Cognitive
in sentence
363 examples of Cognitive in a sentence
Well, if you combine our
cognitive
biases with the nature of news, you can see why the world has been coming to an end for a very long time indeed.
We've got laws that fundamentally treat creative works as property, plus massive rewards or settlements in infringement cases, plus huge legal fees to protect yourself in court, plus
cognitive
biases against perceived loss.
Similarly, using a randomized control trial in rural Pakistan, Atif Rahman and his colleagues showed that lady health visitors, who are community maternal health workers in Pakistan's health care system, could deliver
cognitive
behavior therapy for mothers who were depressed, again showing dramatic differences in the recovery rates.
Without needles and radioactivity, without any kind of clinical reason, we can go down the street and record from your friends' and neighbors' brains while they do a variety of
cognitive
tasks, and we use a method called functional magnetic resonance imaging.
This has literally revolutionized
cognitive
science.
The interesting thing is, these games require that you have a lot of
cognitive
apparatus on line.
So we fill our
cognitive
maps with these markers of meaning.
What's more, we're all capable of understanding the
cognitive
maps, and you are all capable of creating these
cognitive
maps yourselves.
This forming of the powerful attachment between child and parent provides the building blocks for physical, social, language,
cognitive
and psychomotor development.
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.
There's a
cognitive
illusion.
We
cognitive
psychologists know that the easier it is to recall specific instances of something, the higher the probability that you assign to it.
In a book that I'm currently working on, I hope to use language to shed light on a number of aspects of human nature, including the
cognitive
machinery with which humans conceptualize the world and the relationship types that govern human interaction.
Linguists and
cognitive
scientists have been exploring this question for many years now.
When the malfunction is in a circuit that regulates your mood, you get things like depression, and when it is in a circuit that controls your memory and
cognitive
function, then you get things like Alzheimer's disease.
We're going to place electrodes within the circuits that regulate your memory and
cognitive
function to see if we can turn up their activity.
We're going to do this in people that have
cognitive
deficits, and we've chosen to treat patients with Alzheimer's disease who have
cognitive
and memory deficits.
Twenty percent of all the glucose in your body is used by the brain, and as you go from being normal to having mild
cognitive
impairment, which is a precursor for Alzheimer's, all the way to Alzheimer's disease, then there are areas of the brain that stop using glucose.
When I take away one of the voices, the
cognitive
effort to understand the talkers gets a lot easier.
If we recognize the power of becoming technological empaths, we get this opportunity where technology can help us bridge the emotional and
cognitive
divide.
This is victim blaming, and there are many reasons for it, but one is that our
cognitive
structure is set up to blame victims.
It's a
cognitive
synergy where we mash up these two things which don't go together and temporarily in our minds exist.
The New Yorker demands some
cognitive
work on your part, and what it demands is what Arthur Koestler, who wrote "The Act of Creation" about the relationship between humor, art and science, is what's called bisociation.
So if we could switch to the audio from this computer, we've been video conferencing with
cognitive
animals, and we're going to have each of them just briefly introduce them.
Great
cognitive
gain.
Well, the war metaphor seems to force us into saying you won, even though I'm the only one who made any
cognitive
gain.
But just from a
cognitive
point of view, who was the winner?
We are going to take a quick voyage over the
cognitive
history of the 20th century, because during that century, our minds have altered dramatically.
A whole range of professions now make
cognitive
demands.
It's also been the upgrading of tasks like lawyer and doctor and what have you that have made demands on our
cognitive
faculties.
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