Errors
in sentence
468 examples of Errors in a sentence
So if you train an AI in a simulation, it will learn how to do things like hack into the simulation's math
errors
and harvest them for energy.
One idea is that as a simulation runs, it might accumulate
errors
over time.
To correct for these
errors
the simulators could adjust the constants in the laws of nature.
We're going to make lots of
errors.
Keratomileusis corrects what are called refractive errors: imperfections in the way the eye focuses incoming light.
Ideally, the cornea and lens work together to focus light on the surface of the retina, but several kinds of refractive
errors
can impair this delicate system.
Glasses and contact lenses bend light to compensate for these refractive
errors.
And lasers aren’t just correcting the three types of refractive
errors
– this technology can also restore aging eyes.
Paper processes are also slower and more prone to
errors.
Once we know which two
errors
we need to avoid, we can make a table and use the logic of cause and effect to see which thrusters trigger them.
At a time when unreliable computers filled entire rooms, the AGC needed to operate without any errors, and fit in one cubic foot of space.
Margaret’s software needed to quickly detect unexpected
errors
and recover from them in real time.
To counteract this risk, coronaviruses have a unique feature: an enzyme that checks for replication
errors
and corrects mistakes.
There's a situation where
errors
in statistics had really profound and really unfortunate consequences.
They make
errors
of logic in reasoning with uncertainty.
And while a more recent study did show that reaction times and
errors
increase for some bilingual students in cross-language tests, it also showed that the effort and attention needed to switch between languages triggered more activity in, and potentially strengthened, the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex.
Because, in truth, while I said we're correcting for the Earth's atmosphere, we actually only correct for half the
errors
that are introduced.
I know folks said to me they believe it was one of the greatest
errors
in the history of the United States.
The fear has chilled professional interaction so thousands of tragic
errors
occur because doctors are afraid to speak up: "Are you sure that's the right dosage?"
First night in the nursing home unit where she had been in the same assisted living facility, moved her from one bed to another, kind of threw her, rebroke her pelvis, sent her back to the hospital that she had just come from, no one read the chart, put her on Tylenol, which she is allergic to, broke out, got bedsores, basically, had heart problems, and died from the fall and the complications and the
errors
that were there.
You can catch
errors
with it, it's unambiguous in its reading, there are lots of good things about binary.
There's parts of the genome where it cannot tolerate even a single error, and then there's parts of the genome where we can put in large blocks of DNA, as we did with the watermarks, and it can tolerate all kinds of
errors.
When we do this process, we make two types of
errors.
They're Type I
errors.
If it's too low, you're more likely to make too many Type II
errors.
The
errors
we make are actually predictable.
When we get negative feedback, we still, the next time we're face with a certain context, tend to make the same
errors.
What I'm most curious about is, how is a species that's as smart as we are capable of such bad and such consistent
errors
all the time?
This is a hint that I've gotten from watching the ways that social scientists have learned about human
errors.
And what we see is that people tend to keep making
errors
exactly the same way, over and over again.
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