Academic literature on the topic 'Effects on growth'

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Journal articles on the topic "Effects on growth"

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XT, Zou, Zheng GH, Fang XJ, and Jiang JF. "Effects of glutamine on growth performance of weanling piglets." Czech Journal of Animal Science 51, No. 10 (2011): 444–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.17221/3963-cjas.

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An experiment was conducted to investigate the effects of glutamine on growth performance of weanling piglets. Sixty piglets weaned at 21 days of age were randomly assigned to two groups (10 piglets per pen, 3 pens per group). The control group received a maize-soybean meal-based diet. The treatment group received a maize-soybean meal-based diet supplemented with 1.0% free l-glutamine. Piglets were fed the diets for 20 days. Results showed that piglets fed the glutamine diet had lower diarrhoea ratio and shorter diarrhoea duration than those fed the control diet during 20 days after weaning. During the first ten days after weaning, pigs supplemented with glutamine had a 12.05% lower feed:gain ratio than those fed the control diet (P < 0.05). During the second ten days after weaning, they had a 27.75% higher average daily gain than those fed the control diet (P < 0.05); there were no differences in the feed:gain ratio and average daily feed intake. During the first ten days after weaning, the serum urea nitrogen of pigs supplemented with glutamine was reduced by 17.36% (P > 0.05) compared to the control. During the second ten days after weaning, serum urea nitrogen was reduced by 4.27% and serum concentrations of total protein increased by 18.70% in pigs supplemented with glutamine compared to the control (P > 0.05). There were no differences in albumin, T<sub>3,</sub> T<sub>4</sub> and growth hormone.  
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Chantal, Kwizera, Ndihokubwayo Soter, Basil T. Iro Ong' Or, et al. "Effects of Erosion Control Methods on Bean Growth Parameters." Indian Journal of Science and Technology 12, no. 35 (2019): 01–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.17485/ijst/2019/v12i35/130234.

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kottol, Kavitha, Sudha P. Sudha.P, and A. Reni A.Reni. "Studies on Growth Effects of Catechin on Probiotic Bacteria." International Journal of Scientific Research 3, no. 4 (2012): 1–3. http://dx.doi.org/10.15373/22778179/apr2014/189.

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Ozawa, Kazuya, Takao Shibata, and Ryo Ohmura. "Effects of Water Soluble Guest on Clathrate Hydrate Crystal Growth." International Journal of Materials Science and Engineering 8, no. 1 (2020): 20–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.17706/ijmse.2020.8.1.20-25.

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Funatsu, Minayo, Koshi Sato, and Hideo Mitani. "Effects of Growth Hormone on Craniofacial Growth." Angle Orthodontist 76, no. 6 (2006): 970–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.2319/011905-17.

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Abstract Objective: This study determined the effects of growth hormone (GH) therapy on craniofacial growth in idiopathic growth hormone deficiency (GHD). Materials and Methods: Fifty-seven patients (33 boys and 24 girls; age range 4.5 to 16.7 years) with GHD were investigated and categorized into three groups according to the duration of GH therapy: the untreated group, the short-term therapy group, and the long-term therapy group. Their lateral cephalometric radiographs were studied, and craniofacial measurements were assessed by age and sex by using matched standard deviation scores. Results: In the untreated group, the anterior cranial base, total facial height, maxillary length, mandibular total length, mandibular body length, and ramus height were smaller than the standard values. In comparison with the untreated group, the long-term therapy group had a significantly larger upper facial height (P < .05), maxillary length (P < .01), and ramus height (P < .01) measurements. Conclusions: Children who received long-term GH replacement therapy showed increased growth of the craniofacial skeleton, especially the maxilla and ramus. These findings suggest that GH accelerates craniofacial development, which improves occlusion and the facial profile.
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Çavuşoğlu, K., S. Kılıç, and K. Kabar. "Effects of some plant growth regulators on stem anatomy of radish seedlings grown under saline (NaCl) conditions." Plant, Soil and Environment 54, No. 10 (2008): 428–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.17221/405-pse.

