per tracked cell in response to 40, 60, and 70 dB white noise. We found a negative slope in most cells especially for mid-intensities, indicating a decrease in activity as the stress becomes chronic (<i>t</i> test for 40 dB <i>p</i> = 0.36, for 60 dB <i>p</i> = 9.3 × 10<sup>−12</sup>, and for 70 dB <i>p</i> = 0.00750). …”
  12. 3532

    Exposure to environments with different norms changes participants’ behavior. by Claire Lugrin (21156528)

    Published 2025
    “…Each participant faced one of four environments. We varied the type of norm that was manipulated (descriptive versus prescriptive norms) and the direction of the change (increased or decreased prosociality). …”
  13. 3533

    Table 1_The impact of prebiotics, probiotics and synbiotics on the prevention and treatment of atopic dermatitis in children: an umbrella meta-analysis.docx by Lifeng Wang (121568)

    Published 2025
    “…The treatment resulted in a significant decrease in SCORAD score among children with moderate to severe AD, but not in subjects with mild AD.…”
  14. 3534

    Data_Sheet_1_Finger-specific effects of age on tapping speed and motor fatigability.docx by Caroline Heimhofer (19735888)

    Published 2024
    “…</p>Results<p>We found that the maximal tapping speed differed significantly between young (18–30 years, n = 194) and aged (50–70 years, n = 176), whereas the fatigability-induced relative decrease in movement speed did not differ between the age groups (average decrease: 17.0% ± 6.9% (young) vs. 16.5% ± 7.5% (aged) decrease). …”
  15. 3535

    Data Sheet 1_Large scale atmospheric conditions favoring storm surges in the North and Baltic Seas and possible future changes.docx by Nils H. Schade (21676022)

    Published 2025
    “…In contrast, a significant decrease of easterly effective winds is projected for all four locations at the Baltic Sea coast. …”
  16. 3536

    Data Sheet 1_Effects of therapeutic horsemanship on caregiver stress scores of children with autism.pdf by Danielle C. Barron (21634196)

    Published 2025
    “…Semi-structured interviews were performed once during the semester and transcripts were analyzed using thematic analysis.</p>Results<p>We observed caregivers experienced a statistically significant decrease (p=0.03) in their stress levels over a single semester of TH participation demonstrated by a reduction in DASS-21 stress subcategory (pre intervention mean 12.77 (SD = 9.95), post-intervention mean 8.62 (SD = 10.98). …”
  17. 3537

    Data Sheet 2_Effects of therapeutic horsemanship on caregiver stress scores of children with autism.pdf by Danielle C. Barron (21634196)

    Published 2025
    “…Semi-structured interviews were performed once during the semester and transcripts were analyzed using thematic analysis.</p>Results<p>We observed caregivers experienced a statistically significant decrease (p=0.03) in their stress levels over a single semester of TH participation demonstrated by a reduction in DASS-21 stress subcategory (pre intervention mean 12.77 (SD = 9.95), post-intervention mean 8.62 (SD = 10.98). …”
  18. 3538

    S1 Data - by Yumeng Zhang (3115050)

    Published 2024
    “…The results of this study suggest that the level of well-being as a whole, as well as in the eastern, central and western regions increased significantly over the period, with an “east-to-west decreasing” distribution in China. …”
  19. 3539

    Index system for well-being level. by Yumeng Zhang (3115050)

    Published 2024
    “…The results of this study suggest that the level of well-being as a whole, as well as in the eastern, central and western regions increased significantly over the period, with an “east-to-west decreasing” distribution in China. …”
  20. 3540

    Video1_One-year real-world experience with mavacamten and its physiologic effects on obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.mov by Daniel Seung Kim (19510291)

    Published 2024
    “…Moreover, in our center's experience, neither arrhythmia burden, nor contractility have worsened in the vast majority of patients: we note a clinically insignificant mean decrease in left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), with only two patients requiring temporary mavacamten discontinuance for LVEF < 50%. …”