Benefits
in sentence
4904 examples of Benefits in a sentence
Well I've already told you about all of the
benefits
of the optimism bias, which probably makes you want to hold onto it for dear life.
Even when a Canadian cheats the system, they do it in a way that
benefits
society.
Well, we know that playing games together has tremendous family
benefits.
Or better yet, is there a way to get all the
benefits
of post-traumatic growth without the trauma, without having to hit your head in the first place?
It's just because people are uncomfortable with the idea, and that's why I want you today to try to think about this, think about the
benefits
of bees in cities and why they really are a terrific thing.
Self-sustaining entities, 18 months return on investment, plus we're paying people living wage and health benefits, while feeding people for pennies on the dollar.
It's not only the
benefits
that we've talked about with regard to development.
It's the economic
benefits
and the job creation that's coming from this open innovation work.
There are just huge
benefits
to come from designing for the ears in our health care.
We're at last starting to debate this issue, and the
benefits
that are available for designing for the ears in education, unbelievable.
Suddenly, what we're finding with these concerts, away from the stage, away from the footlights, out of the tuxedo tails, the musicians become the conduit for delivering the tremendous therapeutic
benefits
of music on the brain to an audience that would never have access to this room, would never have access to the kind of music that we make.
And yet, statistically, what you discover is that about one in 100,000 ideas is found making money or delivering
benefits
two years after its inception.
One, because the
benefits
of the Marshall Plan have been overstated.
Microsoft first fought off the hacks, but then shifted course when it realized that actively supporting the community came with
benefits.
Distinguished academics at the same time argued that democracies had this incredible range of side
benefits.
Well, what we've seen is the creation, in places like Iraq and Afghanistan, of democratic systems of government which haven't had any of those side
benefits.
Just like fear offers us protective benefits, disgust seems to do the same thing, except for what disgust does is keeps us away from not things that might eat us, or heights, but rather things that might poison us, or give us disease and make us sick.
Maybe because these conventional notions of progress haven't delivered big
benefits
in terms of happiness, there's been an increased interest in recent years in happiness itself.
Richard Ford: I was slow to learn to read, went all the way through school not really reading more than the minimum, and still to this day can't read silently much faster than I can read aloud, but there were a lot of
benefits
to being dyslexic for me because when I finally did reconcile myself to how slow I was going to have to do it, then I think I came very slowly into an appreciation of all of those qualities of language and of sentences that are not just the cognitive aspects of language: the syncopations, the sounds of words, what words look like, where paragraphs break, where lines break.
Now also being engineering scientists, we were able to quantify the performance
benefits
of the Leveraged Freedom Chair, so here are some shots of our trial in Guatemala where we tested the LFC on village terrain, and tested people's biomechanical outputs, their oxygen consumption, how fast they go, how much power they're putting out, both in their regular wheelchairs and using the LFC, and we found that the LFC is about 80 percent faster going on these terrains than a normal wheelchair.
It would fit both in Wright's theory, that it allows us to enjoy the
benefits
of cooperation over larger and larger circles.
This is especially important in developing countries, where a lot of participants consent to research because they believe it is the only way in which they can receive medical care or other
benefits.
It is important to assess the potential risks and
benefits
of the standard of care which is to be provided to participants in any clinical trial, and establish one which is relevant for the context of the study and most beneficial for the participants within the study.
When I was writing this talk, I found it very difficult to strike an honest balance, because on the one hand, I felt very uncomfortable to come out here and say, "Look I've received all these
benefits
from a deck stacked in my favor," and it also felt really uncomfortable to follow that up with, "and it doesn't always make me happy."
I actually think a far more important message is that there are
benefits
as well as risks to sunlight.
It specifies certain
benefits
that the state can uniquely bestow on the operators.
And government has certain
benefits
it can uniquely bestow on these markets.
And there are certain obligations that should go with those
benefits
to be placed on the operators, and the key one is, of course, that the operators pay for everything, including all the interfacing into the public sector.
Imagine that there's a concession period defined of maybe 15 years in which they can take all these
benefits
and run with them.
And if we tell the consumer brands, "You may advertise all the
benefits
of your product," but we tell charities, "You cannot advertise all the good that you do," where do we think the consumer dollars are going to flow?
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