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In this work, effects of gibberellic acid, 2-chloroethylphosphonic acid (ethephon), triacontanol, 24-epibrassinolide and polyamine (cadaverine, putrescine, spermidine, spermine) pretreatments on the stem anatomy of radish seedlings grown under saline conditions were studied. Salt stress decreased the stem diameter, epidermis cell size, cortex zone thickness, vascular bundle width, cambium thickness, xylem width, trachea diameter and phloem width in the seedlings non-pretreated with the growth regulators, in comparison with the control seedlings grown in distilled water medium. In addition, it slightly increased the cuticle thickness. On the other hand, many of the growth regulator pretreatments more or less stimulated the stem diameter, epidermis cell width, cortex zone thickness, vascular bundle width, xylem width, trachea diameter and phloem width in comparison with the control seedlings grown on saline medium. Moreover, they generally reduced the cuticle thickness, epidermis cell length and cambium thickness.
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Jafariehyazdi, E., and F. Javidfar. "Comparison of allelopathic effects of some brassica species in two growth stages on germination and growth of sunflower." Plant, Soil and Environment 57, No. 2 (2011): 52–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.17221/139/2010-pse.

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Members of Brassicaceae have been frequently cited as allelopathic crop. The toxic effect of Brassica spp. may be caused by hydrolysis products of glucosinolates that occur in substantial amounts in the vegetative parts of Brassica spp. This study investigated the allelopathic potential of Brassica napus, B. rapa and B. juncea on the sunflower seed germination and seedling growth. Aqueous extracts of three species from two stages (full flowering and straw) of sampling were separately made with 0 (distilled water), 10, 20, 30 and 40% concentrations. This experiment was conducted in 2 × 3 × 5 factorial arrangement based on completely randomized design with five replications. There was a highly significant difference among different concentrations of extracts and also between two stages of extraction. All aqueous extracts significantly affected sunflower germination, germination rate, seedling root and hypocotyl length, fresh and dry matter weight when compared with distilled water control. The greatest concentration showed a stronger inhibitory effect. Root length was more sensitive to extracts than hypocotyl length.
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Young, Alwyn. "Growth without Scale Effects." Journal of Political Economy 106, no. 1 (1998): 41–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/250002.

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Kabir, M., M. Z. Iqbal, M. Shafiq, and Z. R. Farooqi. "Effects of lead on seedling growth of spesia populnea." Plant, Soil and Environment 56, No. 4 (2010): 194–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.17221/147/2009-pse.

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The effects of lead on root, shoot and seedling length, leaf area, number of leaves, plant circumference, seedling dry weight, root/shoot and leaf area ratios of <I>Thespesia populnea</I> L. were determined in greenhouse under natural environmental conditions with and without phytotoxic metal ions at 5, 10, 15, 20, and 25 µmol/l. Lead treatments have a strong influence on the growth and development of <I>T</I>. <I>populnea</I> by reducing significantly (<I>P</I> < 0.05) all the above parameters. Lead treatment at 5–25 µmol/l produced significant (<I>P</I> < 0.05) effects on seedling and root length, plant circumference and seedling dry weight of <I>T</I>.<I> populnea,</I> while lead treatment at 10–25 µmol/l produced significant (<I>P</I> < 0.05) effects on shoot length, number of leaves and leaf area as compared to control. Tolerance in <I>T</I>.<I> populnea</I> seedling at 25 µmol/l of lead treatment was lowest as compared to all other treatments.
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Yen, Meng-Fen, Mario Miranda, and Ani Katchova. "The effects of capital constraints on the growth of agricultural cooperatives." Agricultural Economics (Zemědělská ekonomika) 66, No. 1 (2020): 27–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.17221/151/2019-agricecon.

