Biological
in sentence
707 examples of Biological in a sentence
This muscle dynamic interaction causes
biological
sensors within the muscle tendon to send information through the nerve to the central nervous system, relating information on the muscle tendon's length, speed and force.
We get this upfront look at the mechanistic interaction between how they respond to the world around them and the state of their
biological
systems.
And we get to see into this window, into their internal states and their
biological
experiences.
So, my husband is the
biological
father of two children with some lesbian friends in Minneapolis.
And my husband and I have a son who lives with us all the time, of whom I am the
biological
father, and our surrogate for the pregnancy was Laura, the lesbian mother of Oliver and Lucy in Minneapolis.
Now we already have international treaties on nuclear and
biological
weapons, and, while imperfect, these have largely worked.
Suddenly I remembered my
biological
father.
And extreme sleep deprivation like jetlag can throw off your
biological
clock, wreaking havoc on your sleep schedule.
Regulate your metabolism by setting consistent resting and waking times to help orient your body’s
biological
clock.
And the message I want to leave you with is, consciousness has to become accepted as a genuine
biological
phenomenon, as much subject to scientific analysis as any other phenomenon in biology, or, for that matter, the rest of science.
Our ears enclose a fine-tuned piece of
biological
machinery that converts the cacophony of vibrations in the air around us into precisely tuned electrical impulses that distinguish claps, taps, sighs, and flies.
So there's computers that protect themselves, like an immune system, and we're learning from gene regulation and
biological
development.
As I'm reading more and more now, and following the story, there are some amazing things coming up in the
biological
sciences.
The
biological
clock tells us when it's good to be up, when it's good to be asleep, and what that structure does is interact with a whole raft of other areas within the hypothalamus, the lateral hypothalamus, the ventrolateral preoptic nuclei.
A
biological
mimic for sleep, it sedates you.
Now, we've set about reducing light exposure before you go to bed, but light exposure in the morning is very good at setting the
biological
clock to the light-dark cycle.
They have a
biological
predisposition to go to bed late and get up late, so give them a break.
SR: So the same way that building lights at night let you know that somebody's probably working there at any given moment, in a very real sense, there are
biological
sensors within a cell that are turned on only when that cell was just working.
They're sort of
biological
windows that light up to let us know that that cell was just active.
Over a lifetime of stressful experiences, this one
biological
change could be the difference between a stress-induced heart attack at age 50 and living well into your 90s.
Your
biological
stress response is nudging you to tell someone how you feel, instead of bottling it up.
This is biofabrication, where cells themselves can be used to grow
biological
products like tissues and organs.
We want to learn how to build
biological
artifacts, like people and whales and trees.
So where we see an unquestionable reality, death as an irrefutable
biological
condition, Torajans see the expired corporeal form as part of a larger social genesis.
But instead of giving in to the sort of visceral reaction we have to this idea of proximity to bodies, proximity to death, or how this notion just does not fit into our very
biological
or medical sort of definition of death, I like to think about what the Torajan way of viewing death encompasses of the human experience that the medical definition leaves out.
But I see something profoundly transformative in experiencing death as a social process and not just a
biological
one.
But I want to ask what we can gain from seeing physical death not only as a
biological
process but as part of the greater human story.
It might help us recognize that the way we limit our conversation about death to something that's medical or
biological
is reflective of a larger culture that we all share of avoiding death, being afraid of talking about it.
So our imagery is 3D, it's chemical, it's biological, and this tells us not only the species that are living in the canopy, but it tells us a lot of information about the rest of the species that occupy the rainforest.
One way to think about this is thinking about
biological
organisms, which we've heard a lot about.
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