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In this paper, we examine how capital constraints affect the growth of US agricultural cooperatives. Employing a panel data set obtained from CoBank on 669 US agricultural cooperatives over 5 years, we employ system-generalised method of moments to estimate models of cooperative growth that incorporate long-term debt, allocated reserves, and retained earnings as continuous measures of capital constraints. We find that long-term debt use and size have positive impacts on cooperative growth, in violation of Gibrat’s law, which posits that firm size and firm growth are independent. In particular, cash flow, unallocated equity and long-term debt financing are critical contributors to asset growth for small and medium-sized cooperatives.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Effects on growth"

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Chaffey, C. M. "The effects of epidermal growth factor on muscle growth." Thesis, University of Nottingham, 1992. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.306697.

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Al-Doski, Shaker. "Effects of growth promoters on sheep metabolism and growth." Thesis, University of Nottingham, 2015. http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/30739/.

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The aim of this thesis was to investigate the mechanisms that mediate the effects of beta-adrenergic agonists (BA) and Growth Hormone (GH) in sheep, by examining the changes in skeletal muscle transcriptome and blood metabolome in order to identify the predominant metabolic mechanisms by which muscle hypertrophy was mediated. Male lambs (120 days old) were all fed a high protein/energy feed ad-libitum, with the GH group (n=10) receiving a single subcutaneous injection of bovine GH (3.75mg/kg body weight, POSILAC, Monsanto) on day 1; the BA group (n=10) receiving BA (cimaterol) at 10mg/kg feed, whereas the control group (CO, n=11) only had the ad-libitum feed. After 6 days sheep were slaughtered, plasma and samples of the Longissimus dorsi (LD), Supraspinatus (SS) muscles and liver were collected. The effect of treatments on the LD transcriptome was assessed on a subset of samples (n=3 from each treatment) via a cross-species approach using the Affymetrix Human U133+2 GeneChip array (47K human microarray). Verification of identified differentially expressed genes and proteins was by quantitative RT-PCR or western blotting, respectively, on all animals. Metabolomics analysis of plasma samples was carried out by Metabolon Inc. (USA) using GC/MS and LC/MS/MS platforms. BA, but not GH, significantly (P<0.05) increased muscle weights and this was associated transition to large fast-glycolytic muscle fibre types. In GH, but not BA treated animals, there was an increase in liver weights (P<0.001). This was associated with an increase in the whole liver content of glycogen (P<0.001), protein (P<0.01), and lipid (P<0.05) content. Analysis of the LD transcriptome of the treated sheep identified 477 and 316 transcripts were significantly altered (P<0.05 and 1.5 fold change) by BA and GH respectively, relative to controls. This muscle was selected as it is a commercial valuable muscle and is commonly used for muscle biochemical studies therefore this would allow us to make comparisons to other studies, including our own. In addition it is a fast glycolytic muscle fibre type there could be compared against SS muscle (oxidative muscle fibre type). BA decreased the expression of genes involved with oxidative phosphorylation and upregulated those serine biosynthetic pathways. Subsequent qRT-PCR analysis showed a BA induced increase in expression of phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase (PHGDH) (P<0.05) and phosphoserine-aminotransferase (PSAT) (P<0.05) mRNA in both LD and SS but not liver. In LD there was also an increase (P<0.001) in PHGDH protein in muscle from BA treated sheep relative to GH treated sheep. Up-regulation of this pathway has been previously reported in cancer cells which has a tendency to be associated with an increase in gene expression of a specific isoform of the glycolysis enzyme pyruvate kinase (PKM2) which has reduced activity. Total PKM and PKM1 and PKM2 isoforms were increased in the SS and LD of BA treated sheep (P<0.05). Previous studies in cancer cells have suggested that increases in serine synthesis are mediated by changes in PKM2 expression and associated enzyme activity. The lack of a differential increase in PKM2 suggested that the regulation of muscle PK in BA treated animals was not critical to the potential increase in serine synthesis capacity. No clear change in PKM gene expression suggested this was not the mechanism by which the serine synthesis pathway was stimulated. There was an increase (P<0.05) in the expression the mitochondrial form of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PCK2) in the LD of BA treated sheep, which might be expected to increase gluconeogenic potential thereby increasing intermediates that could be used for serine synthesis. There was no effect of this gene on sheep treated with GH. An increase in the gene expression of asparagine synthetase (ASNS) was also seen in the muscles of BA but not GH treated sheep (P<0.001) and there was no effect on their livers, which further suggested that BA was influencing the production of nonessential amino acids. Metabolomics analysis showed that products of triacylglycerol breakdown, glycerol and free fatty acids, were all elevated in the plasma of both BA and GH treatments, indicating lipolytic effects but the increase in the free fatty acid profile were more pronounced with GH treatment (P<0.05). Likewise GH rather than BA had a greater impact on elevating plasma glucose and associated metabolites such as pyruvate (P<0.05). There was no effect of either treatment on plasma serine or asparagine concentrations. However there was a decrease in glycine (P<0.05) and glutamine (P<0.05) in GH relative to control, with BA decreasing histidine (P<0.05) and methionine (P<0.01) relative to control. Cell culture experiments were carried out in the myogenic C2C12 cell line to determine if the genes associated with the GH and BA response in sheep were affected during myogenesis and whether there was an effect of des (1-3) IGF-I and dibutyryl cyclic adenosine monophosphate (dbcAMP) that stimulates GH and BA signalling pathways respectively. During differentiation, without treatment, gene expression of PHGDH and PSAT enzymes declined (P<0.05), which might be expected as cells move from a proliferative to a terminally differentiate state. There was no clear effect of treatment on genes associated with the serine synthesis pathway suggesting that the effects of BA, in particular, are on muscle fibres rather than differentiating cells. Of the two growth promoters examined in this thesis BA appears to be the most potent in skeletal muscle. A clear effect of this agent was an increase in the gene expression of the serine biosynthetic pathway, which has been shown to be upregulated in various cancers and, in this pathology, is thought to be a novel mechanism for hyperplastic growth. The associated changes in the expression of genes such as ASNS and PCK2 indicate that their co-ordinated upregulation could be mediated via endoplasmic reticulum stress response mechanisms. Unlike GH, BA does not appear to have a major effect upon the systemic mobilisation of nutrients, but instead seems to targets muscle fibres, activating muscle biosynthetic pathways that potentially provide the substrates required for growth.
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Chapman, Sara Bernice. "Student Growth Trajectories with Summer Achievement Loss Using Hierarchical and Growth Modeling." BYU ScholarsArchive, 2016. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/5970.

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Using measures of student growth has become more popular in recent years—especially in the context of high stakes testing and accountability. While these methods have advantages over historical status measures, there is still much evidence to be gathered on patterns of growth generally and in student subgroups. To date, most research studies dealing with student growth focus on the effectiveness of specific interventions or examine growth in a few urban areas. This project explored math, reading, and English language arts (ELA) growth in the students of two rural school districts in Utah. The study incorporated hierarchical and latent growth methods to describe and compare these students’ growth in third, fourth and fifth grades. Additionally, student characteristics were tested as predictors of growth. Results showed student growth as complex and patterns varied across grade levels, subjects and student subgroups. Growth generally declined after third grade and students experienced summer loss in the second summer more than the first. Females began third grade ahead of their male peers in ELA and reading and began at a similar level in math. Male students narrowed the gap in reading and ELA in fourth and fifth grade and pulled ahead of their female peers in math in third grade. Low SES students were the most similar to their peers in math and ELA growth but were ahead of their peers in reading. Hispanic and Native American students started consistently behind white students in all subjects. Hispanic students tended to grow faster during the school year but lost more over the summer months. Native American students had more shallow growth than white students with a gradual decline in growth in fourth and fifth grades. ELA and reading growth were more closely related to each other than with math growth. Initial achievement estimates were more highly correlated with subsequent growth than previous years’ growth. A cross-classified model for teacher-level effects was attempted to account for students changing class groupings each school year but computational limits were reached. After estimating subjects and grade levels separately, results showed variance in test scores was primarily due to student differences. In ELA and reading, school differences accounted for a larger portion of the overall variance than teacher differences.
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Tavos, Farid. "How elderly population effects economic growth." Thesis, Mälardalens högskola, Akademin för ekonomi, samhälle och teknik, 2018. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:mdh:diva-40834.

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Wirthmueller, Urs. "Priming effects of hemopoietic growth factors on mature effector cells /." Bern, 1991. http://www.ub.unibe.ch/content/bibliotheken_sammlungen/sondersammlungen/dissen_bestellformular/index_ger.html.

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Traytak, Sergey D. "Time-dependent competition effects in diffusion-limited crystal growth: Time-dependent competition effects in diffusion-limitedcrystal growth." Diffusion fundamentals 6 (2007) 47, S. 1-2, 2007. https://ul.qucosa.de/id/qucosa%3A14226.

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Almeida, Nisha. "Measures of maternal tobacco smoke exposure and foetal growth." Thesis, McGill University, 2007. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=112375.

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Objective. Most biomarker studies of maternal smoking have been based on a single blood or urinary cotinine value, which is inadequate in capturing maternal tobacco exposure over the entire pregnancy. This thesis used maternal hair biomarkers to investigate the association between maternal active and passive smoking, and birthweight for gestational age (BW for GA).<br>Methods. Subjects were 444 term controls drawn from 5,337 participants of a multi-centre nested case-control study of preterm birth in Montreal. Maternal hair, collected after delivery, was measured for average nicotine and cotinine concentration across the pregnancy, assuming hair growth of 1 cm/month. The BW for GA z-score used Canadian population-based standards. Multiple linear regression was used to assess effects on the z-score, after controlling for potential confounders.<br>Results. In regression models for maternal active smoking analysis, the addition of hair nicotine to models containing either self-report or hair cotinine or both self-report and cotinine explained significantly more variance in the BW for GA z-score (p=0.009, p=0.017, and p=0.033, respectively). In maternal passive smoking analysis, no significant effect of ETS on BW for GA was found using hair biomarkers.<br>Conclusion. These results indicate that hair biomarkers are sensitive tools capable of predicting reductions in birthweight for maternal active smoking. The stronger results obtained for nicotine are reflective of the fact that hair nicotine is a better measure of maternal smoking, but it could also suggest that nicotine plays an aetiologic role in affecting foetal growth.
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Anderson, Daniel. "Teacher and School Contributions to Student Growth." Thesis, University of Oregon, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/1794/19191.

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Teachers and schools both play important roles in students' education. Yet, the unique contribution of each to students' growth has rarely been explored. In this dissertation, a Bayesian multilevel model was applied in each of Grades 3 to 5, with students' growth estimated across three seasonal (fall, winter, spring) administrations of a mathematics assessment. Variance in students' within-year growth was then partitioned into student-, classroom-, and school-level components. The expected differences in students' growth between classrooms and schools were treated as indicators of the teacher or school "effect" on students' mathematics growth. Results provided evidence that meaningful differences in students' growth lies both between classrooms within schools, and between schools. The distribution of teacher effects between schools was also examined through the lens of access and equity with systematic sorting of teachers to schools leading to disproportional student access to classrooms where the average growth was above the norm. Further, previous research has documented persistent and compounding teacher effects over time. Systematic teacher sorting results in students' having differential probabilities of being enrolled in multiple "high" or "low" growth classrooms in a row. While clear evidence of teacher sorting was found, the demographic composition of schools did not relate to the sorting, contrary to previous research. The persistence of teacher and school effects was also examined from a previously unexplored angle by examining the effect of students' previous teacher(s) on their subsequent rate of within-year growth during the school year. These effects were found to be small and teacher effects overall were found to decay quite rapidly.
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Rätsch, Christian. "Effects of strain on heteroepitaxial growth dynamics." Diss., Georgia Institute of Technology, 1994. http://hdl.handle.net/1853/30647.

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Rahimov, Vugar. "Sectoral Effects of Foreign Direct Investment on Host Country Economic Growth: Evidence from Emerging Countries." Thesis, Uppsala universitet, Nationalekonomiska institutionen, 2013. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-207410.

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In this paper, I study the effect of foreign direct investment (FDI) on a group of host country economic growth for the period 1994-2011. Using aggregate level FDI data for a group of five emerging countries, the paper reveals that FDI has a positive effect on economic growth. Then I use sectoral data and test whether all the sectors have positive effects on growth. The results vary across the sectors. The results seem to be positive for mining and quarrying as well as manufacturing sector, while trade and financial intermediation sectors to have a negative effect on economic growth.
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Books on the topic "Effects on growth"

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Young, Alwyn. Growth without scale effects. National Bureau of Economic Research, 1995.

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Henrekson, M. Growth effects of European integration. Centre for Economic Policy Research, 1996.

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Stokey, Nancy L. Growth effects of flat-rate taxes. National Bureau of Economic Research, 1993.

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Grubel, Herbert G. Service industry growth: Causes and effects. Fraser Institute, 1989.

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Jones, Larry E. Growth and the effects of inflation. National Bureau of Economic Research, 1993.

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Bertrand, Richard L. Theories and effects of economic growth. Nova Science Publishers, 2011.

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Li, Chol-Won. Endogenous growth without scale effects: Comment. University of Glasgow, Department of Economics., 1998.

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Grubel, Herbert G. Service industry growth: Causes and effects. Fraser Institute, 1989.

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Baldwin, Richard E. On the growth effects of 1992. National Bureau of Economic Research, 1989.

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Twimukye, Evarist. Aid allocation effects on growth and poverty. Economic Policy Research Centre, 2009.

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Book chapters on the topic "Effects on growth"

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Isgaard, Jörgen. "GH Effects on Cardiac Function." In Growth Hormone. Springer US, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-5163-8_16.

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Rosén, Thord. "Effects of GH on Body Composition." In Growth Hormone. Springer US, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-5163-8_9.

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Johannsson, Gudmundur. "Effects of GH on Lipid Metabolism." In Growth Hormone. Springer US, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-5163-8_10.

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Monson, John P. "Side Effects of Growth Hormone Treatment." In Growth Hormone. Springer US, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-5163-8_19.

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Hornung, Dietmar. "Growth without Scale Effects." In Lecture Notes in Economics and Mathematical Systems. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-51718-1_11.

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Snow, M. H. L. "Environmental influences on fetal growth: effects and consequences." In Fetal Growth. Springer London, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4471-1707-0_11.

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Vvedensky, D. D., P. Šmilauer, and T. Shitara. "Morphological Evolution During Epitaxial Growth." In Nanostructures and Quantum Effects. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-79232-8_40.

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Moses, H. L., J. Keski-Oja, R. M. Lyons, N. J. Sipes, C. C. Bascom, and R. J. Coffey. "Biological effects of transforming growth factors." In Advances in Growth Hormone and Growth Factor Research. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-11054-6_13.

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Landin-Wilhelmsen, Kerstin. "Effects of Growth Hormone on Blood Coagulation and Fibrinolysis." In Growth Hormone. Springer US, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-5163-8_12.

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Jørgensen, Jens Otto Lunde, Rolf Dall, Nina Vahl, Helene Nørrelund, and Jens Sandahl Christiansen. "Effects of Growth Hormone on Muscle Mass and Function." In Growth Hormone. Springer US, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-5163-8_14.

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Conference papers on the topic "Effects on growth"

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COLLAZO, ALEJANDRO ACOSTA. "MOBILITY AND COLLATERAL EFFECTS ON CITY HERITAGE IN AGUASCALIENTES, MEXICO." In URBAN GROWTH 2018. WIT Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/ug180061.

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Földvári, I., Á. Péter, K. Polgár, G. Berger, and C. Denz. "Growth and characterization of photorefractive oxide crystals." In Photorefractive Effects, Materials, and Devices. OSA, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/pemd.2003.58.

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LEÓN, WILLIAM H. HERRERA, JESÚS PACHECO MARTÍNEZ, MARTÍN HERNÁNDEZ MARÍN, RAUDEL PADILLA CENICEROS, and MARÍA DE LA LUZ PÉREZ REA. "LAND SUBSIDENCE AND ITS EFFECTS ON THE URBAN AREA OF TEPIC CITY, MEXICO." In URBAN GROWTH 2018. WIT Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/ug180341.

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Huang, Hui, Rui-min Wan, Zeng-lin Zhao, Rong-bin Ji, and Shun-chen Pan. "Growth and structure of cadmium zinc telluride crystal." In Photorefractive Effects, Materials, and Devices. OSA, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/pemd.2005.26.

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Caixia, Liu, Xu Zhaopeng, Xu Yuheng, and Xu Shiwen. "Growth and photorefractive properties of near-stoichiometric Zn:Fe:LiNbO3 crystals." In Photorefractive Effects, Materials, and Devices. OSA, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/pemd.2005.162.

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ZARAGOZA-MARTÍ, MARIA F. "THE EFFECTS OF ENVIRONMENTAL GLOBALIZATION ON WATER RESOURCES: IN SEARCH OF THE HUMAN RIGHT TO WATER." In URBAN GROWTH 2018. WIT Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/ug180031.

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Põlajeva, Tatjana, and Sergei Kornilov. "Infrastructure Development: Economic Growth Effects." In The 7th International Scientific Conference "Business and Management 2012". Vilnius Gediminas Technical University Publishing House Technika, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.3846/bm.2012.022.

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Carvalho, J. F., A. C. Hernandes, and J. C. Launay. "Synthesis and Crystal Growth of Bi12[Ti(1-x)V0.8x]O20." In Photorefractive Effects, Materials, and Devices. OSA, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/pemd.2005.228.

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Zhaopeng, Xu, Xu Shiwen, and Xu Yuheng. "Growth and photorefractive properties of Ce:Fe:LiNbO3 crystals with various [Li]/[Nb] ratios." In Photorefractive Effects, Materials, and Devices. OSA, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/pemd.2005.156.

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Verstraeten, D., Ph C. Lemaire, and J. C. Launay. "Bridgman growth and electric breakdown behavior of Vanadium-Zinc codoped Cadmium Telluride." In Photorefractive Effects, Materials, and Devices. OSA, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/pemd.2001.558.

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Reports on the topic "Effects on growth"

1

Young, Alwyn. Growth Without Scale Effects. National Bureau of Economic Research, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w5211.

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Baldwin, Richard. The Growth Effects of 1992. National Bureau of Economic Research, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w3119.

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Stokey, Nancy, and Sergio Rebelo. Growth Effects of Flat-Rate Taxes. National Bureau of Economic Research, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w4426.

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Jones, Larry, and Rodolfo Manuelli. Growth and the Effects of Inflation. National Bureau of Economic Research, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w4523.

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Jaimovich, Nir, and Sergio Rebelo. Non-linear Effects of Taxation on Growth. National Bureau of Economic Research, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w18473.

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Dowrick, Steve. Ideas and Education: Level or Growth Effects? National Bureau of Economic Research, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w9709.

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Baldwin, Richard. On the Growth Effects of Import Competition. National Bureau of Economic Research, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w4045.

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Henderson, J. Vernon. The Effects of Urban Concentration on Economic Growth. National Bureau of Economic Research, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w7503.

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Perez-Polo, J. R. Nerve Growth Factor Effects on the Immune System. Defense Technical Information Center, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada229052.

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Ranciere, Romain, Aaron Tornell, and Frank Westermann. Decomposing the Effects of Financial Liberalization: Crises vs. Growth. National Bureau of Economic Research, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w12806.

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